Lauren Hannaford |
While the national American Cancer Society has remained mum
on an organizational opinion regarding the cold-water challenge, which has
swept the nation in recent weeks, one local chapter leader decided to publicly question the viral awareness effort.
This local leader said, “I will tell you, I have a few
misgivings about the activity,” and also indicated that her local chapter had
not seen an increase in donations because of the challenge. As a cancer
survivor herself, I respect her opinion on the meaning behind the cold-water
challenge – it’s supposed to represent the shock someone feels when they learn for
the first time that they have cancer. I agree and don’t think the two compare;
however, I can’t help but see a big PR failure in what she said to the media.
First, whatever your opinion may be on the cold-water
challenge, she missed an opportunity to capitalize locally on a nationally recognized
effort. Instead, in my opinion, her words only hurt her case. Her message came
through as unappreciative. Even though her local chapter was not seeing a
direct correlation from the effort to an increase in donations, she could have
used local examples as a way to remind supporters of how important continued awareness
is, and then added information to the messaging to encourage donations.
There is no way to know how many people are doing the
challenge just because it’s a fad or if they are truly trying to support the
cause, but don’t tell people you think their effort is a waste. Chances are,
you’re going to offend someone, even if they understand and respect your
opinion. You also run the risk of backtracking on community engagement. Why
would anyone want to engage with your organization after you say his or her
efforts aren’t worth it?
Secondly, her negative comments completely overshadowed what
her local chapter was doing to raise awareness and raise funds. Instead of
talking about upcoming events, volunteer opportunities and ways to give, it’s
lumped into one sentence at the end of the article after the audience was
probably already lost.
Thirdly, she missed the opportunity to turn the national
effort into a localized effort for her own chapter. Why not host an event like
“the largest local cold-water challenge for the American Cancer Society ” and
suggest a $5 donation for participation. Invite the media and push the
awareness even further.
Finally, I believe that she jeopardized future awareness
campaigns and fundraising events for her local chapter. Her comments probably
turned off some current donors from being as supportive as they’ve been in the
past. Volunteer and donor appreciation is important, and her public message
gave the impression that any effort, whether grassroots or not, that didn’t
specifically raise money for the organization was a waste of time.
Knowing when and when not to interject personal opinion into
a situation is important for leaders of organizations. When it’s a potential
detriment to the success of your mission, make sure to consider your statements
before giving them publicly. It may even be worth it to write some talking
points and practice your answer.