• PR Daily
  • Ragan Training
  • Center for AI Strategy
  • Insider
  • Leadership Council
  • Comms Week
  • Comms Framework
  • Log In
Ragan Communications Logo
  • Log In
  • Internal
  • PR
  • AI
  • Social Media
  • Culture
  • Writing
  • EVENTS
  • AWARDS
  • More
    • Contact Us
    • Job Board
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Ragan Insider Old
    • Site Map
    • Privacy Policy
    • Store
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • Ragan is proud to be a part of the Inc. 5000 list for 2025!
Brand Storytelling

Before your brand posts on social about 9/11, read this

The pros and cons of brands getting involved with commemorating the terrorist attacks.

By
Allison Carter
@allisonlcarter
Sept. 9, 2024
Headshot of Allison Carter
SHARE

This story was originally published in 2022. 

The 23rd anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks will take place on Wednesday. Many people and brands will take to social media that day to post memories or commemorations of that terrible day.

Should your brand?

Even as 9/11 recedes from the recent past into history, the event still evokes incredibly strong feelings, not just from those who lost loved ones or escaped one of the towers, but also from those of us who watched the events unfold on live television. The United States still carries deep psychic scars from the attacks, including the fallout which saw the U.S. become involved in a long-running war whose repercussions echo to this day.

Deciding whether or not to post about that day is a delicate calculus. Saying the wrong thing will bring anger, scorn and ridicule. Let’s learn from the mistakes of the past and help you evaluate whether your brand should remember 9/11 publicly — or just hold your own moment of silence.

  1. Don’t promote a commercial product or sale.

The single biggest way brands run afoul of 9/11 or any solemn commemoration is that they feel the need to make their brand part of the story. While some brands are an inextricable part of that story (we’ll get to those later), this is not an opportunity to sell anything or gain brand share.

Huge companies have made this mistake. AT&T infamously inserted their phone into an image of the Tribute in Light art installation, which recreates the Twin Towers with beams of light. A yoga studio in Virginia tweeted they were offering 20% off Bikram classes because 9+11=20%. Both brands had to delete the messages and apologize.

Even brands using more subtle branding approaches have been excoriated on Twitter. Even simply putting a logo or using brand colors in a tribute message can be seen as being in bad taste, as both CVS and clothing brand Pretty Little Thing found out the hard way.

  1. Some brands must speak.

Some organizations have profound connections to 9/11. Financial services firm Cantor Fitzgerald had its offices in the North Tower and lost the majority of its New York workforce, some 658 souls. The company now spends the day making major donations to disaster relief charities. American Airlines and United Airlines both saw their planes turned into bombs, leaving their employees and customers dead. In 2021, United Airlines unveiled a memorial garden for their crew who were killed.

These are solemn and appropriate responses from companies that can never fully escape the shadow of 9/11.

  1. … but many don’t.

It’s OK to stay quiet about 9/11. For instance, let’s say you represent a clothing brand that appeals mostly to Gen Z — a generation who may not even have been born when 9/11 happened. You had no employees affected by the attacks.

You have nothing to gain by making a statement and much more to lose. It isn’t an event with personal meaning to your audience and it doesn’t affect how you conduct business.

Very few will notice if you remain silent — but many will notice if you get it wrong. Consider just taking the day off social media out of respect.

  1. If you need to make a statement.

If you’ve weighed the benefits and the risks and decided you do need to make a public commemoration of 9/11 because it impacts your audience (American Millennials and older, especially those in New York, Washington, D.C., or Pennsylvania) or your business (think uninvolved airlines, security companies, those with headquarters in one of the attack sites), keep these things in mind:

  • No branding
  • No tie to sales in any way
  • Keep it simple with just a few words of text
  • Any imagery should avoid depicting the actual attacks. Don’t retraumatize viewers with photos of the fiery towers. Instead, use imagery of memorials, American flags and so on
  • One post is sufficient

The bottom line: 9/11 is a commemoration of a day when nearly 3,000 ordinary Americans were killed while millions more watched in shock and sorrow. It isn’t a day to make a buck or build your brand. Be kind, be empathetic and consider being quiet.

Allison Carter is editor-in-chief of PR Daily. Follow her on Twitter or LinkedIn.

Topics: Brand Storytelling

COMMENT

Click here to cancel reply.

Ragan.com Daily Headlines

Sign up to receive the latest articles from Ragan.com directly in your inbox.


Terms of Use | Today's Headlines I accept Terms of Use

Subscribe to Ragan's Crisis Communications Daily

Ragan.com Daily Headlines

Sign up to receive the latest articles from Ragan.com directly in your inbox.


Terms of Use | Today's Headlines I accept Terms of Use

RECOMMENDED READING

How an Edelman EVP approaches trust repair in crises
How I Got Here  |  Isis Simpson-Mersha

How an Edelman EVP approaches trust repair in crises

How AARP is redefining aging through inclusion and authentic storytelling
How I Got Here  |  Isis Simpson-Mersha

How AARP is redefining aging through inclusion and authentic storytelling

The secret to Airstream’s iconic culture? Its 30-person employee council
Internal Communications  |  Sean Devlin

The secret to Airstream’s iconic culture? Its 30-person employee council

Working inside out: An internal comms view on rebrands
Brand Storytelling  |  Sean Devlin

Working inside out: An internal comms view on rebrands

A cultural reboot: Inside The Home Depot’s strategy to reframe selling from within
Brand Storytelling  |  Sean Devlin

A cultural reboot: Inside The Home Depot’s strategy to reframe selling from within

  • About Us
  • About Ragan
  • Press Releases
  • FAQ
  • Privacy Policy
  • Receive our newsletter
  • Site Map
  • Store
Ragan Lookbook 2026
  • Memberships
  • Communications Leadership Council
  • Ragan Training
  • Center for AI Strategy
  • Ragan Insider
  • Bits & Pieces
  • Topics
  • Internal Communications
  • Public Relations
  • AI & Automation
  • Social Media
  • Culture
  • Writing & Editing
  • WebSites
  • Communications Week
  • PR Daily
  • What We Do
  • Events
  • Awards
  • Guidebooks
  • Host an event
  • Communications Week Licensing
  • Consulting
  • Job Board
  • Sponsorship
  • White Papers
  • Follow Us
  • LinkedIn
  • Threads
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
Ragan is proud to be a part of the Inc. 5000 list for 2025!
Copyright 2026 Lawrence Ragan Communications, Inc.
Ragan Communications Logo
Forgot your password?

Enter the email you used in your Ragan store purchase.


Back to Log In

Back to Log In
Forgot to set up an account? Set it up now. Having trouble? Contact [email protected] or 1-800-878-5331 Trouble logging in? Contact [email protected] or 1-800-878-5331

Ragan.com Daily Headlines

Sign up to receive the latest articles from Ragan.com directly in your inbox.


Terms of Use | Today's Headlines I accept Terms of Use
  • Facebook Facebook
  • X / Twitter Twitter / X
  • LinkedIn LinkedIn
  • Teams Microsoft Teams
  • Copy Link Copy Link
Hide
Login

Forgot your password?

Not a member? Join now.

Forgot to set up an account? Set it up now. Trouble logging in? Contact [email protected] or 1-800-878-5331
Create Account

Enter the email you used in your Ragan store purchase.


Back to Log In
Having trouble? Contact [email protected] or 1-800-878-5331
Setup Password

Back to Log In
Having trouble? Contact [email protected] or 1-800-878-5331