GoDaddy CEO Bob Parsons' Elephant-Killing Will Likely Drive Customers Away

What Effect Does Public Condemnation Have?

Jeff Musall
GoDaddy CEO Bob Parsons had his elephant hunt in Zimbabwe filmed. Now the video has gone viral, with predictable results. Animal rights organizations are calling for boycotts, and Internet buzz is reaching a fever pitch.

Bob Parsons wasn't poaching; what he did was completely legal. Limited animal hunts are a part of conservation and control. His elephant hunt wasn't much different than what are called Damage Hunts in the American West. Still, it's not everyday people see an elephant shot on video. The public condemnation will most likely hurt GoDaddy.

Does outrageous behavior or statements by executives always damage the brand? What are some other examples to learn from?

BP CEO Tony Hayward goes yachting

When British Petroleum CEO Tony Hayward went to watch his 700,000 yacht "Bob" compete in a race around the Isle of Wight while oil flowed into the Gulf of Mexico, he was roundly denounced. It was only a short time later he announced his resignation.

BP as a company continues to experience problems. BP is the majority owner of the Alaska Pipeline. In January of this year it experienced another in a line of shutdowns due to leaks.

And just today, March 31, BP lost in front of an arbitration tribunal on a deal with a Russian company. The setback might not be directly related to the disaster, but it's not hard to imagine others being wary of doing business with BP.

Enron Executives caught manipulating power supplies

When tapes surfaced of Enron executives bragging about manipulating electricity supplies in California and making fun of "Grandma Millie," the fallout helped ensure executives from the collapsed energy giant would face repercussions.

One former CEO, Jeff Skilling, is in jail. Another, Ken Kay, died from heart failure. There have been suicides and thousands lost their life savings. A film,The Smartest Guys in the Room, documents the fall of Enron.

Wall Street and the engineers of financial meltdown

When the deepest global downturn since the Great Depression began, we didn't know just how much damage economic malfeasance would do. Lack of confidence in economies the world over persists, as does a deep distrust of banking interests.

While some prosecutions may come, to date virtually no one has been held to account. Perhaps it's the scale of the shenanigans. Justice still may be forthcoming to those found culpable.

A film by Michael Moore, Capitalism, a Love Story, asks us to look at needed reforms.

In light of other scandals, it's hard to predict just what the fallout will be for Bob Parsons and GoDaddy. More than likely, customers will be driven away.

Published by Jeff Musall

Jeff Musall has a passion for writing, a knack for frank and informed expression, and a desire to engage the minds of readers. He is an avid sports fan across the board and loves good competitions. His work...  View profile

7 Comments

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  • Michael Segers4/8/2011

    OK, I eat meat. I wear leather shoes, but somehow, I don't believe he has his freezer full of elephant steaks.

  • Az4/7/2011

    @He-Man
    There's a very large difference between an elephant and a cow. Elephants are vunerable (ie, not plentiful). There's bucketloads of cows (and chickens and sheep etc).

    Shooting an animal for food I've got no problems with. Shooting an animal that's on the endangered animals list is stupid and asinine.

  • cm4/3/2011

    Bob Parson's most certainly has damaged the GoDaddy brand and should resign from any position of decision making management in an effort to stem the tide of customers defecting to alternative brands in this very generic world of domain name registration and web hosting. There is good reson to a business to stay with the brand if it might upset even just one of their customers.

    Personally I don't care why he wanted to kill an elephant, nor do I know if it was right or wrong, but why he felt the need to not only produce and publish a video, but to publish a photo of him sitting on the slaughtered animal in a image that harks back to the Abu Ghraib prison photos is just madness. Now I have spent my weekend fielding calls and emails from scores of clients asking why I put them on GoDaddy and when I can get them off. This ego fueled public relations blunder of Bob's is costing me time and money. Why should I have to pay for his inability to act professionally? His defe

  • Peter Flom4/1/2011

    GoDaddy went.

  • He-Man4/1/2011

    If you are not a strict vegan who never wears leather and are critical of hunting you are a total hypocrite.

  • Orchiolum4/1/2011

    I've switched all my domain names from GoDaddy to another company. I won't be back. I agree with LB...great piece.

  • L B Woodgate4/1/2011

    The "pillars of our community" are often lacking in ethical judgments. Great piece.

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