Examining the interplay of an organization's prior reputation,CEO's visibility,and immediate response to a crisis |
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Authors: | Judy VanSlyke Turk Yan Jin Sean Stewart Jeesun Kim J.R. Hipple |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Mass Communications, Virginia Commonwealth University, Box 842034, VA 23284-2034, United States;2. School of Mass Communications, Virginia Commonwealth University, United States;3. School of Communications, Grand Valley State University, United States;4. Hipple and Co., Reputation Management, United States |
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Abstract: | In one of only a few crisis communication research studies taking a relational approach, examining the effects of a company's prior reputation in publics’ responses to a given crisis situation, Lyons and Cameron (2004) found that both reputation and response profoundly affected publics’ attitude and behavioral intentions toward an organization involved in a crisis situation, using hypothetical, fictitious organizations and crises. Using actual organizations and crises, our research team designed a 2 (reputation: good vs. bad) × 2 (crisis response: apologetic vs. defensive) × 2 (CEO visibility in immediate crisis response: visible vs. invisible) within-subjects experiment (N = 102) to examine the variances in stakeholders’ attitudes and behavioral intentions toward a company after being exposed to online video that delivered a corporate crisis response. Findings were counter-intuitive: a defensive response to a crisis is as acceptable to crisis stakeholders as an apologetic response if the CEO is visible (or audible) in the response and if the pre-crisis company-stakeholder reputation is positive. Good reputation, defensive crisis response and CEO visibility in immediate response to a crisis resulted in the best stakeholder attitudes and purchase intentions. |
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Keywords: | Corporate reputation Reputation management Crisis response CEO visibility |
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