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Nick Caporella on crisis communication

From National Beverage CEO had months to respond to LaCroix scandal: Crisis management pro · · CNBC Television

“They could have done more; I guess that took a long time to respond exactly, and also in the CEO statement he hit towards the end starts choc I mean there's exclamation points in the statement that tells you all you need to know.”

Nick Caporella
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer, NATIONAL BEVERAGE CORP
crisis communicationcorporate statementspublic perception

On , Nick Caporella, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer at NATIONAL BEVERAGE CORP, spoke about crisis communication during National Beverage CEO had months to respond to LaCroix scandal: Crisis management pro on CNBC Television.

National Beverage CEO had months to respond to LaCroix scandal: Crisis management pro
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National Beverage CEO had months to respond to LaCroix scandal: Crisis management pro
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National Beverage CEO blamed its earnings miss on "injustice." Dean Crutchfield of the crisis management firm Dean Crutchfield ...
Nick Caporella

About Nick Caporella

Chairman & Chief Executive Officer · NATIONAL BEVERAGE CORP

Nick Caporella, chairman and CEO of National Beverage, was criticized by crisis management professional Dean Crutchfield for the company's delayed response to questions about ingredients in its LaCroix sparkling water. Crutchfield said the company had months to address the issue after news broke around October 1, 2018, but did not respond until January 2019 with what it described as an independent lab test. Crutchfield characterized the delay as "dragging their feet" and suggested the company may have hoped the controversy would be "swept under the carpet." In a statement attributed to Caporella, he wrote with exclamation points that "the personality of the word LaCroix coupled with the awesome experience of its essence and taste is unique" and asked, "would you trade away that LaLa feeling? No way, they shout we just love our LaCroix." Caporella, a 1979 Horatio Alger Award recipient, has described his upbringing in a Pennsylvania agricultural and mining area during the Depression. He said that at age 11 he collected scrap metal and coal, and later started a site preparation business before becoming president and CEO of Burnup and Sims. In his award acceptance speech, Caporella credited a philosophy lesson from his father about carrying blocks in both arms as enabling him to "achieve far beyond my wildest dreams." He accepted the award on behalf of his parents, his wife Thomasina, and his family.

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