09/11/2023
Silence is a terrible strategy 🤫
I heard about the outage on Wednesday from one of my school-mums-what’s-app group where someone had posted that the trains in Melbourne were down.
At 12pm on Wednesday, out of curiosity, I did a quick search on Optus’ socials to see if there were any communications about the outage that up to 10 million Australians were suffering.
Workers, business, exam students, hospitals, public transport all seriously affected and what did I find? 🍩
🍩 Nothing on LinkedIn
🍩 Nothing on Instagram
1️⃣ One post on Facebook that had been uploaded at 7am – by the time I saw it, it had 2.4K reactions, 842 shares and Optus had limited who could post a comment.
1️⃣ One post on Twitter (X) at 6.47 am, 341K views, 159 reports, 411 quotes, 348 comments/likes. The hashtag on Twitter (X) unveiled the normal anger and hillarity.
🙋🏼♀️ 🙋🏼♀️One press conference: At 10.30am, I read, the Optus CEO spoke to the media
Silence like this, is a terrible strategy. Being quiet and ‘hope this all goes away’ is not a strategy to follow in a crisis. It lets everyone else set the tone and tell their version of the story as seen on Twitter (X). And great comedians can have a field day - Jimmy Rees ‘The Great Optus Outage’.
What can we learn from this event? Own the conversation.
📱Be active on the socials: Have a load of customer facing team members posting, commenting, and updating every 10 minutes while the top brass and the engineers work out what the hell is happening.
📺 Be visible in the media: Speak up, speak up often, be empathetic, apologise, deal with the backlash in the short term, have a clear message that a multitude of people can ‘rinse and repeat’ and prepare a full analysis of what happened when you can. When it is all fixed, inform and compensate.