Prescribing versus describing: testing image restoration strategies in a crisis situation
Corporate Communications: An International Journal
ISSN: 1356-3289
Article publication date: 30 January 2009
Abstract
Purpose
Image restoration theory has become a dominant paradigm for examining corporate communication in times of crises. However, much insight gleaned from scholarly research in this area remains descriptive – simply recounting how certain corporations or companies communicated during times of crisis – rather than prescriptive. Therefore, to provide more direct guidance to corporations and organizations, this paper offers the first empirical test of Benoit's five image restoration strategies vis‐à‐vis each other simultaneously within the context of a single crisis situation.
Design/methodology/approach
An experimental investigation that measures consumers' reactions to differentially manipulated crisis‐communication messages. Methods of data analysis include ANOVA and post hoc comparisons of means.
Findings
Results indicate that the strategy of reducing the offensiveness of the event consistently led to higher reputation‐related perceptions of a company than did the other four strategies – denial, evasion of responsibility, corrective action, and mortification – when implemented during a product‐harm crisis situation.
Practical implications
Findings have direct implications for corporate communicators and the organizations they represent in developing and implementing crisis‐communication strategies.
Originality/value
This paper offers an original test of all image restoration strategies within the context of a single crisis. In addition to providing clearer guidelines to practitioners, such inquiry also accelerates the transfer of image restoration theory from the realm of retrospection and description to that of prescription and inference.
Keywords
Citation
Dardis, F. and Haigh, M.M. (2009), "Prescribing versus describing: testing image restoration strategies in a crisis situation", Corporate Communications: An International Journal, Vol. 14 No. 1, pp. 101-118. https://doi.org/10.1108/13563280910931108
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2009, Emerald Group Publishing Limited