Thinking

The political rhetoric against ESG is more heated than ever, with many lawmakers and candidates accusing businesses of “corporate wokeism” and threatening oversight and legislation. Our research has shown clear voter opposition to restrictions on business’ social impact. In a new survey, we can now see what voters believe about the ties between ESG factors and their financial fortunes. 

This brief describes our findings and provides a path forward for navigating the anti-ESG political movement inside and outside the Beltway. 

Download our latest research to see what we found about voter views on ESG investing, and how it can apply to your organization.

You can also find our full report here.

ROKK Solutions Senior Vice President James Nash shared his thoughts on the Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) collapse in a March 29, 2023 op-ed. Read the full opinion piece below and on MediaPost.

It all began with a press release.

On March 8, Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) issued a statement announcing that it intended to raise $2.25 billion through sales of common stock and depository shares, after a $1.8 billion loss in its investment portfolio. Perhaps the doomed bank’s leaders assumed that the colorless prose, stripped of any context or assurances of the bank’s liquidity, would reassure depositors. Instead depositors pulled out their money as quickly as they could, and the bank collapsed.

Silicon Valley Bank may be remembered as a textbook case in how not to handle public relations in a crisis. An impenetrable press release that failed to come clean with depositors or answer basic questions prompted a runoff that wiped out the bank in a matter of days. This time, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. stepped up with a release of its own, declaring unequivocally, “Depositors will have full access to their money.”

This crisis has all the markings of a modern Washington Beltway political hurricane. Thousands of tweets bear the #SVB hashtag, and Twitter owner Elon Musk offered his own take on what the FDIC should do. Senate Democrats plan to grill former SVB executives on what precipitated the bank’s collapse. Senator Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., one of Wall Street’s most persistent critics, called for an accounting within 30 days of regulatory and policy failures.

The Republican-controlled House also plans to spotlight regulatory lapses, beginning with hearings in late March. Some voices on the right, meanwhile, suggested that SVB’s demise may have been due at least in part to its embrace of diversity, equity and inclusion at the expense of fiscal management.

While the fallout from the bank’s implosion continues to rain down, we can draw a few lessons about managing a crisis in today’s cacophonous media environment:

Communicate clearly and effectively: Contrast Silicon Valley Bank’s final pre-collapse press release that “SVB intends to use the net proceeds from the offerings for general corporate purposes” – to the clarity of the initial FDIC release announcing it will provide bank account protection. Which is more likely to calm jittery investors?

Remember that markets consist of people, and people react emotionally: SVB may have thought that burying bad news with dry investor relations language would cause markets to react with a shrug. There’s a time and a place for corporate-speak, and it may be mandated at times for compliance purposes. But when the future of your enterprise is at stake, it’s best to level with stakeholders and treat them as human beings. A lack of transparency will come to light eventually and provoke panic and distrust – two emotions that move markets more than any other factor.

Get out in front of the social media maelstrom: About 4 in 5 U.S. adults use social media, and it will remain as a bellwether and driver of public opinion. During a crisis, social media is often the most immediate way to engage with stakeholders and drive messages to larger audiences. Lack of engagement is ceding this territory to opponents and misinformation. Instead, run positive digital ads in key locations to build a proactive baseline of positive messaging, target key events and audiences, monitor and target competitors, and recalibrate as needed to make sure your favorable content is breaking through the noise.

Prepare for oversight – the storm after the storm: Any major crisis is likely to trigger calls for oversight, bringing the inevitable congressional hearings and demands to reform the system. In today’s divided Washington, that usually doesn’t mean sober-minded discussions on learning from systemic failures and adopting bipartisan measures to avoid repeating them. Rather, it more likely means exercises in partisan finger-pointing, with diversions into red-meat social issues that bring more heat than light. Avoid getting dragged into this type of framing. Instead, act strategically about social threats to your enterprise, remembering that 72% of your stakeholders say they’ll remember your response long after the immediate crisis has passed.

Many leaders of businesses and other organizations will be lucky enough never to stare down the type of crisis that could put them out of business. Fewer than half of businesses have a formal crisis communications plan, according to the software consultancy Capterra, but nearly all business leaders who activated their crisis communications plans say it was effective. For the same reason our offices have fire extinguishers, companies have a responsibility to be ready before a crisis hits. 

Check out MediaPost here for more on ROKK Senior Vice President James Nash’s thoughts on the Silicon Valley Bank collapse.

The term “wokeism” has nothing to do with sleepless nights, but the difference is becoming blurry for many business leaders. Increasingly used as a pejorative term to target corporations involved in ESG, it is the rationale policymakers are using to punish companies. But what do voters think about the heated rhetoric?

With a divided government upon us in 2023, we can expect hearings, legislative initiatives, state-level efforts and loud attacks from the right. Additionally, companies will likely face the whiplash of attacks from the left for failing to do enough. Our study with Penn State University of voters and Congressional offices from across the political spectrum provides new insights that could help businesses navigate the politically charged environment surrounding ESG.

Download the report to see what we found, and how it can apply to your organization.

As midterm elections loom, swing voters continue to be an important part of political strategy in many states. Rich Thau, founder of Engagious, shares insights based on focus groups with swing voters in key states in this timely webinar. Watch the replay here.

As we enter Q4 and immerse ourselves in 2023 planning, our #ROKKstars put their heads together to trendspot next year’s digital, social and paid media trends. Use the 10 trends in this report as thought-starters for evolving your public affairs and communications strategies for maximum amplification next year. Get the report here.

In 2019, 95% of global business leaders said they expected a crisis to hit within the next two years, but only 30% of leaders surveyed in 2021 said they had a crisis management team in place when the COVID-19 pandemic hit.

Don’t lose valuable time by waiting until a crisis actually hits to seek help.

Watch the new video now.

ROKK now offers a comprehensive Crisis Concierge service, a dedicated 24/7 team that brings decades of government, media, and corporate experience, helping organizations navigate these waters. We have the know-how as well as the capacity to handle any communications challenge.

Read more about the crisis concierge service here.

Do you know what’s better than getting your op-ed placed? Pushing it out to an even wider audience in hyper-targeted locations with a paid digital advertising campaign. Using digital to amplify thought leadership ensures you are reaching your target audience with messaging that breaks through. Our latest video tells you how.

Climate change is real and it’s caused by humans. At least, that’s what nearly half of U.S. adults believe, according to a Pew Research Center survey from January 2022. If the majority of Americans don’t agree on the existence of anthropogenic climate change, how can we hope to combat it? By advocating for a clean energy source that fights climate change and bolsters our economy in tandem — nuclear energy. Whether you’re an environmental activist or a voter concerned about the economy and energy security, with nuclear energy, you can have your yellowcake and eat it too.

ROKK Senior Account Executive Ben Khoshbin talks about the bipartisan power of nuclear energy in his first op-ed as an and Energy & Environment Writing Fellow with the American Conservation Coalition and Young Voices- read the article here.

Kansas is no swing state. It hasn’t supported a Democratic presidential candidate since 1964, and hasn’t sent a Democrat to the Senate since the 1930s, and it even inspired the book, “What’s the Matter With Kansas: How Conservatives Won the Heart of America.”

And yet, in a sense, Kansas is a swing state this year. The states already defied national expectations with this month’s vote on abortion. Its race for governor, likely to be one of the closest in the country, will test whether ticket-splitting in national and state elections — which put Republicans Mitt Romney and Charlie Baker in charge of Massachusetts, and Democrat Laura Kelly in the Kansas governor’s mansion — falls victim to today’s hyperpartisan, lockstep politics.

Get more from Senior Vice President James Nash on ticket-splitting at the state and national level, in this opinion piece for The Hill.

Summer is here and believe it or not, 2023 is just around the corner… so now is the time to start planning your digital ad buys for the rest of the year! Our award-winning digital team shares their tips for making the most of your budget in the ever-changing advertising environment:

• Allocate (more) digital ad budget to partners with no minimum spend and to those who haven’t increased costs. These partners are ideal for organizations to leverage test/learn/optimize strategies with their buys. And don’t summer siesta on Direct-to-Publisher news sites and first-party data partners/ad networks that are keeping costs status-quo to compete.

• Increasing global digital ad costs shouldn’t equal decreased spending. Costs are rising across paid social, search and programmatic platforms due to inflation, increased digital consumption, platform demand and saturation. But that doesn’t mean you should spend less in the U.S. You’ll fall behind those who continue to advertise.

• Optimize for target engagements and deeper actions. If your desired paid platform impressions are more costly, pivot and set campaigns to serve to key audiences who are more likely to engage with, click on or convert (email sign-up, take action, etc.) through your ad.

• Invest in great creative, SEO and measurement. Evolving imagery, video, keywords and analytics will only further optimize your ad results, allowing you to get more for each buck.

• Activate paid social media influencers. In addition to ads, paid influencers remain a great and growing way to pay to play, allowing you to reach followers of trusted spokespeople.

• Plan and secure budgets now for year’s end and 2023. First is the best… Set funds aside in advance so it’s not a last minute C-suite fight for your right to win against competitors at the digital ads party.

Let’s get to work! Email Rachel today.