Google Commands Big Cash from PR-Damaged Brand

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Public relations is all about reputation management–your credibility is the coin of the business realm. We’re pretty hard on companies and brands that take a cavalier attitude about their credibility–because once you lose that, it’s all over. Or is it?

Admittedly, we have strongly implied that you can’t buy your way out of a PR disaster, but the oily BP sure makes us think twice:

Before BP could stem the oil gusher at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico, it unleashed $100 million in ad spending, largely on network TV, to stem the damage to its image. But it also started spending heavily where it had never spent much before: buying ads in Google’s search results.

How much did BP spend on search? In two months, BP went from spending very little on search advertising — about $57,000 a month — to becoming one of Google’s top advertisers, dropping nearly $3.6 million in the month of June alone, according to an internal Google document obtained by Advertising Age. That pushed BP into the upper echelon of search advertisers, in a league with Expedia, which spent at least $5.9 million in June, Amazon, which spent at least $5.8 million, and eBay, which spent at least $4.2 million.

This is a significant outlay, even for BP, which spent $94 million on advertising in 2009, and $78.7 million in the first six months of 2010 alone excluding search, according to Kantar Media. Search advertisers only pay when their ads convert or get a click, and in June the crisis was still at full-boil, driving clicks on BP&’s ads. But if BP kept spending at this rate, search would’ve become one of its bigger advertising line items by the end of the year, up there with network, cable or spot TV.

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BP’s increase underscores how important Google has become for reputation management, and in the battle for public opinion. In the wake of the spill, Google was a natural first stop for people seeking information, and BP bought up dozens of keywords associated with the disaster such as “oil spill,” “leak,” “top kill” and “live feed” as it vied for clicks with news stories, images of oiled wildlife and plaintiff attorneys trolling for clients.

via What Big Brands Are Spending on Google – Advertising Age – Digital.

According to BP, ad expenditures during the active spill were $5 million per week.

BP’s ad strategy now follows the typical trajectory of crisis PR, he says. It didn’t start out that way. BP was slow to connect with consumers and gulf residents right after the spill. Tony Hayward’s numerous gaffes didn’t help the company’s image, which came across as inept and out of touch. There’s little question that his mismanagement of the company’s public image led to his ouster as CEO.

So how’s the advertising paying off in PR improvement? A recent AP poll says that “some 66 percent of those surveyed continue to disapprove of BP’s performance, down from a whopping 83 percent in June.” Though still dismal, it does look like the ad spending is helping. However, it’s also certainly due to the fact that time has passed and the oil spill isn’t leading the newscasts anymore. The public has turned to the latest Sarah Palin Facebook pronouncement, Paris Hilton’s cocaine possession arrest and even something important, like the president’s new rug.

Sure, we’ve seen the TV ads BP is using to rebuild its tattered, oil-stained image–that was as predictable as a blob of oil on the beach at Destin. But who would’ve thought they would have spent all that coin on Google search ads?

Clearly, the internet is now the 800 lb. gorilla of reputation management, and Google has some serious bananas.

Hat tip to Shelly Kramer for inspiring this post.

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Siding (with one side) in Your Advertising

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It’s the political season, and tempers run hotter than an August in (insert name of your hot town here). Besides politics, there is also the specter of the ongoing culture war over morality and religion.

That in mind, we recommend you heed advice you may have heard since you were a kid: never discuss religion or politics if you want to keep a conversation pleasant. The same should go for business advertising.

Certainly, we all have strong opinions, and the right to express them is what America is all about. But when one of our clients wants to advocate for a political, religious or cultural issue in their advertisements, I ask them to take a step back. Take a deep breath.

Unless you focus on one group with your ads, you’re advertising not just to people who think the way you do (who will likely believe you are a principled person for expressing your beliefs) but you are also reaching–and potentially alienating–an entire market segment. (TV ads, for example–are generally targeted to the audience at large, even if you focus on one particular channel.)

Here’s an example–an aluminum siding company in Oklahoma:

Yes, you heard him right. In the middle of his pitch to Oklahomans to buy aluminum siding and new windows, he says “Yes, I’m an Oklahoma conservative Christian businessman who stands for liberty and freedom. So, let’s end this secular socialism right now.”

Okay, we’re not here to say he’s right or wrong in his beliefs. We’re here to say that while this may appeal to a base of customers and bring lots of publicity, it may forever damage the company with potential customers who either disagree with him or are simply turned off by his mixing of politics and religion in his sales pitch.

Another way to express yourself publicly is to submit a letter to the editor of your local paper or start a blog. That route makes your political or social stance less tied to your business and its reputation. People will probably be far less likely to find that distasteful, as you aren’t expressing yourself in a way that appears like a craven attempt to makes sales by pushing political or social issue buttons.

Ultimately, we recommend you give potential clients a “business” reason to hire you, whether it be your service record, unique product offerings or longevity in your field. Good marketing and public relations strategy is about knocking down objections–not building walls (or adding siding to existing “walls”).

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