News

From Crisis to Change: Why Bad News Can Be Good News

October 18, 2022 4833

Can bad news about companies be good news for them? How should companies turn crisis management to change management?

(Photo: dreamtimes by license)

My recently published article, “Why bad news can be good news: The signaling feedback effect of negative media coverage of corporate irresponsibility,” published in Organization & Environment, explores these two questions using corporate social irresponsibility as the context. The study investigates how negative media coverage (signaling feedback) of corporate irresponsibility can elicit firms’ following positive corporate social responsibility (response signals).

Granted, no firms like bad media coverage. Bad news is absolutely bad news—think about angry customers, decreased sales, disinvestment, etc. However, what many firms tend to overlook is how bad media coverage also confers positive opportunities: it is a warning sign for the firm to initiate positive changes for its long-term success. Media coverage usually provides information that the focal firms did not normally have access to. For example, the media’s independent (free) research provides collected information from multiple stakeholders. These stakeholders even offer suggestions (again, free!). This is especially useful when it is about corporate social (ir)responsibility, which requires substantial stakeholder knowledge. Although not completely costless, all this information is invaluable feedback for the focal firms to understand what has gone wrong and where to move forward. Naturally, embedded in such media coverage crisis are great learning opportunities for firms’ long-term success.

Of course, not all firms can seize such learning opportunities, even if they know how invaluable these opportunities are. Firms need to know how to crack the code of the feedback. For example, what are the key needs behind all the reported stakeholder dissatisfaction? What is the relationship between different stakeholder demands? If a firm is a high-learning firm actively searching for new knowledge, typically in the form of research and development (R&D), it is in a better position to understand and exploit signaling feedback. This firm may be more capable of learning new information, inferring connections of seemingly unrelated information, and integrating new information into their existing knowledge. A case in point is my former company (Country Garden, a Fortune 500 property management company), which, in response to its workplace accident scandal, leveraged its R&D and developed robots to do dangerous activities.

Interestingly, my study also finds that for firms that do not have a strong learning capacity, negative media coverage can incentivize firms to learn in the form of R&D.  Some industry characteristics are also in play: firms that are already in R&D-intensive industries tend to increase their R&D more, considering the lower marginal costs. 

All the positive changes elicited by negative media coverage, be they small or large, suggest that firms can turn crisis management into change management, converting bad news to good news.

This study itself is a testimonial of learning from feedback. The editor and reviewers provided extremely insightful feedback, which gave me an incredible collaborative and learning experience. I certainly hope business and society can also engage in such collaborative learning to create a virtue cycle of business-society relationship.

Dr. Limin Fu is an assistant professor at the Monash Business School, Monash University. Her research investigates paradoxes in corporate social responsibility (CSR/ESG) and her research interests include strategic management, international business, and innovation.

View all posts by Limin Fu

Related Articles

Recalling the Roots of Jewish American Heritage Month
News
May 11, 2026

Recalling the Roots of Jewish American Heritage Month

Read Now
Political Theory Beyond the Text
Insights
May 11, 2026

Political Theory Beyond the Text

Read Now
Tom Gilovich On the Spotlight Effect
Social Science Bites
May 4, 2026

Tom Gilovich On the Spotlight Effect

Read Now
How Publishers Extract Money, Labor, and Data from Universities
Industry
April 29, 2026

How Publishers Extract Money, Labor, and Data from Universities

Read Now
Whose Work Most Influenced You? Part 6: A Social Science Bites Retrospective

Whose Work Most Influenced You? Part 6: A Social Science Bites Retrospective

Every guest on the Social Science Bites podcast is queried about their area of expertise, and hence the questions tend to differ […]

Read Now
JG Ballard and the Epstein Files

JG Ballard and the Epstein Files

The grudging disclosure of the Jeffrey Epstein files by the US government has rightly attracted a great deal of commentary. The responses […]

Read Now
From Passive Consumption to Active Verification: Embedding Critical Thinking as a Daily Cognitive Habit in Higher Education 

From Passive Consumption to Active Verification: Embedding Critical Thinking as a Daily Cognitive Habit in Higher Education 

In an era defined by algorithm-curated feeds, persuasive misinformation, and increasingly sophisticated AI-generated content, the challenge facing higher education is no longer […]

Read Now
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

0 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments