WHY APOLOGY IS NOT ALWAYS ENOUGH
Ishola Ayodele |
In today's fast-paced, digitally connected world, a crisis can spread like wildfire, with the potential to do significant damage to a company's reputation and bottom line. And when a crisis hits, one of the first things that many companies do is issue an apology in an attempt to mitigate the damage and regain the trust of their stakeholders.
Image by Allan Swart |
In November this year, a luxury Spanish label ‘Balenciaga’ released two campaigns on its website. The first campaign released on the 16th of November was a photographs of child models holding the brand’s handbags that appeared to be a bear wearing BDSM-inspired accessories (BDSM stand for Bondage, Domination, Sadism, Masochism: A sexual activity that involves giving and receiving pain for pleasure). In the second campaign released on the 21st of November, a bag is positioned on top of a poorly disguised document from a 2008 US Supreme Court ruling, a case that focused on child pornography statute.
A viral
tweet shone a spotlight on both images revealing the BDSM tendencies these
campaigns are exposing children to and other twitter users
began to dig up Balenciaga’s past misdeeds. This ignited
a firestorm that traveled from the internet to main stream media like Fox News.
In response, Balenciaga withdraw the campaign and issued an apology in which it
called the campaigns “series of grievous errors”.
However,
rather than this apology reducing the dragonfire of criticism from the public,
it escalated the crisis as celebrities, influencers, and other social media
users began to throw out and burn their Balenciaga products in protest while so
many other people started calling for boycott of the label’s products. This
Balenciaga’s apology was met with
skepticism and criticism because many felt that it did not address the
underlying issues at play which are the fact that the company is sexually exploiting children as well as its inappropriate and offensive use
of underage children for profit making.
It is clear from this Balenciaga’s crisis that apology was not enough to assuage the outrage of the public. So, the question will be why? Perhaps maybe it is not laden with enough emotion to attract sympathy from the public. Let us see how an apology full of emotion performed.
In 2020, during the middle of the lockdown measure deployed by the Nigerian government to curb the spread of the deadly Covid-19 virus. Funke Akindele, a popular Nigerian actress hosted a birthday party at her home in Lagos with invited guests in violation of this lockdown regulation. The party received widespread backlash and after so much criticism, she issued an emotion apology and promised to donate money to a Covid-19 relief fund. However, many felt that Akindele's apology was not sufficient given the gravity of the situation as evident in the increased intensity of her criticism online and some people even called for her arrest. The Covid-19 pandemic was (and still is) a global health crisis that has claimed the lives of millions of people around the world. By hosting a party in violation of lockdown directive of the government, many people argued that Funke Akindele did not only endangered her own health and the health of her guests, but also contributed to the spread of the virus. In this case, an apology alone was not enough to address the harm caused by Akindele's actions. In the end, Funke Akindele suffered loss of endorsement deals and a decline in her public image. She was also arrested, tried and sentenced for flouting social distancing order (but was granted state pardon). After which she did another apology video and she was pardoned by the public.
The truth is that we
cannot know how sincere our apology is but what we know from case studies and
stream of researches are that
1.
‘Sorry’
or ‘I am Sorry’ is not an Apology: It is a step in the
Apology process. Sincere apology takes great courage because it reveals what
most leaders, brands and organizations don’t want people to know about them.
Why is Sincere Apology hard? Sincere apology is hard for the following reasons:
a. It shows imperfection:
Being Fallible is not a reality most leaders, brands and organizations are
ready to accept.
b. It is an admission of guilt:
Sincere apology means taking responsibility, it is easy to deny or blame
someone else or just ignore the public criticism.
c. It has consequences:
Most leaders, brands or organizations are so afraid of the consequences of their
malfeasance that they would rather deny, lie or just do a Plastic apology just
to avoid being punished for their crimes.
2.
Sympathy
Oriented Apology doesn’t work: Many times, when leaders
or organizations tender apologies in crises, they do so just to attract public
sympathy in order to stop negative comments, customers’ boycott or bleeding of
clients. This has always proven ineffectual in mitigating crisis as
demonstrated by the case studies above. The ineffectiveness of this sympathy
oriented apology was also corroborated by a 2022 study published in the
International Journal of Business Communication by Surin Chung and Suman Lee
which revealed that sympathy-oriented apology has little or no impact in
reducing public anger, negative impression, and distrust during a crisis.
3. Crisis don’t just happen: Paraphrasing Prof. Fred Helio Garcia, the author of the best seller ‘The Power of Communication’, “every crisis is first a business problem before it becomes a communication problem.” A stream of studies has revealed that a large percentage of crisis is as a result of ignored smoldering issues. The crisis builds up gradually and stakeholders take note of your misdeed here and there until it reaches a breaking point and they unleash their wrath on your brand or organization not for the recent malfeasance alone but all the wrongs you have committed over time. This also shows that stakeholders perception is formed over time and also from different sources before and during the crisis as studies from the crisis arena theory has proven. And as we can see from the Balenciaga crisis, the massive outrage started when a twitter user highlighted the negative latent implications of Balenciaga’s campaign and other twitter users began to dig up Balenciaga’s past misdeeds.
A
2019 study published in the Frontiers of Psychology journal which examines
whether perceptions of a transgressor’s trustworthiness has any influence on
the relationship between apologies and repaired of trust, as well as whether
emotions plays any role in this stakeholders’ perception of trustworthiness
found that effective repair of trust through apology was mediated by
perceptions of the transgressor’s trustworthiness. Furthermore, the
relationship between apologies and perceptions of the transgressors trustworthiness
was also found to be influenced by stakeholders’ emotions. Therefore, it is
safe to say from empirical and case studies we know the factors which
influences stakeholders’ perception of a transgressor’s sincerity in a
crisis.
IN
CONCLUSION,
It is clear from what we
do know that rebuilding stakeholders’ trust and confidence after a crisis goes
far beyond just saying ‘sorry’, spinning the story, having a crisis management
plan or strategy or any other fire brigade approaches. It is about relationships and being a human.
This is why the focus of my crisis management training for 2023 will be to help leaders, brands and organizations understand and internalize the import of the CRISIS RELATIONSHIP GRID and how their organizations can be more HUMANLY in crisis using the 4Ps Model. Please share your thought with me by leaving a comment below,
Ishola Ayodele is an award winning strategic
communication strategist who specializes in helping Leaders, Brands and
Organizations communicate in a way that yields the desired outcome. He is the
Dean of ‘The School of Impactful
Communication (TSIC).’ He can be reached via ishopr2015@gmail.com
Thank you for the insight. I got value
ReplyDeleteThank you, Mr Ishola, for the educative write-up.
ReplyDelete