You need to tell your story…but do you need to tell the whole story?
For as long as I’ve been in the PR business, we’ve been counseling our clients to tell their story….and helping them craft the messaging, the platforms and the proof points to do so. I’ve done this for almost 20 years….and I’ve often found myself telling clients that we can’t tell their whole story….that certain items and issues are too inside baseball, too granular or simply not newsworthy or noteworthy enough.
However, it seems that those of us in the reputation business need to ask a new question…
Is this the whole story?
Today’s NYT has a front page story about SmithKline Beecham’s failure to disclose that a new drug for diabetes had a risk of cardiac problems.
It also has a story about BP’s relentless pursuit of growth at all costs prohibiting them from learning from their mistakes.
The Toyota crisis will go into the text books as a classic case of trying to minimize or cover up an issue, making it worse.
When I started in this business, no one talked about transparency…they just did it. Today, there is a lot of talk about transparency, and seemingly less of it than ever before.
There is a difference between putting your best foot forward and hiding material information that tells a completely different story…and counseling clients today is more about being their Jiminy Cricket than their “Spin Doctor.”
