Skip to main content

Faculty & Research

Close

Beyond Control: Crisis Strategies and Stakeholder Media in the Danone Boycott of 2001

Working Paper
Parallel and emerging streams of theory hold that intangible factors such as reputation may account for a major share of a firm's market valuation, and that a dialogic relationship with a firm's environment in general and direct stakeholders in particular is increasingly essential. A consumer boycott of unprecedented scope which confronted Danone SA in 2001 as the firm sought to rationalise its biscuit division suggests that under certain conditions these streams are convergent: A firm’s refusal to engage in dialogue with adversaries and stakeholders may negatively impact management’s reputation, and with it market valuation. The case further suggests that strategies of crisis communication aimed at control of dialogue carry increased risks, if not with news media and general public opinion, in terms of conflict and credibility loss with key stakeholders. A further finding is that news media may be of less importance to the outcome of a crisis and to corporate reputation than stakeholder-controlled media.
Faculty

Affiliate Professor of Decision Sciences

Emeritus Professor of Asian Business