Brands no longer get to dominate news cycles and advertising to own the message they want to share. Search engines and social media are important and often dominant customer touch points. Ensuring that brand perception and messaging is responsive and thoughtful is imperative to Uber’s next steps. One of the goals of Momentology as a resource is to teach marketers how to be visible and persuasive in moments that matter. This may be the most important moment in Uber’s young history.
Uber has stumbled into a PR nightmare after their Senior VP of Business Emil Michael shared a potential strategy at a private dinner party that outlined spending $1 million to dig up dirt on several journalists. The journalists were reporting on a handful of unseemly Uber incidents, including a misguided response to female passengers’ accusations of being attacked (responses included the irrelevant observations that the women were “dressed provocatively” or “drunk”).
The Dangers of Negative Online Mentions
Multiple articles by high-profile publications are opining on the issue, as well as recommending other apps riders can adopt to abandon Uber. Those stories are dominating any search on the brand.
Adding insult to injury, one of their investors, Ashton Kutcher, shared a tweet shortly after the incident that said, “What is so wrong about digging up dirt on a shady journalist?” Now it’s not just one person having behaved poorly, but other brand voices are defending the proposed, though theoretical, action of attacks and smear campaigns on the journalists and their families.
Now all of these stories, the publications as well as social mentions, reviews, and influencer response, are dominating Uber’s online reputation.
Uber is feeling the pain as well. People are increasingly searching for information on how to cancel an Uber account, and their download rankings have fallen, from 24 to 41, since the incident, Digiday reported.
How Can Uber Fix This?
When Airbnb’s recent logo redesign got bad press for mimicking other logos (and for looking like lady parts) they were taken aback by their creative blunder but they quickly owned it, dealt collaboratively with the affected company, shared why they were OK with it, and moved on. Their culture of creating a sense of place and belonging trumped a creative mistake.
Airbnb is known for their enormously customer-centric focus in their service offerings and in their ethos. Airbnb employees are encouraged to share Airbnb killers, what would disrupt and even kill the business? This activity helps them to beat competition to innovation.
Airbnb responded quickly and appropriately, diffusing what could have been a negative issue and began dominating the PR cycle with a customer-centric video that brilliantly extols the virtues of the brand, their service, and their customers. It’s this kind of speedy and thoughtful reaction that Uber is currently missing.
What Can Brands Learn From This?
1. Know Your ‘Why’
Brand representatives are less likely to go rogue in their approach if their why has been strongly established. Aligning core values to actions is a big part of establishing a brand voice.
When Michael spoke as a leader and company spokesperson, he was the brand. The words he choose, the actions he took, the stories he told became irrevocably woven into the brand reality and the customer experience.
Expect everyone on the team to know and do their best to exemplify your values as a brand. It’s been evident in the days following the incident that Uber hasn’t clarified their why and that they aren’t unified on next steps.
2. Nothing Is Off The Record
Gone are the days of secret meetings and off site issue resolution that lives in a vacuum. For better or worse, your brands’ wins and losses will likely be exposed to the sunlight.
Make it clear in your copy guides and social media guidelines and policies how brand representatives are to behave and speak. Creating that expectation in the beginning will make it less likely that someone strays from your brand values and embraces them at all times, not just when there’s an audience.
3. Involve The Right Teams For Resolving An Issue
Uber’s staff and customers are left to grasp at straws as to what this means for their core brand message and values. Involving the right teams – leadership, content, search, social, PR, even paid media – to rally around a strong unified message allows for their story to become a part of the customer journey and collaboratively move pass the mistake.
How This Affects Their Customers
In 2014 I spent more than $3,000 on Uber. I have lived my whole life in Oregon until the summer of 2012. With my kids in college, I embarked on a work/exploration adventure that took me to Cleveland and Atlanta.
As a native Oregonian I had always owned a car. The small 6,000 population town where I raised my family for 18 years was 60 miles from the city. I loved the car and the independence and thinking time it provided.
During my 2 1/2 year trip to the Midwest and the south, I choose not to have a car, mostly because I worked close to the office but also, frankly, because I was a little terrified of driving in a city. I loved Cleveland, great theater (largest performing arts center in the country outside of New York), amazing food and world-class museums and symphony. But public transportation was abysmal and taxi cabs were unreliable.
When I moved to Atlanta I was thrilled to have Uber as my main source of transportation (I had experienced Uber in Seattle years ago and loved it). Uber became not only the way I got to the airport and to client meetings, but how I explored a city that was unknown to me.
Uber took me to dinners and plays and speaking engagements. It kept me safe when I decided that, yes, I would have one more martini with extra olives. It picked up friends at the airport visiting from out of town who wanted to see what it looked like for a Pacific Northwest farm girl to live in a 31st floor high rise. It introduced me to an amazing chef who had moved from New Orleans with his wife and drove for Uber because he had health issues that made it hard to sustain the demanding long hours of standing required to cook in a large restaurant.
The Uber experience inspired loyalty in me. That loyalty has been destroyed.
As a faithful customer I wanted nothing more than to support Uber and help set the record straight. They could have shared data showing how much safer Uber is than other taxi services. They could have swiftly and thoughtfully addressed the issues.
So far, Uber has selected soft measures and avoidance as their message. They haven’t addressed customer needs or concerns as a customer so I’m faced with abandoning an app and a service I had loved and valued.
Whether or not they like it, Uber is faced with losing me and customers like me who will take their $3,000 a year somewhere else. Ben Smith of BuzzFeed said he would quit using the service and he along with many influencers are supporting this action. The revenue impact from this misstep is already emerging and the bleeding likely won’t stop until they define who they are and align their values with their actions.
Who Will Step Up for Uber?
We’re in love with the technology and the service, but what matters next is which voices win in the Uber culture. Is it win at any cost with continued aggression and insensitivity, or slow down and redefine who they are and win in the long run? Who will step up for Uber?
The investors, the drivers, executive leadership?
My stepdad, Wally Backman, started for the Mets in 1986 when they won the World Series and he coaches their AAA team the Vegas 51s. When watching their playoff games this year he shared some relevant managing advice. “Everyone is a little scared to step up…you never really know who is going to step up, but those who do define the game.”
Who is going to step up, make amends and follow through with promises that will fix and refocus Uber? The voices winning today are those recommending other driving services.
Finding their way to being customer-centric, earning back our loyalty and being visible and persuasive in moments that matter doesn’t just happen for Uber when the customer is in the car. It’s happening all the time – even when executive leadership sits down to dinner.