
NEW YORK (AP) โ Journalists are used to being wary about odd pranksters pulling April Fool's Day hoaxes at this time of year. Few expect it from a multi-billion dollar corporation.
Volkswagen admitted Tuesday that it had put out a false news release saying that it had changed the name of its U.S. subsidiary to โVoltswagen of Americaโ in an attempt to be funny and promote a new electric utility vehicle.
Several news organizations, including The Associated Press, USA Today, CNBC and The Washington Post, had reported the original press release as real news, some after being assured specifically that it was no joke.
The deception even briefly lifted stock prices for the company, according to The Wall Street Journal, which first revealed the deception by reaching an official at the company headquarters in Germany.
โThe Associated Press was repeatedly assured by Volkswagen that its U.S. subsidiary planned a name change, and reported that information, which we now know to be false," company spokeswoman Lauren Easton said. โWe have corrected our story and published a new one based on the companyโs admission. This and any deliberate release of false information hurts accurate journalism and the public good.โ
The story emerged Monday after a news release was briefly posted on a company website and then disappeared, but not before catching some eyes. CNBC, which declined comment on the hoax, is believed to be the first major news organization to report it as legitimate news.
The AP wrote a story about it Monday after its reporter was assured by Mark Gillies, a company spokesman in the United States, that it was serious, Easton said.
It was a similar story at USA Today, where a reporter specifically asked if it was a joke and was told โno,โ said the newspaper's spokeswoman, Chrissy Terrell.
โThe company used this fake announcement as a way to manipulate respected reporters from trusted news outlets to get attention for their marketing campaign,โ she said. โWe are disheartened that the company would choose this type of disingenuous marketing.โ
The USA Today reporter who was initially lied to was more blunt.
โThis was not a joke,โ reporter Nathan Bomey wrote on Twitter. โIt was deception. In case you haven't noticed, we have a misinformation problem in this country. Now you're part of it. Why should anyone trust you again?โ
At first on Tuesday, the company doubled down on its story by reissuing the news release, which quoted Scott Keogh, the president and CEO of Volkswagen of America. It even changed its Twitter page, announcing that โwe know, 66 is an unusual age to change your name, but we've always been young at heart.โ
There's some precedent for a company trying a โfake newsโ joke. In 2018, the food chain IHOP briefly tried to convince consumer it was exchanging the โP" in its name to โB,โ trading pancakes for burgers.
Gillies, after presenting the false information the day before, came clean on Tuesday. The Journal quoted a spokesman for the company in Germany as saying, โwe didn't mean to mislead anyone. The whole thing is just a marketing action to get people talkingโ about its new car model.
The AP and other news organizations that falsely reported the news later wrote about the hoax. โAbout that plan to change Volkswagen of America's name.โ wrote USA Today's Mike Snider. โNever mind.โ
โPerhaps we should consider whether (the) marketing campaign was funnier in the original German?โ said Juleanna Glover, a corporate consultant and founder of the firm Ridgely Walsh.
Glover said the company landed millions of dollars in publicity from a press release.
โI am sure VW regrets the move for now but a good marketing team will find the path to capitalize on the word play,โ she said.
Shon Hiatt, a professor of management and organization at the University of Southern California's Marshall School of Business, said campaigns with humor aren't necessarily problematic if presented in a tongue-in-cheek way and not as falsehoods to reporters.
โI don't think it will hurt them,โ Hiatt said. โI just don't think it gave them the full potential boost they wanted.โ