ALTOM: Beware of inciting online vendetta from clients

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It started as a dispute over towing a car, and it’s now a cause célèbre, thanks to Facebook.

Last January, a Michigan towing company, T&J Towing, hauled away a 1997 Saturn belonging to Justin Kurtz. The car was
in the student’s apartment parking lot and, according to Kurtz, still had its sticker prominently displayed. He contends
that T&J scraped off the sticker to justify the tow and the $118 fee. It may have been T&J’s most costly tow
ever.

Kurtz promptly opened a Facebook page about the incident, which quickly attracted thousands of viewers, many of whom left
complaints about similar experiences with T&J. As the dispute widened, T&J lost corporate accounts and reacted by
filing a $750,000 defamation suit against Kurtz. Kurtz responded in turn by filing suit against T&J for abuse of process
and for violating the state’s Consumer Protection Act.

Most observers agree that, although T&J was undoubtedly injured by Kurtz’s Facebook page, the towing company’s
main purpose in suing was to shut him up. T&J’s owner, Joseph Bird, might have done better to hire a PR firm and
read up on the Streisand effect.

In 2003, Barbra Streisand’s house was included in aerial shots of homes along the California coastline. The photos
were publicly available, and Streisand was understandably worried about her privacy. The photographer, however, was no paparazzi;
he was shooting the photos for the California Coastal Records Project and the total archive numbered some 12,000 photos. The
harder Streisand pushed to have the photo of her house removed, the more publicity it garnered, and the more people who looked
at the house online just out of curiosity.

More recently, the Streisand effect took a more morbid turn when Muslim radicals, offended by cartoons depicting the prophet
Mohammad in distinctly unflattering ways, threatened to kill anyone who published anything similar, producing not a timid
cessation, but a massive landslide of Internet cartoons about him. The Streisand effect is now well-known among public relations
professionals and most are careful to advise their clients to avoid spitting contests like the one T&J initiated.

In today’s small-scale, do-it-yourself world of news publishing, it can be a major misstep for a company to play hardball
against a little guy. Mark Twain (among other pundits) is supposed to have warned us never to pick a fight with a man who
buys his ink by the barrel. Today, almost everybody online sits in that same position of awesome power, with an apparently
inexhaustible barrel of ink.

It takes almost no time, and definitely no money, to create an angry Facebook page that can be seen by thousands within a
few hours. Twitter users can cover the globe in minutes with fast-breaking news, as tweets morph into numberless retweets.
If a prominent blogger such as Daily Kos (www.dailykos.com) or Pharyngula (scienceblogs.com/pharyngula) picks up the dispute,
the effect can be even greater, leading to instant fame for the little guy.

A legitimately aggrieved company can actually win its battle and lose the overall public relations war. Quiet behind-the-scenes
legal maneuvering doesn’t work well, either, because the other parties will often just post the legal documents.

One way to deal with Internet anger is to refuse to play the game. Lie low and hope the storm passes quickly. The public’s
attention span is like a shooting star—brilliant for a while, but short-lived. The problem is that even when the unwelcome
glow fades, the damage can remain. T&J’s lost corporate contracts won’t return just because the shouting dies
down.

The second way to deal with online criticism is to anticipate the problem and prepare for it far in advance. Go online yourself.
Get the company into blogs and social network sites to establish credibility. Public indignation is greatest against companies
perceived to be well-heeled bullies. A company that shows a history of fielding moderate complaints fairly and in public can
build up a lot of good will. Of course, a company that truly takes advantage of the public won’t be able to hide behind
an Internet façade, but the public forgives much faster when an organization publicly apologizes and makes it up to
their customer.

The latter strategy requires dedication, skill and courage. It’s never easy admitting your faux pas in front of thousands
of critical eyes. It has to be done consistently, so it doesn’t become mere damage control. And it must be done honestly.
But many companies have found that it pays enormous dividends. Public relations professionals know that it’s just another
way of controlling the message.

The Internet doesn’t belong only to the aggrieved. Businesses, too, can buy their ink by the barrel.•
__________

Altom is an independent local technology consultant. His column appears every other week. He can be reached at taltom@ibj.com.

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