Create a free account, or log in

Google’s advertising mistake cost it US$100 billion. Who’s to blame?

When an advertisement goes terribly wrong who’s to blame? That surely must have been the question at Google after the launch of its new AI tool Bard.
Tony Jaques
Tony Jaques
advertising
Google's AI Bard. Source: Google

When an advertisement goes terribly wrong who’s to blame? That surely must have been the question at Google after the launch of its new AI tool Bard.

An accompanying online advertisement showed the Chatbot wrongly answering a simple question, saying the James Webb Space Telescope was the first to take pictures of a planet outside the earth’s solar system when that milestone was truly claimed by the European Very Large Telescope in 2004.

While there were doubtless other contributing factors, share value of parent company Alphabet dropped by $100 billion, and lost further value next day.

As British astronomer Chris Harrison commented: “Why didn’t you fact-check this example before sharing it?” Which is a fair question. Maybe try Googling it?

Most advertising failures are not as costly, but whose job is it to prevent such mistakes from becoming reputational crises?

The advertising department seems to be the obvious answer, yet what about legal checking for compliance, or public relations checking for reputation risk, or brand management checking for stakeholder understanding?

It’s too easy to “blame the intern” — as when a Trump promotional poster carried the message “We need real leadership” and showed marching soldiers outlined against the American flag. It was in fact a stock photo of Waffen SS Nazi storm-troopers.

Or to blame that classic standby “a production error” — as when Channel Seven failed to disclose that onscreen reporting was paid advertorial.

However, such excuses will probably not help Mercer Super, which has just become the first Australian company to be sued over alleged greenwashing in advertising.

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission launched court action against Mercer over alleged “misleading statements about the sustainable nature and characteristics of some of its superannuation investment options”.

The case relates to seven ‘Sustainable Plus’ investment options offered by the Mercer Super Trust, which were marketed to members who were “deeply committed to sustainability”. Mercer’s advertising copy said these options intentionally excluded investments in fossil fuel companies, as well as alcohol and gambling companies.

But the corporate watchdog alleges the products actually invested in no fewer than 15 companies involved in the extraction or sale of carbon-heavy fossil fuels, 15 companies selling alcohol, and 19 gambling organisations.

While this matter is now before the court, the expectation is the case will publicly resolve the question of who was to blame and “where the buck stops”.

In high-profile reputational crises, the media often apply the label “PR Disaster”, suggesting the blame lies with corporate communicators or external public relations advisors. In reality, it is seldom revealed whether good communication advice was given and ignored, or whether bad advice was accepted, or indeed whether professional communicators were even asked for input.

So what’s the best answer when advertising goes wrong? Maybe not even trying to make an excuse or assign blame, but rather some smart PR. In the wake of the recent disastrous cyclone which ravaged New Zealand, someone at local retailer Bed Bath and Beyond approved an email flyer advertising “Cyclone Strength Sales” and “Extreme Deals” for three days.

Just hours later the Kiwi company issued a fresh email. “We got it really wrong today and genuinely apologise for the thoughtless heading in our email to customers. By no means was our intention to make light of cyclone Gabrielle or its devastating effects. Our thoughts go out to everyone affected by the cyclone and we will continue to support those impacted across New Zealand through this tough time.”

Perhaps bigger organisations could learn something from how it was handled.

Dr Tony Jaques is an expert on issue and crisis management and risk communication. He is the CEO of Melbourne-based consultancy Issue Outcomes and his latest book is Crisis Counsel: Navigating Legal and Communication Conflict.