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What Were They Thinking Crisis Communication The Good The Bad And The Totally Clueless Steve Adubato

  • SKU: BELL-51901008
What Were They Thinking Crisis Communication The Good The Bad And The Totally Clueless Steve Adubato
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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What Were They Thinking Crisis Communication The Good The Bad And The Totally Clueless Steve Adubato instant download after payment.

Publisher: Rutgers University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.5 MB
Pages: 192
Author: Steve Adubato
ISBN: 9780813545530, 0813545536
Language: English
Year: 2008

Product desciption

What Were They Thinking Crisis Communication The Good The Bad And The Totally Clueless Steve Adubato by Steve Adubato 9780813545530, 0813545536 instant download after payment.

Some corporations spend millions of dollars on so-called "crisis communication plans." Others offer lip service, avoiding the subject like the plague. They simply hope for the best, praying that they never face a crisis. Either way, as Steve Adubato says, "Wishful thinking is no substitute for a strategic plan."

Nationally recognized communication coach and four-time Emmy Awardûwinning broadcaster Steve Adubato has been teaching, writing, and thinking about comm¡unication, leadership, and crisis communication for nearly two decades. In What Were They Thinking? Adubato examines twenty-two controversial and complex public relations and media mishaps, many of which were played out in public. Among cases and people discussed are:

  • The Johnson & Johnson Tylenol scare: Perhaps the best crisis management ever
  • Don Imus: Sometimes saying "sorry" is too little too late
  • Former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales: Authority does not put you above questioning
  • Bill O'Reilly: Know when to stop defending yourself and save face
  • Former EPA Administrator Christie Whitman: Proof that your written words can come back to haunt you
  • Hurricane Katrina: A natural disaster that led to a larger governmental disaster
  • The Catholic Church's pedophilia scandal: Denial won't get rid of the skeletons in your closet

Arranged in short chapters detailing each case individually, the book provides a brief history of the topics and answers the questions: Who got it right? Who got it wrong? What can the rest of us learn from them?

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