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How Apple went contrary to the five generally accepted PR-norms, but kept its good name

In January 2010, Apple faced a huge crisis, which promised a sharp decline in reputation. A few days after the launch of the iPhone 4 (the most successful Apple product ever launched), it was rumored that with a certain method of capturing a mobile phone (with the so-called “deadly capture”), its signal strength decreases. Trickles of complaints turned into a large-scale avalanche. For a few weeks, Apple made fun of everyone who could. But by mid-July, the criticism had ceased. And not just stopped, but rather well forgotten.


How did Apple achieve such seemingly impossible PR? - Breaking down 5 key “rules” that were previously considered to be immutable in PR. Jobs and the company did not follow any of these rules, but at the same time remained on top.



1. Apologize and take full responsibility



Jobs did not. The first complaint about the weakening of the antenna signal, he responded to the client as follows: “The weakening of the antenna performance occurs on any mobile phone, when it is picked up, stronger or weaker, depending on how you hold the phone and where the antenna is located. Such is the harsh truth of life of any mobile phone. If you encounter this on your iPhone 4, avoid taking it by the bottom left corner. Or just use one of the many available covers. "


2. Do not feed through the media those expectations of the public that do not plan to meet




3. If you are planning to distribute gifts - state it as soon as possible.




4. Avoid comparisons with competitors.




5. Keep unpopular details of the production process secret





So, in the situation with Antennagate, - Apple violated all five immutable rules of PR, which earned the righteous anger of conservative public relations specialists. However, Apple has achieved the desired result. Any competitor to Apple could have done the same thing, but none of them decided to do it. As a result, the competitors were trapped.


Primary sources
  1. Joshua Gans, PhD (Stanford). How To Get Away With It | // Harvard Business Review (Digital). 2011
  2. Pictures taken from the magazines "Mac Addict" and "MacUser".

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Source: https://habr.com/ru/post/427055/


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