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Candidates Both Fall Flat With Their Bailout PR Stunts

September 25th, 2008 @ 11:24 am

3 Comments

Categories: Public Relations, Spin

Tags: Stunt, Obama, Public Relations, Marketing, Corporate Communications, Jon Greer

Barack Obama and John McCain both ventured into the realm of PR stunts Wednesday in response to the Wall Street financial crisis, and both fell flat with their efforts.

First, let’s stop for a sec and define a PR stunt: an action or announcement that’s more flash than substance. Now, let’s define a good PR stunt: one that has people nodding approvingly, brings some fresh energy to your story and basically doesn’t detract from your overall message. A bad PR stunt: one that is easily seen for what it is, and therefore diminishes your message or reinforces negatives about you.

McCain’s PR stunt was his brash announcement that he would “suspend” his campaign to return to DC and work on the bailout. It’s a stunt because he has continued campaigning, making a speech in New York today, running TV ads and having his surrogates appear on the air, while not appearing to play any meaningful role in the bailout talks. Except for his loyalists, he is being derided for the move, which reinforces his shoot first, aim later style. Not good.

Obama’s stunt was to call for a “joint statement” from the two campaigns that would describe their common perspectives on the crisis and the bailout proposal. While not as gutsy as McCain’s ploy, it’s very Obama-esque in its “can’t we all get along” style.

In his case, the stunt fell flat because the joint statement turned out to be worthless drivel, making him look ineffective and not presidential. It got almost zero coverage. I spent 10 minutes trying to search for the damn thing online and couldn’t find it in a form I could link to — how lame is that? [If you're interested, here's a link to something close.] It’s not even posted on the Obama web site, as far as I can tell.

Memo to the campaigns: get back to what you do best: attacking each other, repeating your soundbites and raising money. Leave the PR stunts to real PR people.

Did you know that Jon Greer is available to speak to your company or PR agency about PR and media relations? Contact Jon for more information!

 
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    1

    gkreed

    09/26/08 | Reported as spam

    RE: Candidates Both Fall Flat With Their Bailout PR Stunts

    There's no doubt that the McCain stunt was more damaging because it was more visible. In addition to the things you mentioned, but also his putting on hold the debate (where we can actually hear the candidates position on this crisis) to fly to DC, where he barely said a word during the meeting. "Not good" is putting it lightly.

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    2

    singerdave

    09/26/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Candidates Both Fall Flat With Their Bailout PR Stunts

    Fly back to DC for what! Neither of them have been involved in any of the intense negotiation meetings that have been taking place or the writing of the bill that is what has to take place before it can go to a vote. Believe me, I'm not at all happy about any of this but don't come riding in like the Lone Ranger to save the day when your involvement is only going to muck up the works. I do agree that McCain's stunt was far more transparent for exactly what it was!

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    3

    jongreer

    09/26/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Candidates Both Fall Flat With Their Bailout PR Stunts

    You know, to be honest, I was trying to be "balanced" in my coverage, and I really did think the Obama stunt was lame. But I agree that McCain's was far worse.

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