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Corporate Truth and Public Perception


Article # : 11605 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 9 / 1986  882 Words
Author : Herbert London
Herbert London is dean of the Gallatin Division of New York University and Senior Fellow of the Hudson Institute.

       GOODBYE TO THE LOW PROFILE
       The Art of Creative Confrontation
       Herb Schmertz with William Novak
       Boston: Little Brown & Co., 1986
       pp.242 $16.95
       
        During the well-publicized oil crisis of the 1970s, populists looking for an easy answer to the problem of excruciatingly long lines at gas stations reflexively blamed the big oil companies. It was alleged that these barons of black gold were bilking the public for an even greater gain than the corpulent profits they routinely earned. So widespread was this sentiment that President Carter himself joined the chorus of blame. To many Americans it was simply self-evident that the oil companies were greedy. Almost every television report and newspaper story reinforced this yarn.
       
        Standing against this tornado of public opinion was one man, a corporate Don Quixote, who demonstrated tenacity, imagination, and flair - Herb Schmertz, Mobil Oil's Vice President for Public Affairs. As Schmertz himself notes, if you want to enter the public debate instead of simply being caught in the tide of fashion, you must be willing to engage in confrontation and do so creatively. His record attests to this prescription.
       
        Good-bye To The Low Profile: The Art of Creative Confrontation is written as a primer for business executives who are obliged to respond to the charges made by the media solons. As Schmertz asks, "What do you do when Sixty Minutes Calls?" If you're Schmertz you respond directly, recognizing full well that much of ... (1996 of 5194 Characters)
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