Tag Archives: Bill Ford

Fortune Magazine review of What Did Jesus Drive by Doron Levin

Stepping inside the world of cars and crisis PR

Jason Vines, then Ford Motor Company vice president of communications, at a 2001 press conference. Bill Pugliano—Getty ImagesJason Vines spent his career as a corporate first responder to auto company PR disasters. His new book, ‘What Did Jesus Drive?’ looks back on his time at Ford, Chrysler and more.

Few industries are prisoner to the frightening randomness of negative publicity like the one that builds, markets and sells automobiles.

That’s why an automaker’s vice president of communications or public affairs always is – and must be – a worrier. At any moment the phone may ring, signaling a federal safety investigation, an awful review from Consumer Reports or a gaffe from the CEO that sinks the company’s stock.

Imagine the terror at the Ford Motor Co. F 2.46% in 2000 when news began trickling in about Ford Explorers that overturned when their Firestone tires shredded, killing and maiming their occupants. Or when the New York Times and media figures like Arianna Huffington declared war on sport-utility vehicles. Or when Audis, and later Toyotas, were accused of “unintended acceleration.”

For anyone wishing to know exactly what it’s like to be a corporate first responder to public relations disasters, Jason Vines has just written a definitive account, What Did Jesus Drive? Crisis PR in Cars, Computers and Christianity (Waldorf Publishing). For most of his career, Vines, 54, has advised domestic and foreign automakers. He also served Detroit-based Compuware and, for a short stretch, Zondervan, a publisher of Christian literature.

Vines got his start at Chrysler FCA in the 1980s, an automaker so close to the edge of financial ruin that the slightest scandal or panic could tip it into oblivion. Chrysler’s minivan, its big moneymaker, at the worst possible moment ran into trouble in 1988 when its notorious A604 “Ultradrive” transmission started failing. Vines and his colleagues urged a “customers first” program to be open, honest and to replace every defective transmission, no matter the cost, helped avert bankruptcy.

The lessons learned during a career contending with such crises comprise the book’s spine. In 1996, journalists were following an alarming trend that materialized with the advent of front-seat airbags: the tendency of very small children to be hurt or killed when they deployed. (Airbags worked properly to protect larger children.) The solution was simple: Small children had to ride in the back seat. Vines helped orchestrate a media campaign aimed at parents: “The back is where it’s at.”

Recent news from General Motors GM 3.62% , documenting nearly 30 million vehicles recalled after a potentially deadly ignition switch problem was ignored or covered up by GM engineers and lawyers, suggest that safety and other crises are still routine in the automobile industry.

The Explorer debacle cost Vines his job as vice president of public affairs, as well as the job of Jacques Nasser, the CEO who hired him. A lesson learned is that public relations disasters, no matter how adroitly handled, claim many victims that often include the executives who are on the front lines.

Vines recounts how, during the tension-filled days preceding his ouster, he came to suspect that his phone was bugged by unnamed others at Ford whose purpose was to get to the bottom of leaks to the press. (A Ford spokesperson denied knowledge of eavesdropping.)

In today’s world, audio counter measures – or ACM, as corporate security calls it – have been replaced by email surveillance, which can determine leaks just as easily, if not more so, than bugging a telephone.

If anything, corporations today are vulnerable to PR disasters that travel far faster via Twitter than anything that 60 Minutes is able to disseminate. The lessons of transparency, honesty and “customer first” haven’t changed.

In NASCAR capital to do interview on local Fox; SEMA 2014 in Vegas next

Drove 4 hours with Betsy to Charlotte for an interview October 28th, 7:30 a.m. on the local FOX station (appreciate their interest). The drive from Wilmington to Charlotte is so easy and then so brutal as the last 3,000 miles are through suburbs with strip mall after strip mall, 35 to 45 miles an hour.

What Did Jesus Drive? Crisis PR in Cars, Computers and Christianity officially launches November 1, but lots of people already have the paperback and the e-book in their hands and devices. The electronic versions beyond Kindle get loaded in a few days.

Then, it’s on to Vegas for SEMA2014. Keep the faith. Keep telling the truth. Over and out. Jason Vines

What Lee Iacocca and Autoweek’s Dutch Mandel said about What Did Jesus Drive? coming Nov.1

Jason Vines’ book is being described as “unprecedented,” “defining,” and a “light shining on darkness.”

“Jason’s story telling is his honest account of time well spent in a career documenting numerous pivotal events we all want to hear about.” Lee Iacocca.

“Jason Vines lived The Hurt Locker, defusing one public relations I.E.D. after another. To think some of the largest corporations we can name have been this close to pure PR disaster, and yet were saved by the insight Jason earned from decades of corporate cage fights, is truly amazing. What Did Jesus Drive is a deep dive – nay, it is the colonoscopy – into the bowels of business, and it shares stories long known by a select few, or whispered in hallways outside war rooms.”” Dutch Mandel, Autoweek Publisher.

What Democratic Strategist Joe Trippi is saying about What Did Jesus Drive? and Author Jason Vines

“Get me Jason Vines! How I wish as the candidates I worked for screamed, screwed, or gaffed their way into crisis, I had called on Jason Vines. This is more than a corporate PR book – it’s a masters’ class, no holds barred, white knuckle ride of insights and wisdom for anyone whose job it is to communicate for a living. Jack Nicholson’s character in “A Few Good Men” bellowed “you can’t handle the truth” – Jason Vines in raw and real story telling of his own journey explains to every politician, celebrity, corporate communications professional and government agency that has ever faced trouble (yes I am talking about you NFL – read this one Goodell!) why we have such a hard time telling the truth, why that’s the whole frickin’ problem and what we can do about it.” Joe Trippi, Democratic Campaign and Media Consultant.