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Journal Review: IMPACT OF PAST CRISES ON CURRENT CRISIS COMMUNICATION
Situational Crisis Communication
Theory (SCCT, 2007), posited by W. Timothy Coombs is a theory in the field of
crisis communication. It suggests that crisis managers should match strategic
crisis responses to the level of crisis responsibility and reputational threat
posed by a crisis. Evaluating the crisis type, crisis history and prior
relationship reputation will help crisis managers predict the level of
reputational threat of an organization and how that organization’s publics will
perceive the crisis and attribute crisis responsibility. Thus SCCT can be
applied in an organization's crisis management.
Coombs created his experimentally
based SCCT to give communicators scientific evidence to guide their decisions,
essentially stating that the actions an organization takes post-crisis depends
on the crisis situation. “SCCT identifies how key facets of the crisis
situation influence attributions about the crisis and the reputations held by
stakeholders. In turn, understanding how stakeholders will respond to the
crisis informs the post-crisis communication”.
With empirical evidence to
support his theory, Coombs provided a summary of crisis response strategy
guidelines for crisis managers. SCCT provides crisis managers with an evidence-based
guide to assessing and responding to crises, allowing them to make informed,
strategic, and beneficial decisions.
Theoretical framework
The roots for SCCT can be found
in Attribution Theory. Attribution Theory holds that people constantly look to
find causes, or make attributions, for different events, especially if those
events are particularly negative or unexpected. People will attribute
responsibility for the event and react emotionally to that event. In the case
of organizations, attributions of causality elicit emotional reactions from stakeholders,
especially negative emotions if the organization is attributed as the cause for
a crisis. These negative emotions, like anger, affect stakeholders’ future
interactions with the organization, changing behaviors like purchases and
word-of-mouth recommendations.
Attribution Theory provided one
of the first links between crisis situations and crisis responses. Attributions
of responsibility that shape strategic crisis responses formed the foundation
for SCCT. Coombs built upon Attribution Theory, using it as a base to predict
the severity of potential reputational harm—or reputational threat—a crisis may
bring to an organization and, using that prediction, guide communication
response decisions to minimize damage.
Coombs draws on William Benoit's
image restoration theory in his conceptualization of responsibility and
reputational threat, stating that perception is fundamental to assessments of
both components. If the audience perceives that the organization is at fault, a
reputational threat is put into existence and the organization is held
responsible.
Crisis responsibility and reputational threat
SCCT suggests that the key to
determining the most effective strategic crisis response is understanding the
crisis situation and the amount of reputational threat being posed by the
crisis. Reputational threat is how much damage a crisis could inflict on an
organization if no action is taken to respond to it. Reputational threat is
influenced by three elements: (1) initial crisis responsibility, (2) crisis
history and (3) prior relational reputation.
Initial crisis responsibility is
how much the organization’s stakeholders attribute the crisis to the
organization; how responsible the key publics hold the organization itself for
the crisis. In assessing the level of reputational threat facing an
organization, crisis managers must first determine the type of crisis facing
the organization.
Types of crises
Coombs has identified three
“crisis clusters,” or types of crises, in his SCCT research: the victim cluster,
the accidental cluster, and the intentional cluster. Table 2 outlines these
crisis clusters. In the victim cluster, the organization is not attributed as
the cause of the crisis; rather, the organization is viewed as a victim. In the
accidental cluster, the organization has been nominally attributed as the cause
of the crisis, but the situation is generally viewed by stakeholders as being
unintentional or simply accidental. In the intentional cluster, the
organization is given all or most of the attributions for the crisis and
shoulders the responsibility. In this case the crisis is considered deliberate.
Once it is determined which type
of crisis, or which cluster, the organization’s situation falls under, managers
can predict how much attribution will be placed on the organization and how
much reputational threat it is facing. In fact, Coombs’ own prior research
showed that crisis responsibility and organizational reputation are negatively
related.
Crisis history and relational reputation
Another element that threatens an
organization’s reputation is its history of crisis, whether it has faced
similar crises in the past. Within this context, how well an organization has
treated its stakeholders in the past—its prior relational reputation—also plays
a part in assessing reputational threat. These two elements are involved in the
second step crisis managers must take in evaluating the reputational threat
facing the organization: if either of these elements exist within the
organization, it will intensify attributions of the organization and increase
the level of reputational threat. If an organization has a history of facing
crises or a poor history of dealing with its stakeholders, attributions of
crisis responsibility and the level of reputational threat are greater.
Because of crisis responsibility
and reputational threat, crises can effect changes in emotions, and as a
result, behaviors. If a person perceives an organization to have a high level
of crisis responsibility, he or she is more likely to have feelings of anger
toward the organization. Conversely, lower levels of crisis responsibility can
evoke feelings of sympathy. Both of these feelings can affect the behaviors of
the person toward the organization, whether that person will act positively or
negatively toward the organization.
Crisis response strategies
Once the levels of crisis
responsibility and reputational threat have been determined, SCCT provides
crisis managers with a theoretical base to their strategic crisis response.
SCCT’s list for responding to crises assumes that the organization has accepted
some level of responsibility for the crisis. Coombs found that the primary
responses to crises in SCCT form three groups: deny, diminish, and rebuild.
Each of these strategies helps
the organization get its side of the story into the media. After all how the
crisis is framed in the media will determine how the organization’s publics
view the situation. The media’s frames become the stakeholders’ frames. The
deny strategies help establish a crisis frame and sever any perceived
connection between the organization and the crisis. If the organization is not
involved, or if the crisis is a rumor the organization can dispel, and
stakeholders and the media accept that there is no crisis, no reputational harm
will be done.
Diminish crisis responses attempt
to assure the organization’s publics that the crisis is not as bad as it seems
or that the organization had nothing to do with the situation. These strategies
help lessen the connection between the organization and the crisis and help the
organization’s publics see the crisis in a less negative light. However, these
strategies must be reinforced with credible evidence. If conflicting crisis
frames are presented in the media, the organization’s publics will adopt
whichever frame comes from the most credible source. Rebuild strategies help
change perceptions of an organization during a crisis by offering real or
symbolic forms of aid to victims and asking their forgiveness. These strategies
attempt to take the focus off the crisis by taking positive action.
A secondary type of responses,
bolstering, attempts to increase positive reputational perceptions by
presenting “new, positive information about the organization and/or reminding
stakeholders of past good works by the organization”. This strategy can bolster
goodwill and arouse feelings of sympathy toward the organization, but Coombs
warns, should be used to supplement the primary responses, not as replacements.
SCCT suggests that how an
organization communicates with its publics—what it says—will affect its
publics’ perceptions of the organization. Those perceptions can shape how an
organization’s publics emotionally react to or behave toward to the
organization. Therefore, the communication decisions crisis managers make in
the wake of a crisis could have great consequences, either positive or
negative. It is imperative that crisis managers act strategically to save the
organization’s reputation. According to Coombs: “Crisis response strategies
have three objectives relative to protecting reputations: (1) shape
attributions of the crisis, (2) change perceptions of the organization in crisis
and (3) reduce the negative effect generated by the crisis."
Journal Review: Understanding Image Restoration Strategies from a Stakeholder Approach
This article focuses on image restoration strategies, a practice in public relations. Specifically, this article proposes two major theoretical frameworks; theory of social construction of reality and stakeholder analysis approach in studying image restoration in parallel with Benoit’s image restoration theory (1995). Besides focusing to the limited message strategies of Benoit’s image restoration from the traditional perspective, as providing the practitioners merely ‘what’ strategies to be selected as to respond to the crisis, it is possible that deeper understanding on ‘how’ image restoration messages works and to design message tailored each group of stakeholders should be obtained. Most importantly, this article provides both scholars and practitioners an understanding and fine-tuning restoration messages with specific group of stakeholder in order to regain positive organization image.
Basic concepts of image restoration theory
Two components must be present in a given attack to
the image of an individual or organization:
1. The accused is held responsible for an action,
and
2. The act is considered offensive.
Image restoration theory is grounded in two fundamental
assumptions.
1. Communication is a goal directed activity. Communicators may have multiple goals that
are not collectively compatible, but people try to achieve goals that are most
important to them at the time, with reasonable cost.
2. Maintaining a favorable reputation is a key
goal of communication. Because face, image,
or reputation is valued as important, individuals or organizations are
motivated to take action when it is compromised.
Perception is fundamental to image restoration, as the accused
actor will not engage in a defensive strategy unless the perception exists that
he is at fault. The actor who committed the wrongful act must decide on the
strategy of best course based on their specific situation. Factors such as
credibility, audience perceptions, and the degree of offensiveness of the act
must be taken into account.
Theoretical framework
The theory of image
restoration builds upon theories of apologia and
accounts. Apologia is a formal defense or justification of an individual’s
opinion, position, or actions, and
an account is a statement made by an individual or organization to explain
unanticipated or transgressive events.
Benoit claims that
these treatments of image restoration focus on identifying options rather than
prescribing solutions. He grounds image restoration theory on a comprehensive
literature review of apologia and accounts theories.
Specific influences of
image restoration theory include Rosenfield’s (1968) theory of analog, Ware and
Linkugel's (1973) theory of apologia; Kenneth Burke's
(1970) theory of goals and purification; Ryan's (1982) kategoria and apologia;
Scott and Lyman's (1968) analysis of accounts; Goffman’s
(1967) remedial moves; Schonbach's (1980) updated analysis of Scott and Lyman’s
(1968) theory; and Schlenker’s (1980) analysis of impression management and
accounts.
This article allows both communication scholars and public relations practitioners to develop a deeper understanding on image restoration. In addition to apply the five existing Benoit’s image restoration strategies in repairing image after the crisis, scholars will be able to understand ‘how’ the image restoration message function. That is how communication is used to create reality. That is language as reality-image-- construction. Also, the knowledge of stakeholder approach when incorporating with the image restoration strategies enables the practitioners in being aware of the existence of multiple interpretations influencing an individual perception regarding an organization’s image. Therefore, practitioners should be strategically design the restoration message based upon the framework of socially construction of reality and the multiinterpretations to successfully communicate with its stakeholders.
Refferences :
Coombs, W.T. (2004). Impact of past crises on current crisis communication: cnsights from situational crisis communication theory. Journal Of Business Communication, 41 (3), 265-289. DOI: 10.1177/0021943604265607
Kessadayurat, C. (2011). Understanding image restoration strategies from a stakeholder approach. BU Academic Review, 10 (1), 282-287

