Guest guest Posted May 29, 2006 Report Share Posted May 29, 2006 May 28, 2006] Regaining consumers' trust: Bausch & Lomb comes clean on concerns about 'ReNu' http://www.tmcnet.com/usubmit/2006/05/28/1661268.htm (Baltimore Sun, The (KRT) Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge) May 28-- Wearing a dark suit and standing before a nondescript backdrop, Bausch & Lomb chief executive Zarrella looks into the camera and soberly lays it on the line. " The health and safety of your eyes has always been our first priority. That's why we've stopped selling one of our ReNu contact lens solutions: MoistureLoc, " Zarrella says, speaking slowly and deliberately during the commercial, which recently began airing nationwide. " Despite exhaustive testing, we're unable to eliminate the possibility of a link to a rare eye infection. " Quick and conciliatory damage control is considered key to countering corporate catastrophes. Modern examples run the gamut from Martha showcasing recipes she picked up in prison to soften her image as she reclaimed her decorating empire to Exxon's shutting down communications after its Alaskan oil spill in 1989, which exacerbated bad impressions. The health care industry is particularly sensitive turf because product failures and shortcomings can affect the quality, even the length, of people's lives. In 2004, Merck & Co. was criticized for its reluctance to recall Vioxx after it was found that the arthritis painkiller could increase the risk for blood clot-related heart attacks and strokes for long-term users. Conversely, & 's rapid pulling of Tylenol from store shelves amid a tampering scare in 1982 earned it public and industry praise, and a generation later is still considered the gold standard in corporate damage control. Bausch & Lomb's response has been viewed as somewhere in the middle - - both complicated and facilitated by modern technology. Rumors about Bausch & Lomb have multiplied on the Internet and television and print media have taken the company to task. The company turned to all three outlets to spread its counter- message. It has run print ads in national and local newspapers along with the TV commercial in which Zarrella is the plaintive -- if unglamorous -- star. It also launched an online information center and sent out hundreds of thousands of e-mail messages to customers. Barbara Puffer, a public relations professional from Connecticut, has worn contact lenses for 40 years and uses ReNu products. She got an e-mail from the company in mid-May and almost immediately posted it to an online communications group, under the heading " Hot news ... I have my eye on a great PR case unfolding now. " Bausch & Lomb must " have some savvy PR folks cranking out the message, " she wrote. " The cost to do nothing would have been far greater for their reputation as a good health care provider, " said Puffer, who teaches an online course on the topic at University of land University College. " Had they not immediately worked on this containment and recovery, it could have affected other products. " The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced this month during a continuing investigation that MoistureLoc was the likely cause of an increase in a fungal eye disease that has led to vision loss and corneal transplants. By the time of the announcement, Bausch and Lomb was already in full communications crisis mode to protect the 153-year-old business. The Food and Drug Administration issued a finding May 15 that claimed the Rochester, N.Y., company did not properly review MoistureLoc after it was on the market and did not notify the agency of reported infections in a timely manner, which the company disputes. The business is also under fire for waiting until April 13 to take MoistureLoc off store shelves after the FDA announced on April 10 that it was looking into the product as a cause of the infections. In an e-mail interview, Bausch & Lomb spokeswoman Margaret Graham said the company stopped shipments of MoistureLoc immediately, but " within two business days " learned there was confusion in the market about what products were safe to use. The company then formally removed MoistureLoc from retailers and alerted consumers to not use it. " We regret any confusion caused during those two days and if there was something we could go back and change, it would be eliminating that confusion from the start, on April 10, " Graham wrote. According to the latest data from the CDC, there are about 130 confirmed cases of Fusarium keratitis -- the infection associated with MoistureLoc -- in Puerto Rico and 26 states, including two cases in land. Nearly 40 of those infected have had to undergo corneal transplants to save their vision. Since deciding to permanently take MoistureLoc off the market as of May 15, the same day Zarrella's commercial appeared, Bausch and Lomb's full attention has turned toward rebuilding its reputation. " I don't want to go into the specifics of our marketing plan for competitive considerations ... but you can be sure that we're going to do what it takes to rebuild this brand and regain confidence in our products, " Zarrella said during a conference call May 15. The chief executive weathered his own PR crisis in 2002 when it was discovered he'd lied on his resume, falsely claiming he held a master's degree in business administration. At the time, Zarrella offered to resign, but Bausch & Lomb chose to withhold his $1.1 million bonus that year instead. During Zarrella's conference call, he estimated the MoistureLoc recall alone will cost as much as $70 million. On top of that will be the lost sales: MoistureLoc was a $100 million product last year. But the lost market share could be the most devastating. Also, since April, Bausch & Lomb's stock is down about 24 percent.To counter those effects, the company has offered fact sheets and product replacements or refunds as well as a Wear & Care kit full of freebies meant to encourage proper eye maintenance. It has communicated with thousands of eye-care professionals and given multiple presentations to various organizations. When a company faces a public relations predicament, a series of events is set in motion, said Jay White, chief executive of Baltimore Research Inc., a firm that runs focus groups for companies looking to gauge public reaction to products, advertising and even crisis management efforts. Large corporations typically have in-house teams that monitor media accounts of troublesome situations, which they use to gauge sentiment. Then they get to the real work, assembling a team of public relations specialists, ad agents and executives to brainstorm possible counterbalance measures. All of it must happen on a tight timeline. " The major objective is to turn a negative into a positive, " said White, who saw such plans in action while on the job before starting Baltimore Research. He spent 13 years in sales and marketing for Dow Chemical Co., which manufactured napalm and Agent Orange, and another eight-plus years at National Fruit Product Co., which had to deal with the 1989 backlash against apples sprayed with the ripening agent Alar. Some environmental groups contended it increased the risk of cancer in children. When it comes to health, " perception is reality, " White said. " It gets back to emotional versus rational behavior. " Reputation is a company's " number one asset, " according to Bernstein, a 1977 University of land University College graduate who runs a crisis management company in California and is the author of Keeping the Wolves at Bay: A Media Training Manual. Bernstein tells clients there are five tenets of effective health care crisis communication: It must be prompt, compassionate, honest, informative and interactive. Thus far, he says, Bausch & Lomb has ignored at least three. The company did not share all of its information, hasn't been apologetic enough and was too slow to respond to concerns and initiate a recall, he said. " You need to respond very quickly, and if you don't, several things happen, " Bernstein said: rumor, innuendo, loss of public confidence and the prospect of more lawsuits. Bernstein pointed to Duke University Medical Center's botched heart and lung transplant that led to the death of a 17-year-old girl in 2003 because her blood type and the donor's differed as a sensitive situation that was managed well. " They admitted their mistake right away, " he said, putting the surgeon on camera " practically in tears " and volunteering to do a 60 Minutes interview. The hospital also ended up paying a lower settlement to the family than might be expected, he said, because the response was appreciated. " They were speaking from the heart, " Bernstein said. " People understand that mistakes happen, even at Bausch & Lomb. Nobody's perfect, people understand. But when you try to obfuscate or tiptoe around the truth, that's when you start to look like you've committed a crime. " " The pharmaceutical industry in general, with rare exception " handles crises badly, Bernstein said. " It's astounding how businesses in any industry, particularly health care, fail to learn from the mistakes of those who precede them. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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