Fullintel Logo
  • Solutions
    • Media Intelligence Platform
    • Executive News Briefings
    • Strategic Media Analysis
    • 24/7 Situation Management
  • By Need
    • Enterprise
    • Pharmaceuticals
    • PR Agencies
    • Government Services
  • Resources
    • Blog
    • PR Glossary
    • Newsroom
  • Customers
  • About
Client Login
Contact Us
Request Demo
PR Crisis

On-Call Crisis Media Monitoring: 24/7 Monitoring of your Brand

September 10, 2019 Andrew Koeck
PR Crisis|PR Crisis

The year 1993 may have been before Twitter, Instagram and Facebook, but it was certainly no stranger to the most dreaded of all PR situations: the fast-moving crisis.

That’s the year Pepsi found itself on the receiving end of a nasty rumour – one that erroneously claimed several used syringes had been found in Pepsi products. Its PR team immediately went into overdrive, pulling round-the-clock shifts to monitor and address the issue. The company ultimately debunked the story, but it still cost the company around $25M from lost sales, increased marketing, and ballooning labor costs due to all that monitoring and managing of the crisis.

Similarly, when United Airlines suddenly found itself mired in arguably the most serious PR debacle of 2017 – intense viral outrage after a 69-year-old man was violently removed from a flight – the company lost $800M in value in a single day. At the time, much of this erosion in value was blamed on the company’s “tone deaf” response.

But these companies clearly aren’t alone. Many a PR team have been forced to run the gauntlet of a possibly existential communications crisis, from the #deleteUber social media campaign of 2017 to the 2015 E. coli outbreaks at Chipotle restaurants. 

Sometimes, as in the case of Pepsi, these situations are unavoidable. Other times, as in the United example, they’re largely of the organization’s own making. But every PR crisis is similar when it comes to a PR team’s need to monitor what’s being said, evaluate, and respond appropriately (as well as outreaching proactively).

According to Boston-based Shift Communications, a PR crisis is very much like a fire. To burn, it needs three things: heat, fuel, and oxygen. “Something has gone wrong and your brand is on fire,” says Shift. “There’s something you did or something you’re responsible for – the fuel. There’s the tide of public opinion – the heat, the energy. There’s your speed of reaction to it – the catalyst. As with real fires, if you deny the fire any one of these sources, you break the chain reaction that causes fire and it burns itself out.”

Breaking the chain, however, is difficult if you don’t know where to start. When a crisis hits – and after the initial panic subsides – it’s very likely your PR team will be tapped out creating and executing communications plans, dealing with reporters’ emails and phone calls, responding to social media comments, contacting influencers, and briefing the C-suite.

Your secret weapon: flexible, as-needed, on-call crisis monitoring 

But while your media monitoring partner unfortunately can’t save you from a crisis, it can keep you informed in real-time about just what the heck is going on out there.

Because you have no idea when the next crisis will hit, a good crisis monitoring program is flexible enough to cycle in and out of your organization as required and without long-term commitments. 

A strong crisis media monitoring program also has the following other attributes:

  • It allows you to sign up anytime, even if you’re under contract with another monitoring provider, and cease your engagement just as quickly
  • It pushes the most relevant, breaking news alerts to your team in real time
  • It provides multiple, human-curated media reports on each day of the crisis
  • It monitors content from paywalled and subscriber-only sources, along with sources that aren’t covered by your automated SaaS solution due to licensing issues
  • It’s an extension of your team that frees up full-time staff to focus on actual communications

Even if your staff already use a SaaS monitoring tool, it’s likely they’ll be so snowed under during a major crisis they won’t even have time to log in. They almost certainly won’t have time to augment their current tool’s results with Google searches, logins to multiple paywalled sources, and other actions required to attain the full picture when coverage is breaking on multiple fronts. 

Fully automated crisis monitoring, while promising, often creates more work than it solves thanks to the avalanche of irrelevant results produced by static search strings without human curation. And the importance of accurately gauging coverage sentiment, especially when time is short and nerves are frayed, can’t be overstated – something automation also struggles with.  

Think of on-call crisis monitoring as the special forces of media monitoring: a group of well-trained specialists there when you need them, and gone just as fast. 

An extra crisis monitoring layer certainly would have helped Pepsi’s overworked PR team save some of that $25M the company lost in the fallout over the syringe crisis – not to mention United’s $800M problem. 

Fullintel’s new crisis monitoring package features 24/7 alerting on relevant breaking news (SMS or email), multiple coverage reports delivered throughout the day, and a crisis wrap-up analysis report providing key takeaways. It lasts as long – or short – as your crisis, and doesn’t require a subscription. 

For more information, please contact sales@fullintel.com.

  • crisis communication
  • crisis management
  • Media Monitoring
  • PR crisis monitoring
Andrew Koeck
Andrew Koeck

Andrew is Co-Founder and President of Fullintel. His 25-plus years of media intelligence experience helps large organizations and Fortune 1000 companies such as Textron, AAA, Clorox, Kraft Heinz, MUFG, and Bell plan and implement day-to-day and crisis media monitoring and analysis strategies and best practices. He also co-founded dna13, the world’s first software-as-a-service media monitoring platform, which was eventually acquired by PR Newswire.

Post navigation

Previous
Next

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

Categories

  • Awards 12
  • Blog 52
  • Business 20
  • Executive Insights 29
  • Media Monitoring 111
  • Newsroom 24
  • Pharmaceutical News 28
  • PR Crisis 15
  • PR Lessons 12
  • PR Strategy 23
  • Shows 4
  • Top Media Outlets 37
  • White paper 6

Recent posts

  • Brand Monitoring 2025
    Brand Monitoring: The Complete PR Professional’s Guide to Protecting Reputation in 2025
  • Media Monitoring Vs. Media Analysis
    Media Monitoring vs. Media Analysis: What’s the Difference and Why It Matters
  • Complete Guide to Media Intelligence
    The Complete Guide to Media Intelligence for Enterprise PR Teams

Tags

AI media monitoring AMEC AMEC Awards Angela Dwyer ChatGPT Communications crisis communication Crisis Communications crisis management crisis media monitoring Crisis Monitoring Data and Measurement event media monitoring event monitoring influencer marketing influencer monitoring IPRRC media analysis Media Impact Score media intelligence media measurement Media Monitoring media monitoring platform media monitoring service media monitoring services media monitoring tools Pharmaceutical News Pharma News PR PR Conferences PR Crisis PR crisis management PredictiveAI™ PR measurement PR news PR Research PRSA PRSA ICON PR Tools Public Relations real-time media monitoring Sentiment Analysis social listening social media monitoring social media platforms

Related posts

Media Monitoring Vs. Media Analysis
Media Monitoring

Media Monitoring vs. Media Analysis: What’s the Difference and Why It Matters

September 9, 2025 Ted Skinner

If you’ve ever been confused about the difference between media monitoring and media analysis, you’re not alone. These terms are often used interchangeably in PR and communications, but they represent two distinct yet complementary functions that every communications professional needs to understand. Think of it this way: if media monitoring is like taking your temperature […]

Complete Guide to Media Intelligence
White paper

The Complete Guide to Media Intelligence for Enterprise PR Teams

September 5, 2025 Ted Skinner

Global brands must manage reputation across thousands of media channels, multiple languages, and diverse markets, all while delivering insights fast enough for executive decision-making. What once relied on basic media monitoring has evolved into intelligence platforms that predict trends, benchmark competitors, and demonstrate clear ROI. For PR teams, the difference between catching an emerging story […]

Brand monitoring tools 2025
Executive Insights

Brand Monitoring Tools: 2025 Buyer’s Guide for PR Professionals

September 4, 2025 Ted Skinner

PR teams evaluate an average of 6.2 brand monitoring tools before making a purchase decision, according to our recent survey of 200 communications professionals. With over 200 tools competing for attention in today’s crowded market, the selection process has become more complex than ever. The stakes are higher too—the right brand monitoring platform can mean […]

Fullintel Logo

Schedule time with a media expert to see a live, one-on-one demo.

  • 1.339.970.8005
  • Book a Demo
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • X
Solutions
  • Media Intelligence Hub
  • Executive News Briefings
  • Strategic Media Analysis
  • 24/7 Situation Monitoring
By Need
  • Enterprise
  • PR Agency
  • Government
Resources
  • Blog
  • Product Updates
  • Case Studies
Want to receive news and updates?

    © FullIntel, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    • Terms & Conditions
    • Privacy Policy