The first
day I join the PR-branding and development dept., my manager Yi gave a short
brief of my daily job and told me never shut down phone and keep in contact. I didn’t
really alert.
It was Sunday
morning; I was on the way to church. I received
a call from Yi, saying that a girl just committed suicide in one of our hotel
branch in Hunan Province. She asked me to chill and just focus on one thing – monitoring
media, from all sources! “If there is anything being report, even a single
sentence, you have to record down whatever you find, and keep updating on our PR
private chat group. Do not publish anything on our social media platform without
my authority because the issue is now under police’s investigation.” She hung
up, following by a message given me the details of the issue.
To be
honest I was nervous because I don’t know what will happen the next second. And
so of course I drive home and search for media reports from online media, TV,
and social media keywords for a whole day.
Via the
chat group I know that every one of us have our own roles.
One colleague is
standing by all the time to educate the hotel branch manager how to handle
media. As it is located at another province and our PR people from headquarter are
not able to present in front of journalists and cameras right away.
Another
colleague is to prepare several official written announcements, just in case
the issue became crisis and we have to response immediately.
One colleague is
to deal with IT department and make sure booking channel is shut down so that
no more guests will come to hotel before police release the block.
And one
colleague is to make internal report to all the employees who are working for
this hotel brand. This is to make sure that they are informed and alerted so
that they will not trust any rumours from the public.
Manager Yi is the one in
charge of managing every link and decides what to do next.
Two days
later, the girl was found not a guest of our hotel. She failed her job
interview and then went to one of our hotel branch to find her friend, but in
the end she cannot make herself out of the blue, she jumped out from the
building and ended her life.
It took
about 10 days and finally the discussion on social media cool down and faded
from the public. By the effort that our team done, our hotel brand did not
involve in the hot discussion. WOW! I was so proud that I was part of the team.
And I believe we managed it calmly and pro were because there is a mature
emergency handling plan and the people and time were well organized.
After we
summarized the whole case into document form and put it in cabinet, I asked
manager Yi, can you tell me how you can organize it so well. She said, as a PR
person in a leading hotel company that have 3000 hotel branches around the
world, emergency happen almost every day. You have to be prepared and alert! Just make sure your heart is in good
condition and enjoy your PR challenges! "
Enjoy your PR day!
Claudia Xinyin Xie
Enjoy your PR day!
Claudia Xinyin Xie
1 comment:
Hi Claudia!
Wow - that's incredible that you were able to witness crisis management first hand. It is awesome you were involved and able to see the difference a well prepared plan for handling a crisis made in that situation! Emergencies are never good, but it's great that you are part of a team well equipped to handle them!
I wish you all the best, and congratulations for staying so calm! That's a trait of a good PR professional!
- Bronte
Post a Comment