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When Digital PR Goes Wrong: Lessons From Campaigns That Failed

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Digital PR has immense potential. Done well, it amplifies brand credibility, earns attention, and builds trust across multiple platforms. But when executed poorly, Digital PR can do more than fail — it can actively damage a brand’s reputation, trigger public backlash, and create long-lasting negative associations. In today’s fast-moving online environment, one misstep can go viral for all the wrong reasons.

This op-ed explores where Digital PR fails, why certain campaigns implode, and what lessons communicators must draw to avoid repeating these costly mistakes.

1. When Brands Chase Virality at All Costs

Case Example: Pepsi’s Kendall Jenner Ad (2017)

Few campaigns illustrate Digital PR failure more clearly than Pepsi’s infamous commercial featuring Kendall Jenner. In the ad, Jenner leaves a photoshoot to join a protest, ending with her handing a can of Pepsi to a police officer — a moment meant to symbolize unity and peace.

2. Misreading the Room

Case Example: Burger King’s “Women Belong in the Kitchen” Tweet (2021)

On International Women’s Day, Burger King UK tweeted: “Women belong in the kitchen.” The intention was to promote culinary scholarships for women, but the opening tweet — stripped of context — read as sexist and tone-deaf.

3. Inauthenticity and “Woke-Washing”

Case Example: H&M’s “Coolest Monkey in the Jungle” Hoodie (2018)

H&M posted an image of a Black child wearing a hoodie with the words “Coolest Monkey in the Jungle.” Whether through ignorance or lack of oversight, the image ignited global outrage.

4. The Pitfall of Stunts Without Substance

Case Example: Sunny Co Clothing’s Free Swimsuit Giveaway (2017)

Sunny Co Clothing promised a free swimsuit to anyone who reposted its Instagram photo. The post went viral — far more viral than anticipated — with tens of thousands of participants. The brand quickly realized it couldn’t fulfill the orders and changed its terms.

5. Hijacking Tragedy for Attention

Case Example: Cinnabon’s Carrie Fisher Tweet (2016)

After actress Carrie Fisher’s death, Cinnabon tweeted an image of her with a cinnamon roll replacing her iconic Star Wars hair bun. The brand likely meant it as a tribute, but it was widely condemned as insensitive and opportunistic.

6. When Influencer Partnerships Go Wrong

Case Example: Fyre Festival (2017)

Perhaps the most infamous digital PR disaster of the decade, Fyre Festival promised a luxury music festival in the Bahamas, hyped by top influencers like Kendall Jenner and Bella Hadid. The reality: mass chaos, disaster relief tents, and cheese sandwiches instead of gourmet meals.

7. Ignoring Platform Culture

Case Example: McDonald’s #McDStories Campaign (2012)

McDonald’s launched the hashtag #McDStories to encourage customers to share heartwarming experiences. Instead, Twitter users flooded it with negative stories about poor food quality, bad service, and health concerns.

8. The Risks of Automation

Case Example: US Airways’ NSFW Tweet (2014)

US Airways accidentally tweeted an explicit image in response to a customer complaint. The post stayed live for nearly an hour before deletion.

9. Overconfidence in Brand Equity

Case Example: New Coke (1985, revived in digital conversations)

While predating digital PR, the New Coke fiasco still offers lessons relevant today. Coca-Cola’s decision to replace its formula led to public outrage. Decades later, digital PR still references this failure as a cautionary tale.

The Common Threads of Failure

From Pepsi to Fyre Festival, these failures share recurring themes:

  1. Tone-Deaf Messaging: Failing to read cultural or emotional context.
  2. Inauthenticity: Jumping on causes without commitment.
  3. Operational Misalignment: Promises made without the infrastructure to back them up.
  4. Overpromising and Underdelivering: The fastest way to erode trust.
  5. Lack of Platform Understanding: Ignoring how audiences actually behave online.
  6. Neglecting Oversight: Automation and fast-paced posting without checks.

Why Digital PR Fails More Publicly Than Traditional PR

Traditional PR failures might be limited to a few bad headlines. In contrast, digital PR failures are:

Digital failures are not private embarrassments; they are global case studies.

How to Avoid Failure: Guardrails for Brands

  1. Cultural Awareness Checks: Always vet campaigns through diverse perspectives before launch.
  2. Scenario Planning: Anticipate backlash and prepare responses.
  3. Authenticity Audit: Ask: “Does this campaign align with what we actually do?”
  4. Platform Sensitivity: Tailor campaigns to the culture of each channel.
  5. Operational Readiness: Ensure logistics can deliver on promises before hype.
  6. Human Oversight: Never leave automation unchecked in sensitive communications.

Digital PR is powerful, but power cuts both ways. The same speed and scale that can propel a campaign to global recognition can also magnify mistakes into scandals. The failures of Pepsi, H&M, Fyre Festival, and countless others demonstrate that in the digital age, there is little room for carelessness or insincerity.

Ultimately, Digital PR fails when brands forget that people — not platforms — are at the center of communication. Audiences crave authenticity, respect, and transparency. Betray those expectations, and even the most creative campaign will collapse under scrutiny.

The future of PR belongs not to those who chase fleeting viral moments, but to those who build trust, act responsibly, and design campaigns that resonate with integrity.

Ronn Torossian founded 5WPR, a leading PR agency.

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