Data breaches and effective crisis communication: a comparative analysis of corporate reputational crises

Abstract

Online data breaches are recurrent and damaging cyber incidents for organizations worldwide. This study examines how organizations can effectively mitigate reputational damages in the aftermath of data breaches by hacking through situational crisis communication strategies. Comparable data breach crises do not have an equally negative impact on organizational reputation. Providing comprehensive and exhaustive guidelines, and detailed explanations about the incident to consumers helped to reduce the damage. Organizations that primarily relied on one single strategy, performed better than those that inconsistently blended strategies. Particularly denial was ultimately detrimental to organizational reputation. Self-disclosure allowed companies to positively influence media reporting. Social media communication did not play an important role in the response of the organizations involved. The consistent and timely adoption of compensation, apology and rectification strategies, combined with reinforcing strategies such as ingratiation and bolstering, positively influenced  reputational recovery from the crisis.Security and Global Affair

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