GM boss Bob Lutz to c-suite peers: Say something!
December 31, 2008
If General Motors fails and Bob Lutz takes part of the rap, a lack of communication wonโt be the culprit.
The 72-year-old vice chairman blogs regularly (fastlane.gmblogs.com), he does TV (http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/185021/september-17-2008/bob-lutz) and he even addressed the members of the Public Relations Society of America at the 2008 International Conference, held in Detroit in September.
In that speech, PRSA members heard Lutz preach what he practices:
There ainโt no risk-free lunch. โHow many times have you read a corporate press release, a canned statement, or the โAโ portions of a Q&A document and thought, โThis doesnโt say anything!โ?โ he asked the PR crowd.
Iโve been a lifelong critic of corporate communications that donโt communicate, or are too sanitized. All large corporations are good at it, and General Motors is certainly no exception.
In this case, communications, instead of being a weapon for putting out the truth, becomes simple risk avoidance. It focuses on making sure that no one says the wrong thing.
And often, by focusing on not saying the wrong thing, youโre essentially saying nothing โฆ
With this kind of approach, nothing โwrongโ will be communicated, but nor will anything beneficial or memorable.
Transparency creates a cult following. Lutz pointed out that the GM Volt has become an โiconic vehicleโ long before its launch. Why?
Weโve been totally open with the press about the vehicleโs design, how and why changes were made from concept to production, how the battery testing is going, and so forth.
A cult following has sprung up, exemplified in part by Volt Nation, a group started by a New York neurosurgeon and electric car enthusiast. Itโs a rather rabid following, and Iโve had the pleasure of speaking to a large number of them. Their website has a โVolt waiting listโ with about 50,000 names on it.
You can bet the list, or the group, wouldnโt be as large if we had simply introduced the Volt Concept car and gone dark.
Understatement and accuracy beat hyperbole and fluff. Quoth Lutz:
It irritates me when I see a press release that says โthe finest, best-looking sedan in its classโ or something to that effect.
Journalists donโt like to be told what their review is going to be.
The automotive journalist believes that he or she has the role of evaluating the vehicle as presented and then reporting on it.
And if we tell them in advance how wonderful it is, it tends to trigger the negative antibodies โฆ โYouโre trying to do my job for meโIโll show you. Let ME be the judge of that.โ
Itโs much better when you state the facts calmly and accurately, and then say โIt was our goal toโ or โOur intent wasโ or โWe strove to โฆโ
Be nice; be assertive.
Journalists, being people, like subjects who have a human touch, have a sense of humor and donโt take themselves too seriously. And thatโs how I would tell you to approach them, and counsel your executives to approach them.
How they must hate the pompous, self-congratulatory, big-shot stuffed shirts they so often have to interview, especially when all they get are tired tidbits of the company line doled out with a heaping helping of arrogance.
But, if you do find yourself on the receiving end of a true media hatchet job, take โem on! โฆ When a story appears with which you take righteous exception, donโt hesitate to dispute its content or conclusions publicly.
You have to communicate in person and in real time.
Even just five years ago, if youโd told me I would appear on the Stephen Colbert show or be writing a blog, I wouldโve reacted with real skepticism.
Now, doing these things is practically second nature.
And, I will admit, one of my first attractions to the GM FastLane Blog was the opportunity to skewer the media right back when they say something blatantly inaccurate about us.
But itโs so much more than that, Iโve come to realize. Itโs an opportunity to have a real dialogue with our customers and potential customers. Itโs an opportunity to put our message out there, unfiltered.
And itโs immediate. I donโt have to tell you how important the timing of getting your message out there is; if itโs too late, itโs too late. Youโre sunk.
Enough said.