Or: Backbone Implants for Otherwise Lily-livered Organizations, God Yes!
Hi all,
I'm a longtime lurker, but I've gotten a lot from reading all the posts on FWR over the last few years, so thanks a lot!
On the heels of the Booker Prize debacle with Baroness Nicholson, which is the latest in a list of sorry examples of institutions, companies, and organizations folding like the proverbial deck chair at the merest hint of social opprobrium for having ties with us witches or witch affiliates, I've been wondering:
Would there be a way to teach organizations how to avoid taking these kneejerk panicked reactions to a simple Twitter pile-on? I know that Wokeness is the order of the day for many organizations, but I don't think institutional capture has gone that far (or has it?) and I think there must be institutions who cave to the mob purely in blind panic, without actually even trying to weather the storm.
Could there be a way of training organizations to be more "resilient" in the face of online storms-in-a-teacup?
I have no experience in social media management or anything like that, so maybe such a thing already exists, but if it does it doesn't seem to have been put to good use thus far.
This doesn't just apply to the trans debate, of course – I think it could be hugely beneficial to public discourse at large if institutions were encouraged to take stock and actually get some perspective on how much weight to give to a few screeching avatars on Twitter?
Cheers!