Good morning, PR pros:
Universal Pictures’ “Cats” film trailer has sparked some purrs but mostly yowls.
Journalists and other viewers responded immediately with snark.
Refinery29’s headline read, “Questions the internet (& I) have about the ‘Cats’ trailer.” CNN’s headline read, “Why the ‘Cats’ trailer creeped us out.” BingePost couldn’t choose and wrote an article titled, “20 headlines we almost wrote concerning the ‘Cats’ trailer.”
Social media users’ response was just as negative, and the trailer has more than 202,000 downvotes on YouTube (compared with 83,000 upvotes).
The negativity isn’t a death knell for the mouser film, however. “An extreme response is catnip for a studio chasing audiences in the age of Netflix,” The Guardian reported.
How might you land on your feet after scathing criticism?
Here are today’s top stories:
Ogilvy employees outraged over controversial client
Buzzfeed recently published a transcript of a meeting between Ogilvy’s chief executive, John Seifert, and employees discussing the agency’s decision to retain as a client the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, especially as political and human rights issues fester.
Here’s what one employee had to say:
“So I think what I heard is that we’re willing to work with companies that have oil spills. We’re willing to work with companies that sell big tobacco. We’re willing to work with companies that contribute to obesity rates. And I guess, what I’m mostly hearing is that we’re willing to work with companies that are allowing children to die and that are running concentration camps.”
Why you should care: The transcript underlines the crucial nature of employee advocacy and how an organization’s values are tied to it. In the meeting, another employee stated, “I’m not sure what our values are.” Make sure your employees know what your organization stands for.
Related reading:
FROM OUR EXPERTS
When is it appropriate to use parentheses? Should the word “while” be used as a synonym for “although”? Ragan’s Russell Working shares tips to help steer your writing in this final installment of our series on Strunk and White’s “The Elements of Style,” marking its 100th anniversary.
(image via)
7-Eleven seizes the (birth)day for an eponymous goodwill gesture
Here’s a Big Gulp of serendipity for you.
At 7:11 p.m. Central time on July 11 (that’s 7/11, of course), J’Aime Brown was born—weighing 7 pounds, 11 ounces. (Yes, we know.)
7-Eleven’s PR team jumped at the opportunity, welcoming the baby with a gift basket. But wait; there’s more. Soon after, the convenience store chain pledged $7,111 to Brown’s college fund.
No other way to celebrate a one-in-a-million 7-Eleven baby! Welcome to the world, J’aime Brown! She truly is our #LadyLucky 💕✨” https://t.co/xG5Rk8bm1K
— 7-Eleven (@7eleven) July 19, 2019
Why it matters: Consumers love a feel-good story, so pounce when you see an opportunity that elevates your brand. Focus on the hero(es) of the story, not your marketing messages—a storytelling best practice.
Related reading:
MEASURED THOUGHTS
Communicators have work to do when it comes to search engine optimization.
A recent SEO report by Reboot looked at 30 top marketing agencies and revealed that 70% of agencies had a poor page speed, according to Google’s Page Speed Insights tool. More than half (63%) lacked internal links, and 57% had undesirable pages indexed by Google.
Other issues include thin content—or website pages with no content—and pages that were poorly optimized for keywords (52% and 47%, respectively).
Miss Michigan swiftly loses crown over tweets
Just one day after Kathy Zhu was given the title “Miss Michigan,” the Miss World America organization stripped it after finding “offensive, insensitive and inappropriate content” under her Twitter account.
Miss World America’s State/National/Chief Director accused me of being racist, Islamaphobic, and insensitive.
They stripped me of my Miss Michigan title due to my refusal to try on a hijab in 2018, my tweet about black on black gun violence, and “insensitive” statistical tweets. pic.twitter.com/K1Btho0Pgq
— Kathy Zhu (@PoliticalKathy) July 19, 2019
Miss World America’s State/National/Chief Director accused me of being racist, Islamaphobic, and insensitive.
They stripped me of my Miss Michigan title due to my refusal to try on a hijab in 2018, my tweet about black on black gun violence, and “insensitive” statistical tweets. pic.twitter.com/K1Btho0Pgq
— Kathy Zhu (@PoliticalKathy) July 19, 2019
Why you should care: The incident reveals the importance of vetting anyone you want to employ as a public face of your organization. As more brand managers turn to influencers and rising internet stars to make headlines, ample research is necessary to avoid controversy.
Related reading:
SOCIAL BUZZ
Many on social media celebrated writer Ernest Hemingway’s 120th birthday over the weekend.
“There is no rule on how to write. Sometimes it comes easily and perfectly; sometimes it’s like drilling rock and then blasting it out with charges.” Ernest Hemingway, born on this day in 1899 pic.twitter.com/tZ58aj4cGG
— Ray E. Boomhower (@RayBoomhower) July 21, 2019
The author’s terse, straightforward style has inspired generations of scribes—and even a writing app bearing his name.
Do you have a favorite writer who guides your prose style? Share your influencers @bekiweki with #MorningScoop.
CAPTION THIS GIF
It can be rough to jump into a long list of tasks after the weekend, but some news and emails can be as good as a cup of coffee (almost).
What gets you excited to hit “send?” Caption the GIF below under the hashtag #MorningScoop, and we’ll share the best in tomorrow’s Scoop.
Happy Monday, PR, marketing and social media pros!
What has you excited to hit “send” this morning? What do you love receiving in your inbox?
Caption this GIF, and I’ll share the best in tomorrow’s #MorningScoop. pic.twitter.com/v7CdGIgb5H
— Beki Winchel (@bekiweki) July 22, 2019
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