Communication Breakdown

Observatory on Corporate Reputation LLC

Communication Breakdown is a postgame show for PR pros. In each episode, hosts Craig Carroll (Founder of the Observatory on Corporate Reputation, Editor of the SAGE Encyclopedia of Corporate Reputation, Lecturer at Rice University’s Jesse H. Jones Graduate School of Business) and Steve Dowling (former head of communications at OpenAI and Apple) discuss the strategies and tactics companies are using in high-visibility crises and PR initiatives, giving listeners unique insight into how key decisions are made. The podcast offers two unique perspectives on communications theory and practice, drawing on Craig’s research and teaching on reputation at USC Annenberg, UNC Chapel Hill, and universities worldwide, and Steve’s two decades of experience as a comms leader at some of the world’s most influential companies. Whether you’re a PR professional, marketing executive, or just curious about how companies make key communications decisions, you’ll find these discussions insightful and valuable.

  1. 1 g fa

    …and the home of the brave

    In this episode of Communication Breakdown, Steve Dowling and Craig Carroll examine why America’s 250th birthday feels smaller, flatter, and more complicated than a milestone this large should feel. They look at how companies are approaching the anniversary through nostalgia, patriotic packaging, official sponsorships, and, in a few stronger cases, civic contribution. The conversation explores why patriotic language now carries reputational risk, how the split between America 250 and Freedom 250 has muddled the national moment, and why companies need more than flags and slogans to show up credibly. For PR, communications, and corporate reputation leaders, this episode is a sharp case study in authenticity, civic usefulness, and the limits of safe messaging. Takeaways America 250 should be a major national milestone, but polarization, distraction, and weak organizing have kept it from becoming a shared civic moment.Companies are cautious because words like freedom, patriotism, founders, and American values no longer land in one shared place.The split between America 250 and Freedom 250 has created a signaling problem for sponsors trying to avoid partisan alignment. Topics Mentioned America 250, Fourth of July, corporate patriotism, civic patriotism, symbolic patriotism, access patriotism, nationalism, hospitality, political polarization, shared meaning, corporate reputation, patriotic branding, nostalgia, strategic ambiguity, civic contribution, stakeholder trust, government sponsorship, Freedom 250, America 250 Commission, DEI backlash, ESG backlash, corporate values, authenticity, local service, veterans housing, emergency water, childhood hunger, public trust, civic institutions, hope, American identity, historical progress, rights rollbacks, corporate communications, public relations Companies Mentioned Gallup, NPR, Marist, Coca-Cola, Chevy, Budweiser, Jeep, HBO, UFC, Home Depot, Anheuser-Busch, Albertsons, Safeway, Jewel-Osco, The Wall Street Journal Episode Hashtags #America250 #Freedom250 #FourthOfJuly #CorporatePatriotism #CivicPatriotism #SymbolicPatriotism #AccessPatriotism #CorporateCommunications #PublicRelations #CorporateReputation #BrandReputation #StakeholderTrust #StrategicCommunications #PatrioticBranding #CivicEngagement #CorporateResponsibility #Authenticity #Gallup #NPR #Marist #CocaCola #Chevy #Budweiser #Jeep #HBO #UFC #HomeDepot #AnheuserBusch #Albertsons #Safeway #JewelOsco #WallStreetJournal #ShawnPNeal #AdvocastLeadershipAdvisory #OCRNetwork  Communication Breakdown is a production of the Observatory on Corporate Reputation. Hosted by Craig Carroll and Steve Dowling. Produced in partnership with Advocast Leadership Advisory and  Shawn P Neal. For questions, feedback, or episode suggestions, reach out at podcasts@ocrnetwork.com

    39 min
  2. 25 giu

    Comms on Three Continents

    In this episode of Communication Breakdown, hosts Steve Dowling and Craig Carroll move across three communication flashpoints on three continents: the evolving influence economy at Cannes Lions, Lululemon’s cultural misstep at the Great Wall of China, and the San Francisco Giants’ mishandling of Pride Night controversy. They examine how influence is no longer contained inside advertising, PR, marketing, or customer experience silos, especially as creators, algorithms, AI summaries, and political actors reshape reputation in real time. The conversation sharpens around two major lessons for communications leaders: cultural accuracy has to happen before spectacle, and values questions need institutional answers, not evasive talking points. For PR, corporate affairs, and leadership teams, this episode is a reminder that operational clarity, cultural fluency, and prepared governance now determine whether a brand controls the story or gets corrected by the public. TakeawaysCannes Lions now reflects a broader shift from advertising as a discipline to influence as an operating system.Lululemon’s Great Wall mistake shows that brands cannot borrow cultural authority without first proving cultural accuracy.The San Francisco Giants’ Pride Night controversy shows how local values issues can quickly become national political stories. Topics Mentioned Cannes Lions, influence, advertising, corporate communications, public affairs, creators, AI, algorithms, media fragmentation, authenticity, purpose, cultural credibility, Lululemon China, Great Wall of China, cultural accuracy, cultural review, apology strategy, Weibo, social media virality in China, market access, operational integrity, Pride Month, San Francisco Giants, Major League Baseball, LGBTQ fans, religious expression, culture wars, internal communication, values communication, communicative governance, stakeholder interpretation Companies Mentioned Lululemon, Bloomberg, Weibo, China Daily, San Francisco Giants, Major League Baseball, Fox News Episode Hashtags #CannesLions #Lululemon #Bloomberg #Weibo #ChinaDaily #SanFranciscoGiants #MajorLeagueBaseball #FoxNews #CorporateCommunications #PublicRelations #CrisisCommunication #ReputationManagement #CorporateAffairs #CulturalFluency #BrandReputation #StakeholderTrust #ValuesCommunication #InfluenceStrategy #PrideMonth #CultureWars #InternalCommunications #LeadershipCommunication #ShawnPNeal #AdvoCast #OCRNetwork Communication Breakdown is a production of the Observatory on Corporate Reputation. Hosted by Craig Carroll and Steve Dowling. Produced in partnership with Advocast Leadership Advisory and  Shawn P Neal. For questions, feedback, or episode suggestions, reach out at podcasts@ocrnetwork.com

    28 min
  3. 18 giu

    Beast Mode

    In this episode of Communication Breakdown, Steve Dowling and Craig Carroll examine MrBeast’s 500 million YouTube subscriber milestone and the reputation challenges that come with creator scale. They look at how Jimmy Donaldson managed a live-stream moment when fans playfully subscribed and unsubscribed to delay the milestone, and what that revealed about his relationship with his audience. The conversation also explores the tension between authenticity, institutional scrutiny, crisis management, and the growing communications function around one of the world’s most successful individual creators. For PR and communications leaders, the episode is a sharp case study in what happens when a personal brand becomes a global enterprise. Takeaways MrBeast’s 500 million subscriber milestone marks a shift from creator success story to institutional reputation challenge.Founder-led brands need communications counsel that protects authenticity while translating business realities for broader audiences.The “negative money” comment illustrates how internal explanations can land poorly when different audiences interpret the same message through different lenses.Topics Mentioned MrBeast, Jimmy Donaldson, YouTube creators, subscriber milestones, live streams, audience behavior, creator economy, personal brand, founder-led companies, reputation management, crisis communications, media training, narrative expansion, authenticity, audience trust, institutional scrutiny, online safety, teen audiences, stakeholder expectations, communications counsel Companies Mentioned MrBeast, YouTube, TikTok, LinkedIn, HBO, Amazon, Wall Street Journal, Reddit, T-Series, Y Combinator Episode Hashtags #MrBeast #YouTube #TikTok #LinkedIn #HBO #Amazon #WallStreetJournal #Reddit #TSeries #YCombinator #JimmyDonaldson #CreatorEconomy #CorporateCommunications #PublicRelations #ReputationManagement #CrisisCommunications #MediaTraining #PersonalBrand #FounderLedBrands #AudienceTrust #NarrativeStrategy #OnlineSafety #StakeholderTrust #ShawnPNeal #AdvoCast #OCRNetwork Communication Breakdown is a production of the Observatory on Corporate Reputation. Hosted by Craig Carroll and Steve Dowling. Produced in partnership with Advocast Leadership Advisory and  Shawn P Neal. For questions, feedback, or episode suggestions, reach out at podcasts@ocrnetwork.com

    31 min
  4. 11 giu

    Missives You Might’ve Missed

    In this episode of Communication Breakdown, hosts Steve Dowling and Craig Carroll revisit recent essays from Craig and Steve on corporate communications, media scrutiny, and the strategic role of the comms function. Craig breaks down his argument that many communications teams are doing valuable work in the wrong order, adding tools, reports, and activity before clearing out low-value work and building repeatable strategic access. Steve then pushes into the risks of bypassing the press, the value of editorial scrutiny, and why Pope Leo’s communication style offers a timely lesson in speed, authenticity, and disciplined message control. For PR and corporate reputation professionals, the episode is a sharp reminder that credibility depends on sequence, scrutiny, and sustained alignment between what an organization says and what it can actually support. Takeaways Communications teams cannot earn strategic influence by simply adding more dashboards, reports, tools, or meetings.The real opportunity is moving from high effort and low impact toward work that creates judgment, access, and organizational influence.Boeing shows the risk of a widening gap between public claims and operating reality, especially when communications enters only after the crisis forms. Episode Hashtags #ProvokeMedia #Boeing #AlaskaAirlines #Shell #Greenpeace #Axios #Meta #DoorDash #GameStop #CNBC #Pfizer #Amazon #Wirecutter #NewYorkTimes #RealMadrid #CorporateCommunications #PublicRelations #CorporateAffairs #MediaRelations #CrisisCommunication #ReputationManagement #StakeholderEngagement #LeadershipCommunication #StrategicCommunications #MediaScrutiny #GoDirect #PopeLeo #VaticanCommunications #ShawnPNeal #AdvoCast #OCRNetwork Communication Breakdown is a production of the Observatory on Corporate Reputation. Hosted by Craig Carroll and Steve Dowling. Produced in partnership with Advocast Leadership Advisory and  Shawn P Neal. For questions, feedback, or episode suggestions, reach out at podcasts@ocrnetwork.com

    35 min
  5. 4 giu

    bp’s Big Problem

    In this episode of Communication Breakdown, hosts Steve Dowling and Craig Carroll return to BP’s boardroom battle with former chairman Albert Manifold. After being dismissed over governance, oversight, and conduct concerns, Manifold fires back with a nearly 800-word statement accusing BP of mischaracterizing his behavior and framing himself as a disciplined reformer focused on shareholder value. Steve and Craig examine how Manifold is trying mto prevent BP’s version of events from becoming the only version, while BP’s restrained response risks leaving a narrative vacuum. The conversation also brings in Craig’s justice framework, including distributive, procedural, interpersonal, and informational justice, to unpack why this dispute is no longer just about conduct. It is now about credibility, process, power, and who gets to define the story Takeaways Manifold’s statement shifts the communication problem from an executive departure to a battle over competing narrativesThe strongest and riskiest claim in Manifold’s statement is that no one raised conduct concerns with him during his tenureFor BP, the danger is that unanswered claims could harden into conventional wisdom before the company speaks again. Topics Mentioned BP, Albert Manifold, executive departures, corporate governance, board communication, reputation defense, counter-narrative, shareholder activism, cost discipline, crisis communication, image rehabilitation, conduct allegations, narrative vacuum, board legitimacy, procedural justice, distributive justice, interpersonal justice, informational justice, stakeholder trust, media strategy, leadership communication Companies Mentioned BP, Bloomberg, Financial Times, Wall Street Journal Episode Hashtags #BP #Bloomberg #FinancialTimes #WallStreetJournal #CorporateCommunications #PublicRelations #CorporateReputation #CrisisCommunication #BoardGovernance #ExecutiveLeadership #LeadershipCommunication #StakeholderTrust #NarrativeStrategy #ReputationManagement #ShareholderValue #CorporateGovernance #MediaStrategy #ShawnPNeal #AdvoCast #OCRNetwork Communication Breakdown is a production of the Observatory on Corporate Reputation. Hosted by Craig Carroll and Steve Dowling. Produced in partnership with Advocast Leadership Advisory and  Shawn P Neal. For questions, feedback, or episode suggestions, reach out at podcasts@ocrnetwork.com

    23 min
  6. 28 mag

    “Lower-Value Human Capital”

    In this episode of Communication Breakdown, Steve Dowling and Craig Carroll unpack two corporate reputation problems where leadership, governance, and messaging collided under pressure. First, they examine Standard Chartered CEO Bill Winters’ “lower value human capital” comment and the three cleanup attempts that followed. Then they turn to BP, where chairman Albert Manifold was removed after less than a year, setting off a governance fight that threatens to prolong the company’s instability narrative. Across both stories, Steve and Craig show how communications teams lose ground when leaders treat high-stakes moments as messaging problems instead of trust, governance, and stakeholder problems. Takeaways Bill Winters’ cleanup attempts focused too much on explaining context and not enough on clearly rejecting the idea that people are “lower value.”A CEO press briefing can create unnecessary risk when the official investor message has already been carefully scripted and vetted.BP’s chairman removal shows how a governance problem quickly becomes a communications problem when the process is unclear. Topics Mentioned AI and workforce displacement, executive communication, internal communications, investor relations, employee trust, crisis communication, CEO apologies, stakeholder management, governance failures, board accountability, reputation risk, leadership credibility, corporate instability, media strategy, press briefings, narrative control, strategic communications Companies Mentioned Standard Chartered, NVIDIA, Wall Street Journal, Air Canada, BP, Bloomberg Episode Hashtags #StandardChartered #NVIDIA #WallStreetJournal #AirCanada #BP #Bloomberg #CorporateCommunications #PublicRelations #CrisisCommunication #InternalCommunications #ExecutiveCommunication #AICommunication #WorkforceDisplacement #EmployeeTrust #InvestorRelations #CorporateGovernance #BoardAccountability #LeadershipCredibility #ReputationRisk #StakeholderManagement #NarrativeControl #ShawnPNeal #AdvoCast #OCRNetwork Communication Breakdown is a production of the Observatory on Corporate Reputation. Hosted by Craig Carroll and Steve Dowling. Produced in partnership with Advocast Leadership Advisory and  Shawn P Neal. For questions, feedback, or episode suggestions, reach out at podcasts@ocrnetwork.com

    31 min
  7. 21 mag

    The AI Commencement

    In this episode of Communication Breakdown, Steve Dowling and Craig Carroll examine a string of AI-related commencement speech misfires and what they reveal about executive communication, audience awareness, and the limits of pushing a message into the wrong moment. The conversation centers on former Google CEO Eric Schmidt’s controversial University of Arizona address, contrasting it with stronger speeches from NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang at Carnegie Mellon and musician Jacob Collier at Berklee College of Music. Jensen Huang at Carnegie Mellon: https://www.youtube.com/live/FZh_0uRgrg4Jacob Collier at Berklee College of Music: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f0exDKy5uuk Takeaways AI is a relevant topic for graduation speeches, but relevance does not guarantee resonance. Eric Schmidt’s speech leaned too heavily on scale, urgency, and instruction, leaving graduates feeling lectured rather than inspired.Jensen Huang’s Carnegie Mellon address worked because he built human connection first, then introduced AI as part of a broader story about responsibility, failure, and opportunity. Topics Mentioned Artificial intelligence, executive communication, commencement speeches, leadership messaging, audience analysis, corporate reputation, speechwriting, CEO visibility, stakeholder trust, Gen Z workers, AI anxiety, leadership authority, ceremonial communication, emotional resonance, public speaking, message timing, reputation risk, corporate storytelling, leadership credibility, communication strategy Companies Mentioned Google, NVIDIA, Gallup, Bloomberg, The Atlantic, Denny’s Episode Hashtags #Google #NVIDIA #Gallup #Bloomberg #TheAtlantic #Dennys #ArtificialIntelligence #AICommunication #ExecutiveCommunication #CorporateCommunications #LeadershipCommunication #CEOCommunication #Speechwriting #CorporateReputation #PublicRelations #AudienceAnalysis #StakeholderTrust #ReputationManagement #LeadershipMessaging #GenZWorkforce #CommencementSpeech #AILeadership #ShawnPNeal #AdvoCast #OCRNetwork Communication Breakdown is a production of the Observatory on Corporate Reputation. Hosted by Craig Carroll and Steve Dowling. Produced in partnership with Advocast Leadership Advisory and  Shawn P Neal. For questions, feedback, or episode suggestions, reach out at podcasts@ocrnetwork.com

    29 min
  8. 14 mag

    Of Maersk and Men

    In this episode of Communication Breakdown, Steve Dowling and Craig Carroll examine two high-stakes corporate communication moments with direct lessons for CEOs, communications executives, public affairs leaders, and reputation advisors. First, they analyze eBay’s sharp rejection of GameStop’s attempted takeover bid and how the company used disciplined messaging, board governance language, and business credibility to control the narrative. Then, they turn to Maersk’s response to rising fuel costs and operational risk tied to the Strait of Hormuz, showing how executive transparency, expectation management, and operational communication can protect stakeholder trust during uncertainty. Takeaways eBay showed how a board can reject a high-profile takeover bid without overexplaining, overreacting, or letting the other company define the narrative.GameStop’s bid exposed a credibility gap between executive confidence and the substance needed to support a serious corporate transaction.Maersk demonstrated how crisis communication can use selective transparency to prepare customers and investors for cost increases without projecting false certainty.Topics Mentioned corporate communications, CEO communication, executive credibility, corporate reputation, crisis communication, reputation management, board governance, takeover bid, hostile offer, fiduciary duty, investor communication, public affairs, stakeholder trust, narrative control, messaging strategy, messaging vacuum, leadership communication, business credibility, operational transparency, selective transparency, expectation management, geopolitical risk, supply chain disruption, Strait of Hormuz, oil prices, fuel costs, crew safety, customer communication, chaos communication, corporate affairs, public relations strategy, communications as a business function, decision friction, transaction costs, operational fluency Companies Mentioned eBay, GameStop, CNBC, Amazon, Maersk, Target Episode Hashtags #eBay #GameStop #CNBC #Amazon #Maersk #Target #CorporateCommunications #CEOCommunication #ExecutiveCommunication #CorporateReputation #ReputationManagement #CrisisCommunications #PublicRelations #PublicAffairs #BoardGovernance #InvestorRelations #StakeholderTrust #NarrativeControl #MessagingStrategy #LeadershipCommunication #ExecutiveCredibility #OperationalTransparency #ExpectationManagement #GeopoliticalRisk #SupplyChainDisruption #StraitOfHormuz #BusinessStrategy #CorporateAffairs #ShawnPNeal #AdvoCast #OCRNetwork Communication Breakdown is a production of the Observatory on Corporate Reputation. Hosted by Craig Carroll and Steve Dowling. Produced in partnership with Advocast Leadership Advisory and  Shawn P Neal. For questions, feedback, or episode suggestions, reach out at podcasts@ocrnetwork.com

    30 min

Descrizione

Communication Breakdown is a postgame show for PR pros. In each episode, hosts Craig Carroll (Founder of the Observatory on Corporate Reputation, Editor of the SAGE Encyclopedia of Corporate Reputation, Lecturer at Rice University’s Jesse H. Jones Graduate School of Business) and Steve Dowling (former head of communications at OpenAI and Apple) discuss the strategies and tactics companies are using in high-visibility crises and PR initiatives, giving listeners unique insight into how key decisions are made. The podcast offers two unique perspectives on communications theory and practice, drawing on Craig’s research and teaching on reputation at USC Annenberg, UNC Chapel Hill, and universities worldwide, and Steve’s two decades of experience as a comms leader at some of the world’s most influential companies. Whether you’re a PR professional, marketing executive, or just curious about how companies make key communications decisions, you’ll find these discussions insightful and valuable.

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