From Sierra Leone to AI: Modern Crisis Communication Tactics
Digital Coffee: Marketing BrewJune 18, 2025
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50:4869.76 MB

From Sierra Leone to AI: Modern Crisis Communication Tactics

In this episode of Digital Coffee Marketing Brew, host Brett Deister interviews Angela Bettencourt, a global communication professional with over 20 years of experience. Angela shares her insights on how businesses should prepare for and handle PR crises, the importance of adapting messaging for diverse markets, and the role of storytelling in rebuilding public trust. She recounts her experiences, including organizing Sierra Leone's first-ever renewable energy conference, and discusses the impact of AI on global communications and crisis management. Tune in to learn practical tips on leveraging technology, embracing strategic communication, and maintaining organizational values during challenging times.

3 Fun Facts:

  1. Angela Betancourt is a scuba diving enthusiast—her LinkedIn banner is a scuba diving photo!
  2. During a major conference in Sierra Leone, Angela and her team had to invite 149 Paramount Chiefs by texting each one individually on a flip phone because most didn’t have internet access.
  3. Angela brews very strong coffee at home with a percolator and prefers trying unique, local coffee shops when traveling.

Key Themes:

  1. Crisis communication planning and response
  2. Adapting messaging for diverse global audiences
  3. Leveraging technology and AI for research
  4. Challenges of international campaigns and logistics
  5. Storytelling to rebuild and maintain trust
  6. Navigating tariffs and international market entry
  7. Importance of organizational values during crises

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I think every business, large or small should

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say, okay, if something hits the fan,

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what is our game plan? Avoidance. Sticking your head in the sand

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is not it. You want to address it quickly.

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And welcome to a new episode of

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Digital Coffee Marketing Brew. And I'm your host, Brett

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Deister. And if you can please subscribe to this podcast and all your favorite podcasting.

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Absolutely. A five star review really does help with rankings. Let me know

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how I am doing. But this week I have Angela with me

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and she is a global communication professional with over 20 years of

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experience. She has worked on projects across five

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continents, including two years in Sierra Leone

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during the Ebola virus crisis. She is the founder and CEO of

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Benacourt Group, a strategic communication marketing

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firm dedicated to amplifying individuals, businesses and organizations

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driving positive environmental and social

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impact. But welcome to the show, Angela. Thank you so

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much. Thank you for having me. I'm excited to be here. Yes. The first question

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I asked all my guests is, are you a coffee or tea drinker? I am

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a coffee drinker. I love tea, so no hate on the tea, but I'm a

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coffee drinker for sure. Anything specific or

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is it just Starbucks or whatever else is in the Keurig? I

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brew my own coffee at home. I have my little like percolator,

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cafeteria thing that I use and I make myself very, very

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strong, strong, strong cups of coffee in the morning. And then I have my own

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little, my little favorite creamer that I put into it. But if I'm

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out and about and need a bit of coffee.

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Yeah, I try to go to coffee places that are unique

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to the destination and if all else fails, can't go wrong with

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a grande coffee from Starbucks. Yeah, it's

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easier to find. But I get you about finding the little independent

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shops that usually have the better cups of coffee. Exactly.

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So I gave a brief summary of your expertise. Can you give our listeners a

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little bit more about what you do? Yeah. So as you, as you

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mentioned, I've been working in PR marketing industry for over

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20 years and my career trajectory has been

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extremely nonlinear. I've worked in so many different industries. Started off in

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hospitality and worked my way through several PR

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agencies in New York and agencies with offices in

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San Francisco and just, you know, the really big cities. And I worked

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in house for some very large brands. And then the

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last couple of years I've been working,

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my work has been focused on environmental and social impact. And what does that

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mean? Essentially, I love working with businesses,

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organizations, individuals that are trying to do good

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things for the planet. Whether that is a

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ocean advocacy nonprofit, whether

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it's a film that talks about

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climate change in a really great storytelling way,

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or a business that is creating products

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out of recycled materials, these are the types

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of businesses and organizations and individuals that I love

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working with because they're doing such interesting, cool

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things. And I just want to be there to help them amplify and

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elevate these stories and their projects so that more people are

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aware of what they are doing. Got you. So how do you adapt

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messaging to resonate with diverse markets and cultures across

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different continents? Absolutely. So it really comes

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down to your audience. It comes down to

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the people you're serving, who is the product for,

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who is this nonprofit for, who are the

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people that you are trying to help?

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And once you have identified these

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elements, then you create messaging

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that helps you best deliver

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your message, your story, what you're trying to achieve

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to this audience. And so it doesn't matter

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if I'm in, you know, working in Sierra Leone or

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working on a client project in Kenya

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or on a project in London, I

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always think about, who are we in service

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for? Who is this for? What are we trying to achieve?

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And why does this product or service or film

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or whatever, it might be important to the. To your

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audience and how it's going to make their lives or their community

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or the planet more generally

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better? And so

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that's true of the audience, it's true of the culture that you're in.

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It's really about having your

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audiences come first in your messaging and how

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it benefits them. And once you know the context,

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then you can adapt your message to

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that context in a way that will resonate. And then what's of

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the marketers, like, never been to that country, but they have to talk to it.

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Like, how's the best way of figuring that out? Because I think most of the

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problem is that if you've never been to a place, don't know the culture of

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the place, don't know how they speak slang or whatever,

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it's harder to make a message for something you have no idea about.

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Yeah. And I think, luckily for technology, there are so many ways to

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access culture these days. And so to

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anyone who's trying to break into a new market or wants to

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introduce a product to an entirely different culture, the first thing

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is, I would say, is if you don't know anything about that culture, find someone

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who does. You know, connect with them on social media,

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reach out to them on, you know, on LinkedIn, on Instagram,

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and schedule a call on WhatsApp on Zoom and talk

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to them, talk, talk to them about their community,

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about who they are, about what matters to this community

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about. Because it has to be people first. It has

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to be person first and humanity forward.

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And so once you, you know, you can find someone

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who's your, essentially your, your, your translator,

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your introduction to a culture,

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that local person is going to know that culture and so

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rely on them, talk to them as a way to

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understand what you're trying to achieve. Right.

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If you, if you determine that your product or your service is

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going to perform, is going to do good in this community,

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all you have to do is get into this community. Then

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starting with the people there, the local people there. You can't go wrong.

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All right? And I mean even for like a preliminary like

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research, is AI okay for that? Like just to do your topical research

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and then talk to somebody? Because sometimes you don't even know where to start.

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Absolutely. I think it's really great to educate yourself

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about a market ahead of time. And I think,

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you know, 40 years ago that would have been an encyclopedia or whatever

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50 years ago. And then later on it would have been, you

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know, you would just go, you know, you'd go on Google and look. So if

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you tell AI or OpenAI or any of these Gemini or any of these other

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platforms, hey, I need a brief history about this country. I need,

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I need to understand, I need a little bit of understanding of

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this story of this country and this AI platform gives you

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the answer. I think that's great. I think it's really great. I think it's, it

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shows your effort in wanting to understand a culture before, ahead of

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speaking to someone there. And you can say, you know, I,

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here's what I discovered online, right? That this, you know, X country,

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X city, X whatever is such and such and such

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and such and such. And historically xyz. And

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now that I have that information, I want to hear it from you. What's your

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lived experience there? What's your actual day to day?

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What is, what is of the time right now? Right.

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So 100% sure, use, use whatever

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knowledge source you can to educate

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yourself. Obviously you want to make sure everything's factual and that you're getting information

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from credible places. And yeah, I think it's respectful

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to educate yourself ahead of a conversation with a person.

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But I don't think that Google research

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and, or any artificial intelligence is a replacement

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for a conversation with an actual person in this destination.

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I think it's complimentary and I think it's a, it's a setting,

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the foundation for a conversation. So basically, Gen

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Z making chatgpt their, like, lifeguide is probably the

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worst thing you can do right now. I think asking

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ChatGPT a bunch to make a bunch of assumptions about people and a certain

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culture, and then you just walk into that culture with all these

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assumptions that whatever the platform gave you, I

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don't recommend, I don't recommend. I

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don't think anyone would want that to be their own experience. I don't

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necessarily know if I want someone to just go onto, you know, an

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AI platform, pull up a bunch of stuff about my city and then be like,

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so this is what I know about your city and this is what I've assumed

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about all of you, you know, everyone here, when that's

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just. I don't recommend. I do think it's great for research.

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I do think it's great to empower yourself with knowledge ahead of a conversation.

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But this is, this is one of those areas where at the end of the

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day, a Zoom call, a WhatsApp call

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is still extremely necessary when you're talking about

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bringing something to a market. And I think

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some great people will tell you if you're developing a product, to test it out

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in the market as quickly as possible. Right. Don't wait for it to be perfect

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and you want to put it out there and get real human,

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human feedback about the

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product. So, yeah, AI does not replace a

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conversation. And can you share example of a global

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communication campaign you led that had a significant impact and

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what factors contributed to its success? Yeah. So one

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example that I'll share that I felt really, really felt international to

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me. The two years that I was in Sierra Leone, there were a

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lot of different things going on in this program, a lot of incredible things that

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the people on this team were able to do that was just

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brilliant and in the big scheme of things, had great impact in

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society. But one of the things that I was tasked to lead, to help lead,

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at least from the communications and marketing side, was the

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country's first ever renewable energy conference.

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And we had a very short window of time to pull this off,

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and it required participation and

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collaboration with the Minister of Energy and his team. At that

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time of administration, it required a lot of input,

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it required a lot of funding, it required a lot of different things. And

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we invited several hundred people from around the world

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to attend this conference. So the majority of attendees were Sierra

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Leonean, but we had people come in from Nigeria, we had people come in from

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China, we had people come in from Europe. The United States. I was part

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of the team helping to literally send out those invitations and coordinate their

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visas upon arrival. And then

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this conference was part of a bigger story. Sierra Leone was one of

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the first countries to sign a, an agreement or a compact

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with the Energy Africa Campaign, which was at the time a

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British led initiative to help bring renewable

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energy power to a region of the world that

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was so energy poor. And Sierra Leone was one of the first countries,

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or I believe the first country to sign this compact. And so

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we're talking like ministers from other countries. It was a big deal.

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And this conference was born out of the sign signing of

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this compact that was like, okay, well we're going to have these ministers come in

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and sign this document. We might as well build a bear conversation around

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it. And several things happened. One, it was

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wildly successful conference, very, very proud of that.

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And so many pieces went into it. And it was

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really about informing and letting the world know, especially

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European markets, that Ebola was in the

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past. The country was now looking forward to

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the next step to recovery, to thriving, to bouncing back.

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And the renewable energy market was ripe and ready for

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investment. And so this, my part was

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to get out press releases, help set up press conferences to let the

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world know that Sierra Leone gets six months

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of sunshine a year opposite of the rainy season, which is like another

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six months. And that's a whole other thing. This country with so much

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sunshine and so much opportunity was ready for

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renewable energy sources from all over the world.

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And long story, it's already a long story. But longer story short,

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the campaign resulted in over two

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dozen international media coverage. So from

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Europe, from around the greater

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African region, from London, which is a

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really, really big deal. And so I would say that was

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very successful campaign to let the world know that

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Sierra Leone is ready for investment, ready for renewable

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energy. Business got you. And

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was there any pitfalls you had to overcome? And how did you overcome those pitfalls

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with so many? One, it was, we were

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a small team. I'm very, till this day,

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I'm just in awe of what this team was able to accomplish

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literally in like a three month period to pull something of this

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magnitude off. The other worry is

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that this whole conference was about

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bringing renewable energy to a country that is energy

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poor, that does not have a power

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grid, that can be at the time

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power and bring energy to everyone. One of

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our worries that would have been super ironic, but

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possibly also proving a point is

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what if the power goes off during the conference?

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What if that happens? It didn't. We prepared

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adequately for that. Moment to avoid

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that moment from happening. But that was something we had to overcome. We had to

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come up with a plan. Another point to overcome

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was the coordinating international visas

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and the access of logistical

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access from the airport of Sierra Leone to the mainland part

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of Sierra Leone, which required a boat ride. So there was

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a lot of questions around, how do we get people

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that are coming in smoothly transitioned from the airport,

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which required, you know, a bus ride, a boat ride, a bus ride,

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and get them to this conference, especially people that have never been

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to the country before. We wanted

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to make sure everyone was. There was food at this conference

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and so finding

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partners that would cater

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to this amount of people. So there were several challenges

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that we had to overcome. One of the most interesting ones was

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Sierra Leone has what they call Paramount Chiefs,

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which is kind of a governor, if

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you will. They have 149 paramount chiefs, which kind of represent these

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different states within Sierra Leone. And they're kind of like governors would be in the

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United States. Most of these

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chiefs do not have Internet connection.

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So to invite them it required old school

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texting and keeping track of

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this long list. Right. It was like, how do we

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email? We can't email them, we can't

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send them an invite and we can't mail them an invite. How do we

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invite these Paramount Chiefs to come

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to this event?

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There was no other way than to just sit there one evening

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with my colleague and just start texting on a flip phone.

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It was sometimes you just have to get back to basics to

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overcome challenges. When technology cannot

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help you, you have to just go back to the basics. And I, and I

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find that to be an interesting life lesson in many

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ways. Yes. Sometimes old tech is the best. Tech.

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Exactly. Or no tech is the best.

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Yeah. So it was, it was interesting. You know, you really have to just be

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resourceful and really creative. And so I really like

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to think about those opportunities as they're not so much challenges. But,

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you know, if you've ever wanted to try to think outside the box, here you

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go. Here's the opportunity to get really creative and to literally think

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outside of the parameters that you're accustomed to.

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And then how can small businesses with limited budgets adopt a global.

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And then how can small businesses with limited budgets. Absolutely.

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And that's a great question because again, I think that probably now

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more than ever, it's so easy to connect with people

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around the world and, and really leverage the

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technologies that are currently available. And it doesn't

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have to cost a lot of money. I think the key, though, is strategy.

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Where do you want to go? Why do you want to go there and what

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benefit can you provide to the people there?

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And so that is the main thing. I love

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seeing small jewelry brands and other

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businesses that have very small operations in the States,

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but they're eager to bring their products, product and

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ship to people. And so it's, it's, the question is if you really

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believe in your product doing well there and it makes sense for what you're

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trying to achieve and you can identify your target audience in these

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markets, then there, it's, there's

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never been a better time to set yourself up logistically

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to support that. Right. It's easy now to

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ship products worldwide, easier than it's ever been.

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And so you think about what does that look like logistically for you?

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Right. And I think that really just having a

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plan of action, of execution that makes sense for your

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operations is the key. And thinking about

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things like pricing, what about

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shipping fees? What about maybe any import fees? Are

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these things that you want to absorb? Are you going to work them into

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your international pricing for your customers to cover those

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costs? And so when you start thinking about the

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customer first and their experience, that will

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guide, I think that would really guide you as to the best

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way to bring your product to a new country. Does the

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infrastructure there support this? Do you want

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to set up? There's a brand that I really love, she

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does like home interior and she's just always been

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British based. And she not too long ago she posted on her

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Instagram that she opened up this huge warehouse in the United

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States and she's high volume, high, you know, very

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recognized brand in Europe and she posted this huge

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warehouse in the United States and her thing was, okay,

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US Folks, now it's going to be easiest as it's ever been for you to

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order these products because she's thinking about people first.

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And you know, in an age where you can

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have same day or next day delivery and sometimes overnight

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delivery, what does that look like? What does the delivery process

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look like for your customer? So once you start thinking about customer first,

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I think that is your North Star in how you enter any

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new market, but especially an international market. And have the

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tariffs actually played any role in maybe

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negatively impacting all that stuff? Because I know at least in the

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US we do have uncertainty in that. And so has it

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negatively impacted going more global because of it's more

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expensive, it's more expensive maybe to ship into the United States or whatever?

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Yeah, and that, that's a really great question. I think it depends on the industry

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and I also think it depends on your.

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And I think it's, I think it's going to be very personal to the business.

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So I think some industries are going to be feeling it a lot more than

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other industries. I know in the, in the retail industry, I'm

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hearing retailers that are again,

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European based, that have US audiences, US

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customers, some of them are just absorbing the costs.

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They're saying we're not increasing prices, we're going to absorb the cost on

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our end to keep things smooth for the customer.

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And so it's really, I think that

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to different degrees the tariffs are going to impact, especially if

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you rely on international shipping, you have an international audience already.

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I think it's going to perhaps impact your supply chain

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and definitely some industries more than others. And so I think if you're

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an industry where tariffs are going to impact you, it's rough,

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it's a hard time. And I think it really comes down to

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the current state of your business and where you're based

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and what resources might be available for you as a business owner in

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your particular area and, and also your

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ability to absorb or not the price

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of what it's going to cost your customer. And

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we've, you know, I think I've already seen prices go up. I've seen, I've

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gotten like notifications that prices are going to go up in some

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stores and that really just comes down to

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that individual business, some larger than others that are saying,

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you know what, you know, it's, it's prices are going

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to go up a little bit, we're going to absorb a little bit or we're

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absorbing everything and we want to keep things the

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same price for you. And that's what I've seen from

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retailers that have one or two retailers that I've seen

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that I, that I'm a customer of have they have

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absorbed the price and just to keep it better for the customer.

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So it's, it's, it's a great question, but it's a hard question because I think

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it depends on the industry and I think it depends on your supply

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chain and I think it depends on the, the

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current status of your business. I think if you're hurting,

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it might just hurt even more. And if you're in a position where you

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can survive it,

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I think, you know, that's good for you. I saw

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in the news there was farmers, farming community

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that said, you know, we can absorb the cost for the next couple of

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months but after that we might be in trouble. Right. So I just think it

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depends. And what do you believe are the most common mistakes companies

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make when facing a PR crisis? And how can they avoid that?

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So crises will happen, right? Just like in life,

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right? Things happen. And to

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avoid is not the approach I think

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every business, large or small should say,

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okay, if something hits the fan,

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what is our game plan? Avoidance. Sticking your head in the sand

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is not it. You want to address it quickly. You want to,

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you want to research, get to the bottom of

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things, and you want to be prepared

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to explain what happened. But even more

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importantly, accountability account of, someone's got to be

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accountable for what happened. If it was an error that your organization

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made, and I've seen it happen all the time in smaller levels of

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sorry, this shipment just isn't going to get to you on time. We

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made a mistake with our XYZ shipping process.

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Here's what we're doing to correct it, here's what we're going to do in the

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future to let it not happen again. And here's

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10% off. Right? Like you never want to avoid.

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If you're in a crisis situation and you're still needing to assess,

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the first thing that you can do is say, we're in a crisis situation

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and I'm still trying to figure out what's going on. We're getting to the bottom

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of it, we're investigating, we're looking into it, we are taking action.

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That is key. Avoidance. Denying is not

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going to work, especially not in this day where things

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will go, things will get tweaked, things will just get shared quicker than you can

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even say, right? And so the key is

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acknowledge, investigate,

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understand what's going on, take corrective action.

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You know, take accountability, take corrective action. If it was something that's out of

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your control, but it's still impacting your business

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or it's still kind of brought into a crisis, same thing applies.

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You have to recognize what role you played in a crisis.

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And if there was no role at all, well, what role are you going to

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play in the solution? You want to make sure you're taking action.

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You want to make sure you let immediately communicate what you're doing to correct

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the problem, what you're doing to avoid it from happening ever

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again. And then you want to continue to take those

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steps to show that you've made a difference.

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Sending out a press release, but not taking any action behind

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the scenes is a negative action. You

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want to take action and you want to find solutions and you want to put

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things into place to avoid these things happening ever again.

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And then in your experience, how can storytelling play a role

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in rebuilding public trust after a crisis? Because there is that after

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the crisis ends, you have to rebuild that trust again. Right? And that's why.

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But that's why your response to the crisis is so important for how things are

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going to play out. Because by tackling it head

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on, not sticking your head in the sand, by tackling it head on and

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saying this happened. If apology needs

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to be, if there needs to be an apology, then you apologize. And

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then you take corrective action and you show transparency. Because

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your response is where the trust is begins.

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If you're avoidant, if you're in denial, if you push blame

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to everyone else except for yourself or your company or whomever or

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whatever happened, you are breaking the foundation of

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trust. And so from the very beginning,

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trust is on the table. How you respond

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and what you do every step of the way until it's resolved.

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And then what you do after is where

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the trust is. If you're

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shady, you're not clearing your communications, you're denying,

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you're pushing, placing blame everywhere except for where you

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need to be. If you're not taking accountability, if you're

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screaming at people, yelling at people on

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threads, Instagram, whatever it is, you are not

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going to be seen as a trustful person. And

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now a situation that was already bad is

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now 10 times worse, and it's going to be much more difficult to recover

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from just because of failure to take those

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steps. So if you do those things and tackle it head on

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and apologize sincerely if you need to, and take corrective

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action and then demonstrate, show people. Don't just

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tell people, show people what you are doing. What

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does that look like? Maybe it's a tour of your factory.

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Maybe it's, you know,

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it's a visibility report. It's something.

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But you're transparent about what you're doing and you're demonstrating that

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you've taken actionable steps, then the next step is

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here, here, the outcome of the steps we have taken.

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And you're transparent and open. You know, it's a town

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hall. It's a. Ask me, you know, ask me anything on,

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you know, it's an Instagram live. It's whatever it is.

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Now you are saying, gosh, you know, things happen, things

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hit the fan, things go wrong, that this person was on top of it, they

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stayed ahead of it, they are sincere, they're taking

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actions. And that's all part of that storytelling,

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right? Talking about who you are. And when a crisis

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happens, leaning on those initial values

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and tripling down on your stance and your mission is

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extremely important. And so your storytelling is happening

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in your accountability and the actions that you're taking.

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Here's an infographic of the 10 steps we took to correct action.

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Here is an IG live with

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a non leadership, an employee, whoever, who is our

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testimonial to what we're doing. Here's a third party

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independent person that came in to

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review and here's their outcome. We're putting it all out for you to see.

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Here's you know, the story is that narrative that you're telling.

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And so the actions

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turn into the stories that you're telling your audience. And then

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afterward you continue to tell the story of,

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you know, a year has passed. Reflect on what you've learned,

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reflect on the impact

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show. Demonstrate a year later, two years later, that you're

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still keeping your word about the things that you said. Those

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are the stories that you want to start telling

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very early on and continue to tell in your business,

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service, organization, etc.

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Got you. And can you share a specific story about a challenging crisis

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you managed and how you successfully navigated that?

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I have a few. I'm

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trying to think, I would say

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part of me is I'm also grateful that I haven't been a part of

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a crisis that was like, so, you know, an international

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incident or anything like that. I'd like to think that the

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organizations and the businesses that I've worked with have been really good about

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putting practices and procedures in place to avoid those types of things. But

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I will share one story that I think was kind of interesting. In my experience

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in Sierra Leone around this conference, we had someone,

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you know, I was mentioning that we had these international visas that needed to be

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established as a landing visa so that number one, they would be emailed

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ahead of time to the attendees and there would be a

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visa available for them, the actual visa available for them at the airport.

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I had somebody coming in from China that

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I guess the email was sent to them en route to Nigeria,

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their connecting flight, and they never

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couldn't access their emails or didn't have Internet connection. And now they're in a

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connecting flight in Nigeria and the Nigerian airport wasn't going to let them leave. So

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I start getting calls at 3 o' clock in the morning like, hi, I'm coming

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from here. I need to get into this. You know, this is someone who we,

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we needed to have at this conference. And

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I quickly knew that this was going to be a problem. And almost like, how

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do I sought, Like I'M not an intern. Like, I'm not a, you

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know, visa person. I'm not part of this government at all.

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Like, it's wild that they're calling me. But I guess because I, you know,

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as part of this invitation process, they were calling me at three o' clock in

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the morning. I remember speaking to Nigerian authorities

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about that. In fact, we had sent this visa to this person that they're not

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staying there. They're trying to get in transit. Talk about

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interacting with someone of a different culture, of a powerful position.

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And I'm not a person of government authority of any kind,

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but I'm trying to work out with this person. They were a little bit panicked,

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a little bit. If you can imagine, you're traveling this long way. And

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then once again, I was able to

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somehow talk to them. They were able to get on the flight, and when they

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landed in Sierra Leone, their visa wasn't there. So now it was

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more phone calls. And I'm just sitting here thinking,

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this is bad. How do we get this person in? And I can't solve

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this. I need to call some people. I didn't really know what to do, and

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I was feeling a little bit panicked. But I realized that

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we did have these. Even though the documentation wasn't there, I knew that we

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could produce this documentation eventually. I

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just took a deep breath, I calmed myself, and I thought, okay,

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let me start calling some people that can make these

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decisions to let someone into a country that's not me. It was

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just interesting that they were calling me

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again. It was very early in the morning at this time, and I spoke to

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a lot of authorities and I also

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said that, well, the Minister of Energy will vouch for

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this, you know, because I had a good relationship with the Minister of

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Energy Wild,

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and it worked out. But I realized I was. It did all work

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out in the end, but I realized it was a very. I felt like it

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was a situation where I could have overstep boundaries or

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the immigration officer did get mad at me.

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I'm like, this is not, you know,

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so of course you don't want to.

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You want to keep a clear head and you want to

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ensure that you are bringing people into. If you can't solve

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a problem, you need to bring the people into the fold that can solve the

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problem. And if they're not available to solve the problem, then you

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need to refer them to other people that can't solve the problem.

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And I think it was like, if you couldn't get in, they were going to

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send him back. It was this whole traumatic, dramatic thing. In

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the end it was like, look, I know that the Minister of Energy would be

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okay with this person coming in. And

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in the end it worked out. But it was a little bit

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nerve wracking for me. This is international officials

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and I'm just someone working

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there, you know, it could have been a

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crisis, I think, but it turned out not to be. And I think I

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like to think that I took the right steps in de. Escalating in talking

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to people, in leveraging relationships, in talking, you

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know, just pulling from resources that I can in order to

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make it so that this person can indeed attend this

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conference. And they were really upset, which is

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kind of added extra intensity

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to the situation. But it worked out. It was a crisis averted

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story, I would say. And how do you

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advise organizations to shift public narratives during polarizing

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and emotionally charged situations? Oh,

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that is. We're seeing that play out

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right now in real time. And

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I very much admire the

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organizations that are sticking with

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their mission and sticking with their

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initial approach to things

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and are not wavering in their

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commitment to, to what they said they were going to set out to do.

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I truly. Because that's the hard thing to do.

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It's easy to say okay and change course with the wind.

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It's much harder to say no,

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we will always represent these people and we're going to continue

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to represent these people no matter who says we need to not

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represent these people. That is sticking with your values.

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Sticking with your values is

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not easy. And you know

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the strength of your values when they're tested. Right? When

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you get, when you get tested, that's when you really

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know the strength of your values and your conviction to your mission as an

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organization. And so

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if you, if you've established a business

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with a certain mission and a certain value system

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and it's worked for you, you are a thriving business. The business people love

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and you stick with it during hard times. That says something about

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the character of that business. And it's the same thing about that person. If somebody

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is really

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passionate and authentic and true about their intentions,

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good intentions, and they're tested and they

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stick with it despite pressures, outside pressures,

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that's extremely hard to do. And I

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admire organizations that say,

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we're sticking with our value system, we're sticking with our mission. We're not

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changing course because it doesn't work with

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some external factor. Got you. And then what advice would you give

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an organization aiming to integrate proactive crisis communication

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planning into their overall marketing strategy? Yes,

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everyone should have one. Everyone should have one. No matter what size of

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your organization, you know, whether something. Do a SWOT analysis,

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right? Old school SWOT analysis. We always hear about SWOT

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analysis forever and ever in college and ever and ever do the SWOT

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analysis. Because in that SWOT analysis you have what, your

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threats, right? And so the old school

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SWOT analysis I think is

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underrated. Look into that, right?

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What are the threats that are

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facing your business? And just get your team together

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and say, gosh, what are all the things that could go wrong?

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You know, play devil's advocate. What are all the things that could go wrong? What

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if someone says this? What if we put out this message and they start wanting

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to cancel us? What if we decide that we want to put out this

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product and it turns out to be a bad product that malfunctions?

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We need to do a recall. It's a fun

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exercise, you know, do the whole swap. Because it's nice to see your opportunities and

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it's nice to see, you know, your strengths and what are your

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weaknesses and what are your threats. And

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that is a great way, old school way

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to really get into the

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things that could potentially hinder your business or

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hurt your reputation, right? From a PR

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side, what does that look like? Do you have messaging

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points? Are your people media trained?

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Your employees are your best, best, best, like

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cheerleaders, right? Or not?

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Right. So what is your culture?

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Is there some stuff going on that if it's, you know,

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if it made the news or someone, you know, did a tick tock about

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it, or if somebody did something,

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can that hurt you? You know, is there what's shady? And so when

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you look at these, when you look at these weaknesses and threats in your

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business, I think that gives you a really good foundation as to,

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okay, here are really the things that can hurt us if it goes wrong

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and goes in violation of our values and our

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culture. Let's put in a process in place.

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Once you have that process, delegate, delegate.

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Who's going to be in charge of

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putting. You have your messaging points, but then who's going to be in charge

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of the specific messaging points of the situation? Who's going to take this

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point and put it on social? Who's going to get in front of the camera,

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do a press conference? Hopefully the CEO or the business or the leader of the

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organization, or you or whoever. You know, you want to have

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a plan. And your plan starts with understanding your vulnerabilities

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as a business. Vulnerabilities in your culture,

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vulnerabilities in your, in your operations, vulnerability in

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Your business practices, all of these areas

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can be potential sparks

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for crisis. And you also want to think about,

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well, what if a crisis falls in our lap? Has nothing to do

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with us. You know, we are just minding our own business. But somebody,

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somebody packaged something in a bad packaging

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and you happen to use a similar type of packaging, but it's different.

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And now you get dragged through the mud because of whatever.

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It's good to think about these things too and have

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a game plan, you know, acknowledge,

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investigate, take corrective action if it's

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necessary, issue an apology if it's necessary, accountability,

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and then the steps to make things better.

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That's going to look a little bit different for every organization, especially large

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organizations. You really want to have

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your team, your

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crisis team that you activate

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in the event that you need to do it so that there's not pandemonium and

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craziness going around and panicking. Right. So, yeah,

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that's. That would be my advice. Gotcha. And then what future trends

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do you foresee in global communications and crisis management that

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businesses should start preparing for now?

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Absolutely. I think AI is.

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AI is like the best thing ever and the worst thing ever. Right.

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In many ways, I think I could be your best, best friend or it

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could be just. I mean, I think about

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the people that are just getting these deep fake things made of

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them. People that are creating entire. There was a

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journalist. Here's, here's a crazy thing. And you can look this up because it's happening.

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Journalists that are interviewing fake people, they don't know that they're

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fake. There was an NPR story about a summer

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reading list of books that didn't exist. And authors were like,

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I didn't write that. Right.

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So these are all crises that you have that you

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were just minding your own business. And now someone fake

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wrote an AI book and put your name on it or something. And now it's

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ranking in npr and you're like, what? I didn't, I didn't

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write this. I didn't put this out there. So we're definitely getting

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in. In an era where crises can just

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come knocking at your door for no apparent reason and you're just minding your own

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business via whether it's like deep fakes or scams.

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There was the, the author of Diary of the CEO,

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Steve Bartlett, he put out a message

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not to give people money because people are setting up fake entire

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websites with his personality and ask and like

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defrauding people out of so much money. And he was like,

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no, that is not me. I'm not doing that.

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He's just someone, you know, he's this person building this business, building this empire. And

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now you have someone over here taking advantage of that, creating these crises

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that you have nothing to do with. So it's

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crazy time. It's a crazy, crazy time, I think, for

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crisis communications because you can get dragged into something you had absolutely nothing to

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do with. So just like

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Steve did, in response to that, I would say

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you need to put this into

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your future plans and know that there are people out there

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who might want to ruin your image, ruin your reputation, steal your

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ideas, do your ideas.

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I mean, think about like, this hermes bag, Chinese

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TikTok video, and the. The fallout

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of, like, oh, my gosh, you know, what are bags really worth? And,

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you know, I think those luxury brands were kind of like,

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some of them are doubling down. Like, no, no, no. We really do make our

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things in Italy. Here's video proof, you know, like, let's discount that.

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Another example of how crises can just develop around you. So I think it's really,

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really important, number one, to,

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again, if you get caught up in one of these crises, you do not

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want to spend a second of hesitation to get out there

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and correct the record. Nope, that's not

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me. Nope, that's not us. Nope, this is not us. This is

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who we are. And use every platform

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you have to debunk

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any thing that's being said about you. And even

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then, it could still be. It could still have a tarnish

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on your reputation, right? And that's when storytelling becomes

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more powerful than ever, because

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eventually that will fade. The next crisis

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will erupt. That will fade into the background, given

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time. And now you need to be out

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there doubling down on your vision, your mission, your

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statements, who you are, and produce

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lots and lots of content across as many

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platforms as you can in order to

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continue to debunk, even if it's been years

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to continue to double down on who you are as a business organization.

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But, you know, it's very interesting times. And I'm.

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I'm constantly seeing crises pop up that have nothing to do with the person

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involved, like the person they're mentioning. No fault of their own. It's

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just someone decided to do a deep fake. Somebody set up a fake webpage and

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took millions of dollars from people. It's really

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unfortunate. But storytelling

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and establishing your reputation and your brand about who

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you are, right? Because brand is not just the logo, the brand is who you

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are fundamentally. And

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really strengthening that over and over again, right? Through

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marketing practices, through public relations, communications,

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is going to be the best way

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to avoid

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or, and, or survive any type of a crisis of

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this nature. Got you. And then people are listening to this podcast and they're wondering

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where can they find you online to learn more. Yeah, so my LinkedIn,

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which is I think just Angela Bancorp one I think is my like LinkedIn thing.

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Angel Betancourt. You'll see my picture. I have a, my, my LinkedIn banner

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is scuba diving. So you can, you can find me there. That's a

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really great place. From there you can get to my business website. It's

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groupbettencourt.com There's a contact me for form there.

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That's easy to get to me there too.

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The bet in Court group on Instagram is a great way to

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reach me there too. Yeah. But I see

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LinkedIn because I'm very active on there. So that's a really good place to just

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send me a DM and I'll see it.

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Yeah, that, that's, you can email me too. You can

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email me@Angela Group.com can email me there too. That's

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fine. I, I, I try to read as many emails as possible.

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Sometimes they go to spam. So just bear with me. If I don't respond, hit

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me up on LinkedIn because then I'll see that that's fair. That's fair.

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Anyways, any final thoughts for listeners? I think this has been great

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interview. I really appreciate that you are having these

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conversations because it's really important.

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Everything is changing so fast with technology. I think it's really

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important that you, I'm definitely of the embrace

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technology for your business.

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I also, my also advice is no matter what industry you're in,

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experiment with some of these AI tools that are out there. I know

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for Bancorp Group we're always looking for really innovative ways to tell

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stories. And I've been working on just in off

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hours on a day when things are quiet around the house. I'm just on my

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computer. I've been working on creating interactive

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games on educational ones about my

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industry on some of these platforms. And it's

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fascinating what you can create and it's wonderful. So

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when it comes to storytelling, think about all the different tools that are available

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that you can leverage to tell stories in innovative and

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fun and creative ways. That's something I'm practicing, but I'm

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preaching it to you because I think it's going to really help empower you and

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your team for the continuation of

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much more advancements and changes and things in

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technology. All right, thank you, Angela. For joining Digital Coffee Marketing

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brand sharing your knowledge on global communication and crisis management.

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Oh thank you. Thank you so much. No, this has been great. I'm so happy

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you had me on. I really appreciate you. Thank you. You're welcome. And thank you

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for listening. As always. Please subscribe to this podcast and all your favorite podcasting

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apps. We'll leave a few five star video really does help with the rankings. Let

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me know how I'm doing and join me next week as I talk about what's

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going on in the PR marketing industry. All right guys, stay safe, get to understanding

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what you need to make better crisis plan and for your global

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communication and see you next week later.