Should The #CosbyMeme Social Media Disaster Worry Brands?

What should brands take­away from this lat­est social media cam­paign fail­ure?

Lisa Lacy By Lisa Lacy. Join the discussion » 0 comments

Cor­po­rate Amer­i­ca got anoth­er great case study this week in how not to drum up post-scan­dal good­will on social media thanks to a huge blun­der by the mar­ket­ing team for come­di­an Bill Cos­by. Experts agree Cosby’s camp should have seen the #Cos­byMeme fias­co com­ing. But, at the same time, they say it shouldn’t scare oth­er brands away from solic­it­ing con­sumer feed­back – it just goes to show that brands need to do their due dili­gence and be real­is­tic about how con­sumers are like­ly to engage with a brand before post­ing any requests.


In a move that may very well top lists of the Great­est Social Media Fails of 2014, come­di­an and sit­com dad Bill Cos­by quick­ly learned this week that the road social media infamy, much like hell, is paved with good inten­tions.

On Mon­day, Cos­by tweet­ed, “Go ahead. Meme me! #Cos­byMeme,” with a link to a meme gen­er­a­tor on his web­site, www.BillCosby.com/CosbyMeme.

By Tues­day, the gen­er­a­tor had been removed, along with any men­tions of it from Cosby’s Twit­ter account, where he has near­ly 4 mil­lion fol­low­ers.

That’s because instead of col­or­ful sweaters, Jell‑O and his epony­mous TV show, many Twit­ter users cre­at­ed memes about rape:

#BadTiming

Accord­ing to the Hol­ly­wood Reporter, Cos­by has been accused of sex­u­al­ly assault­ing 13 women. And, per the Asso­ci­at­ed Press, he set­tled out of court with one in woman in 2006.

The tim­ing of the meme gen­er­a­tor is per­haps curi­ous also giv­en the recent head­lines come­di­an Han­ni­bal Buress made when he called Cos­by a rapist dur­ing his act. What’s more, the YouTube video of his com­ments has more than 230,000 views as of Novem­ber 11.

And, in Sep­tem­ber, Vul­ture, the self-described “enter­tain­ment des­ti­na­tion from the team behind New York mag­a­zine,” pub­lished a time­line of abuse charges against Cos­by to coin­cide with the pub­li­ca­tion of his biog­ra­phy by for­mer CNN Man­ag­ing Edi­tor Mark Whitak­er in part because the book does not men­tion any of the alle­ga­tions.

The inter­net has shown time and time again that those with skele­tons in their clos­ets should not play with hash­tag or meme cam­paigns,” said Andy Beal, author of “Repped: 30 Days to a Bet­ter Online Rep­u­ta­tion”. “Usu­al­ly a meme attack of this nature is levied against a brand with a past that social media does­n’t eas­i­ly for­get. In the case of stars such as Bill Cos­by, the bur­den of proof is much low­er, and the mere alle­ga­tion of rape was enough to fan the flames of a meme fail. He, or his staff, should have known bet­ter.”

Scandals Haunt Brands On Social Media

The past has indeed haunt­ed many brands in com­pa­ra­ble hash­tag fails. In Novem­ber 2013, for exam­ple, finan­cial ser­vices com­pa­ny JPMor­gan, which was embroiled in scan­dals tied to the finan­cial cri­sis and mort­gage-backed secu­ri­ties, asked its fol­low­ers to sub­mit ques­tions for an exec­u­tive with the hash­tag #AskJPM. Instead, it was flood­ed with respons­es like:  


 

And, sim­i­lar­ly, the Mets, which have con­sis­tent­ly dis­ap­point­ed New York base­ball fans for years, should have per­haps antic­i­pat­ed the hash­tag #IamaMets­Fan­Be­cause might inspire respons­es like:


 

McDonald’s, too, did not like­ly expect the reac­tion it got to its 2012 #McD­Sto­ries cam­paign in which con­sumers instead shared mem­o­ries of unfa­vor­able fast food expe­ri­ences, as com­piled by the Dai­ly Mail here.

And, of course, there’s the #MyNYPD exam­ple, which was intend­ed to show­case good­will among the cit­i­zens of New York City and its police depart­ment, but instead inspired images of police bru­tal­i­ty.

#Takeaways For Brands

While not­ing Twit­ter users could have cre­at­ed anti-Cos­by memes on their own, Jason Bur­by, pres­i­dent of the Amer­i­c­as at dig­i­tal agency Pos­si­ble, said Cos­by and his team clear­ly fueled the fire.

To me the big ques­tion is about tim­ing and under­stand­ing the medi­um,” Bur­by said. “[Cos­by] is clear­ly spend­ing resources/effort to attempt to show [him­self] in a pos­i­tive light based on the recent accu­sa­tions and decline in pos­i­tive sen­ti­ment and pop­u­lar­i­ty. But this was not the way to do it clear­ly and this should have been seen com­ing.”

Tes­sa Wegert, com­mu­ni­ca­tions direc­tor at inter­ac­tive mar­ket­ing firm Enlight­en, agrees.

Con­ced­ing that vir­tu­al­ly every brand has expe­ri­enced a social media mis­fire at some point, she said the #Cos­byMeme exam­ple demon­strates “brands need to exam­ine their pro­mo­tion­al ideas from every pos­si­ble angle and imag­ine the worst-case sce­nario before mov­ing for­ward with a cam­paign. Obvi­ous­ly there’s no way to know exact­ly how con­sumers will react, but memes are vehi­cles for par­o­dies. They’re bound to get out of hand.”

How­ev­er, Bur­by said he hopes this doesn’t instill fear in brands about putting con­tent cre­ation into their cus­tomers’ hands.

Most times with a good prod­uct or ser­vice and fan base it will lead to pos­i­tive expres­sion and ulti­mate­ly help build and extend the brand,” he said. “But some more con­ser­v­a­tive brands get scared of what might hap­pen and this will be anoth­er exam­ple of what that can look like.”

Instead, Bur­by said the key is to not be scared of what poten­tial­ly could hap­pen, but to be real­is­tic about what will hap­pen.

Is it like­ly that some­one like Febreze is going to get sig­nif­i­cant push back in a social cam­paign?” Bur­by said. “No, it isn’t like­ly. In fact, they have a very loy­al con­sumer base that loves to talk about their prod­uct.”

Bot­tom line: Cos­by and his team should have seen this com­ing, Bur­by said:

This should not scare con­ser­v­a­tive brands into avoid­ing social or invit­ing con­sumer cre­ation out of fear, but it should force peo­ple to ask and be real­is­tic about ‘How are con­sumers like­ly to engage with the brand in this way right now?’”


Does your brand have a rep­u­ta­tion man­age­ment plan in place for when things go wrong on social media?

Lisa Lacy

Written by Lisa Lacy

Lisa is a senior features writer for Inked. She also previously covered digital marketing for Incisive Media. Her background includes editorial positions at Dow Jones, the Financial Times, the Huffington Post, AOL, Amazon, Hearst, Martha Stewart Living and the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund.

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