Produktbild: Dealing with an Angry Public

Dealing with an Angry Public The Mutual Gains Approach to Resolving Disputes

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

01.11.2010

Verlag

Simon & Schuster N.Y.

Seitenzahl

288

Maße (L/B/H)

22,9/15,2/1,8 cm

Gewicht

357 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-4516-2735-0

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

01.11.2010

Verlag

Simon & Schuster N.Y.

Seitenzahl

288

Maße (L/B/H)

22,9/15,2/1,8 cm

Gewicht

357 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-4516-2735-0

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Dealing with an Angry Public

  • Contents

    Acknowledgments

    Chapter I. Introduction

    A New Way of Interacting with the Public

    Why We All Should Be Concerned About Angry Publics

    The Public Is Not Easily Appeased

    The Typical Approach to Public Relations Does Not Work

    A Different Approach Is Needed

    Chapter II. Why Is the Public Angry?

    What Is Anger?

    Why Are People Angry?

    Rational and Irrational Anger

    Typical Responses to an Angry Public

    Dealing with an Angry Public: The Conventional Wisdom

    Chapter III. The Mutual-Gains Approach

    The Mutual-Gains Approach: Six Principles

    The Old Plastics Factory

    Background

    Applying for a Waiver

    Further Study

    The Public Presentation

    A Disaster Threatens

    The Fallout

    Chapter IV. Accidents Will Happen

    Three Mile Island: To Tell or Not to Tell

    The First Day: March 28, 1979

    The Second Day: March 29, 1979

    The Third Day: March 30, 1979

    The Final Days: March 31 and April 1, 1979

    Telling the Truth: The Mutual-Gains Approach

    The Advantages of Disclosure Outweigh the Disadvantages

    Act in a Trustworthy Fashion

    Select a Capable Spokesperson

    Enlist Support on the Outside

    Government and Business Should, Can, and Do Cooperate

    The Exxon Valdez: When Paying Out Doesn't Pay Off

    Cleaning Up

    A Modest Proposal

    Exxon's Response

    Mitigation Efforts

    Compensation for Damages

    The Aftermath

    Doing It Differently: The Mutual-Gains Approach

    The Company's Failure to Accept Responsibility

    The Company's Failure to Establish Clear Lines of Communication

    The Company's Failure to First Mitigate, Then Compensate (and Ultimately Leave People Better Off)

    The Company's Failure to Convene an Effective Problem-Solving Forum

    Conclusion

    Chapter V. Risky Business

    What Is Risk?

    Assessing Risk

    Perceiving Risk

    Communicating Risk

    Risky Business

    The Breast Implant Controversy

    The Story Unfolds

    The Story Is Retold

    What Should the Company Do?

    Implant Rupture

    Drawing Conclusions in the Face of Uncertainty

    Knowing Your Product and Presenting It Truthfully: The Mutual-Gains Approach

    Set Clear Performance Standards

    Minimize the Risk, Not the Concerns of Others

    Make Commitments You Can Keep

    Seek to Know, Not to Hide

    Engage Stakeholders in Making Risky Decisions

    Make Contingent Commitments

    Chapter VI. When Values Collide

    What Are Values?

    Why Are Value Conflicts So Difficult to Resolve?

    A Model for Deescalating Intractable Conflicts

    Hydro-Quebec and the Cree: Clashing Cultures

    Hydro-Quebec's Response to the Cree

    Talking With, Not At, the Other: The Mutual-Gains Approach

    Seek Common Principles -- Despite Seemingly Stark Differences

    Consider That You Might Be Wrong

    Consider Substantial Community Improvement Through a Fair Process, Not Compensation Only for the Few

    Ignoring the Principles of the Mutual-Gains Approach Intensifies Cultural Conflict

    Animal Rights

    Listening Whether You Agree or Not: The Mutual-Gains Approach

    Examine History to Better Understand Today

    Seek Reason Amid Emotion, Not Reason at the Expense of Emotion

    Recognize Diversity on the Other Side

    Beware the Pitfalls of "Rights Talk"

    Seek Forums for Dialogue

    Chapter VII. The Media

    The Conventional Wisdom of Media Relations

    The Media as Adversary

    The Media as a Tool

    The Media Can Be Controlled

    Media Policy by Default

    The Mutual-Gains Approach to Dealing with the Media

    Take into Account the Interests of the Media

    Tell the Media What You Know and Don't Know

    Make Available People with Authority Who Can Share Their Views Openly

    Work to Convince Media They Have an Educative Role

    Use a Neutral to Speak in a Single Voice

    In a Consensus-Building Process, Establish Ground Rules to Guide Media Interactions

    Use Additional Means of Communication

    Set an Example for the Media to Follow

    Summary

    Chapter VIII. Principled Leadership

    Doing the Right Thing

    Integrity, Honesty, and Trust

    How to Inspire Trust

    Sharing, Listening, and Learning

    What Leaders Value

    Leadership and Institutions

    Concluding Remarks

    Notes

    Bibliography

    Index