In a crisis, Optus appears to be ignoring Communications 101
- Written by Alison Stieven-Taylor, Lecturer in Strategic Communications, Monash University
Millions of Optus customers are in the wilderness of a nationwide network outage that began at 4am.
The initial response from Optus delivered by an unnamed company spokesperson on Facebook[1] and X at 6.47am AEDT told Australians little they didn’t already know, that the network was down, and that the company didn’t yet know what had happened.
Later, at 10.30am, the ABC got through to Optus Chief Executive Kelly Bayer Rosmarin via WhatsApp and asked[2]
What do you know? What’s happened?
Bayer Rosmarin replied:
Well I mean we do know how important connectivity is to all of our customers, so we are really, really apologetic and sorry that our connections have gone down today. The teams are working with huge effort to try and restore services as a priority, and will keep working on that until everybody’s back in action.
For the second time in a little over a year[3], the country’s second-largest telecommunications provider lost control of its story.
In September last year when the data of up to 9.8 million of its present and former customers was compromised, it failed to contact[4] those affected for days and communicated via media statements, believing that was the “quickest and most effective way to alert as many current and former customers as possible”.
Golden rules for crises
Every company should have a crisis communications plan – a “living document” that it regularly updates, so that when a crisis emerges there is a strategy ready to be implemented.
There are several golden rules to executing an effective crisis communications response. They are based on transparency, honesty and empathy, and are well documented by theorists such as Timothy Coombs[5] and William Benoit[6].
Read more https://theconversation.com/in-a-crisis-optus-appears-to-be-ignoring-communications-101-217265