
Executive Summary
- A lie becomes the headline when the truth surfaces, even if the original issue was small
- If you cannot share details, explain the constraint, share the process and commit to the next update
- Correct inaccuracies fast with verified facts, one spokesperson and consistent messaging
Why this matters
When reporters are on deadline, they want verified facts, clear context and a responsible quote. If a brand lies, it usually gets exposed through documents, sources or conflicting statements. The damage is not just the story. It is the trust loss that follows your brand for years.
What to do instead of lying
If you cannot answer a question, you still have options that protect credibility.
Use one of these approaches:
1) Share what you can verify
2) Explain what you cannot share and why
3) Commit to the next update and follow through
Copy you can use
If you do not know yet:
“We are still verifying facts. We will share what we can confirm by [timeframe].”
If legal limits details:
“We are unable to comment on specific details due to ongoing legal matters. We can share the steps we are taking and when we will provide the next update.”
If a claim is false:
“For accuracy, here is what we can confirm right now: [one sentence].”
A simple media truth protocol
Step 1: Designate one spokesperson and one intake channel
Step 2: Gather verified facts and document sources
Step 3: Align leadership, legal and communications on what is confirmed
Step 4: Respond with facts, process and next update timing
Step 5: Update consistently across press, website and social
FAQ
What if the truth makes us look bad?
The truth usually comes out anyway. Owning verified facts early gives you the best chance to show responsibility, reduce speculation and rebuild trust.
Can we say something is true if we believe it but cannot prove it?
No. In media responses, separate what is confirmed from what is being reviewed. Speculation creates contradictions later.
How do we correct something we already said that was wrong?
Correct it quickly, clearly and once. Share the accurate fact, avoid defensiveness and update every channel with the same corrected language.
Next step: If you need senior-led media guidance or crisis PR support


