For small businesses, reputation can take years to build and only hours to damage.
That reality became painfully clear for Kelly R. Scott, owner of Little Britches, after false online accusations spread rapidly across social media and triggered public backlash against her business.
Scott, a longtime business owner in the children’s retail space, spent more than a year fighting the claims in court after posts alleging misconduct involving baby products circulated widely online. The case ultimately resulted in a civil jury verdict in Scott’s favor.
But while the legal outcome helped clear her name, Scott says the experience exposed a much larger issue facing entrepreneurs in the digital era: how quickly viral misinformation can create financial and reputational damage before facts are fully verified.
“The internet doesn’t automatically fix itself once the truth is on paper,” Scott said in a public statement following the case.
The situation involving Kelly R. Scott and Little Britches reflects a growing challenge for small businesses operating in highly connected online communities where Facebook groups, consumer forums, and viral posts can rapidly shape public opinion.
For Scott, the consequences extended far beyond social media comments.
According to interviews discussing the case, Little Britches experienced significant declines in revenue after the allegations spread online, while the company also faced threatening phone calls, negative reviews, and sustained public scrutiny.
The controversy also affected the company’s ability to market products online. Scott said social media backlash made it increasingly difficult to advertise baby gear and safety-related products without attracting renewed attacks or harassment, contributing to broader operational strain on the business.
Founded as a resale-focused children’s retailer before expanding into boutique clothing and baby products, Little Britches built a loyal customer base over many years through both physical retail locations and online sales.
Now, Scott says the company is moving away from baby gear entirely and shifting toward a clothing and gifts-focused model.
At the same time, she has become increasingly vocal about what she sees as a broader cultural issue involving misinformation, online mob behavior, and the role social media communities can play in amplifying unverified claims.
“I want to talk honestly about how toxic some mom Facebook groups and ‘buyer beware’ spaces have become, and how much harm they can cause to small businesses and real families,” Scott said when discussing her goals moving forward.
The experience has also pushed Scott into larger conversations about digital accountability and the real-world impact online misinformation can have on entrepreneurs, employees, and local businesses.
Researchers studying digital behavior have increasingly warned about the business risks associated with coordinated online backlash and viral misinformation. A widely cited study from Carnegie Mellon University on “online firestorms” described how social media networks can rapidly accelerate aggressive negative word-of-mouth, often driven more by emotion and group reinforcement than verified facts.
According to the researchers, digital environments create conditions that encourage “unrestrained information flow” and reduced social accountability, allowing online communities to amplify outrage at a speed rarely seen in traditional public discourse. For businesses, the result can be immediate reputational damage long before facts are fully investigated.
Scott says that dynamic became one of the most difficult parts of the experience.
In a recent podcast appearance, she described how quickly online accusations escalated into widespread public judgment despite many participants having no direct knowledge of the situation itself.
For Scott, the case was never only about one post or one verdict. It became an example of how rapidly online narratives can impact real businesses, real employees, and real families when misinformation spreads faster than verification.
As conversations around online accountability continue to grow, Scott says she hopes more business owners begin treating viral misinformation as a serious operational and reputational risk rather than simply “internet drama.”

