BUS 284
BP Oil Spill (2010)
In a Consulting Memo written for the company you should address:
What is a Buffer Statement? As a Company you should...
STATE THE PROBLEM USING ALL RESEARCH/SOURCES
ESTABLISH EMPATHY TOWARDS THOSE AFFECTED
SHOW COMPANY/CLIENT RELATIONSHIPS - PROMISES
HELP TO EASE THE SEVERITY OF THE ISSUE
WHOLE FOODS CONSULTING MEMO - ACTIVITY IN PAIRS
Based on your original posts, get with a nearby partner and have them read your post and discuss what stood out about the Whole Foods incident and video apology. Did your partner pick up similar or different things in the apology?
Together, read through the Whole Foods Consulting Memo (in our Canvas Resources) and identify the main features of this kind of report: what features appear to establish professional ethos? What phrases and examples indicate that buffer statements, empathy, goodwill and other effective bad news rhetoric is used?
WE WILL DISCUSS TOGETHER AS A CLASS.
Using our major activity from Monday, the Bad News Representative Activity, review the material that you worked on as a team and think about how you would organize this content into distinct sections of an opening rough draft (use the Whole Foods memo as a guide, and the Documents you worked on as a team for Monday). Underneath the post you made for today’s Whole Foods response use this space to propose a rough draft template that fits the company you worked for.
In your Reply (to your post) you could highlight the major sections that might go into a consulting memo for this company (e.g. will you organize content based on rhetorical appeals, ethos, pathos, logos, kairos? Will you organize solely on effective/ineffective bad news rhetoric used? Will you design unique titles for your section headers to promote reader curiosity? Use this space for yourself/peers to see how you would organize content in a written corporate apology. What have these resources helped you learn about writing bad news rhetoric in written form?