This Crisis Media Training workshop focuses on the need for successful interaction with the media. After completing our training, your employees will have the skills necessary to confidently and correctly manage media contacts.

We pride ourselves on offering fully customized media training workshops depending on your industry.
   
 

Crisis Management Leadership

Tips For Developing A Successful Emergency/Crisis Management Program

SEO in Public Relations Crisis Management

Turnaround Specialists: Hiring a Crisis Management Leader

Strategies Behind Crisis Management

Crisis Management - How to Survive a "Disaster"

Turning Brand Crisis Management Occurrences Into Public Relation Bonanzas

Control on the Media - Crisis Management

Crisis Media Management Planning

The Best Way For a CEO to Deliver a Crisis Management Speech

World Class Corporate Crisis Media Management and Communications Teams

The Worst Case Scenario - Crisis Management Issues

Understanding Crisis Management KPIs

Crisis Management - What Happens When It's All Over?

Steps For Designing a Crisis Management Plan

Brand Under Fire - Crisis Management for Individuals

Crisis Management Tools For Remote Workers

Crisis Management - Are You Prepared?

Characteristics of Successful Crisis Management

Free Yourself From Crisis Management

25 More Crisis Management Lessons Learned

Effective Crisis Management of Major Incidents

Crisis Management

Crisis Management - Expert Strategies For Turnarounds and Liquidations

Crisis Management Measures - Reduce Risks and Prevent Crisis

The Importance of Public Relations and Crisis Management Planning To Your Business

Crisis Management Ain't Fun!

Corporate Crisis Management Tools

Crisis Management - Will You Survive This Day?

Crisis Management Planning - What's Happening Where We Work?

 


Crisis Training Training

A Crisis can happen to any organization, at any time. We specialize in preparing people to manage a crisis while communicating effectively with 
the media. For more information please call or email us.

Crisis Management Connectivity & Accessibility - Staying Online
 

 If a crisis management official can't get online, retrieve his files and/or make a phone call when he needs to, business is severely impaired and his reputation is threatened. If there's anyone who needs to walk their talk on connectivity and accessibility, it's those of us who work in the field of crisis management. However, by extension, anyone who might end up becoming engaged in crisis management response also needs to have a very high level of connectivity and accessibility or at least be able to ramp up those levels as needed with crisis management.

So I thought I'd share with you how I attempt to achieve this crisis management goal, with some significant crisis management success. I also welcome your ideas for publication, and I'm always open to checking out new systems and technologies that could be of crisis management assistance. Please know that I can't write about everything I review, but if it impresses me it's bound to result in an article or two. And I also have to point out that what works for me, as a small consultancy operating as a virtual agency on larger cases, wouldn't necessarily work for others.

Staying Online during crisis management
I need Internet and email access to operate my business at its peak efficacy. Ideally, I want to be able to continuously use my Outlook-based email system. Yet I found, often the hard way, that:
Some locations, even major hotels, don't have currently functioning Internet access.
Sometimes my local ISP "goes down" for an indeterminate period of time.
Client locations, given today's IT security needs, seldom afford me the ability to send email out from Outlook, although I may be able to access Web-based email if they will at least allow me to run my browser through their server.

On the go -- even in the back of a car -- I might want to receive or send email or access the Internet.

Here's what I do to stay online in crisis management:
Ensure I Don't Rely On Any Single Service. You'll see what I mean as you read the rest of this.
Use Sprint PCS When No Broadband Is Available. I have two computers, my desktop and my notebook (usually used for travel but fully capable of replacing my desktop on a few minutes’ notice -- I'll talk about data backup and restoration in another article). At home or traveling, I can connect to the local broadband service by Ethernet cable or wirelessly. But when that's not possible, I have a SPRINT PCS card for my notebook computer that allows me to get pretty-darn-fast Internet and email access using a service completely different than my primary ISP (Adelphia). For the non-technical, a PCS card is a special card-shaped device that slides into a slot on your notebook computer and which is able to call into the SPRINT network wirelessly. Verizon, Cingular, T-mobile and, I believe, other services have their own PCS cards, SPRINT just happens to be the fastest-speed service I could find in my local market.

Use My Cingular-powered Blackberry When Needs Must. Face it, typing on a computer (at least for an experienced keyboard user) is one heck of a lot easier than thumbing a Blackberry keyboard. However, I have found my Blackberry to have multiple uses in the area of connectivity and accessibility:

It gives me a third Internet service to use if no others are available.
Its Internet/browser access is quite decent.

I can and do maintain a separate Blackberry email address for my clients to use in the event of urgent communications AND in the event that my primary email server is down. I choose not to "sync" my Outlook email with the Blackberry, the volume of regular email (I tried it once) just buries the tiny device.

Oh yeah -- it's a telephone too, one which has powerful data duplication capability (i.e., storing every contact and appointment from my Outlook program).

Host My Email And Website On Yet Another Service. I use a relatively small but very reliable service, BAPORT.COM, to host my Bernstein Crisis Management website and my email. Hence, even at home, if Adelphia has crashed, I can use my SPRINT PCS card to retrieve my email from the BAPORT server. If BAPORT goes down, and it has, it still has a backup system which stores incoming emails and eventually gets them to me -- and I alert my clients to cc my Blackberry address until further notice.

Become Skilled At The Use Of Wi-Fi Sites. If you are going to be engaged in any form of crisis response, it is an essential, not optional, skill to become VERY familiar with how to access your email and other Internet functions from a "Wi-Fi site" -- i.e., anywhere where wireless access can be found, which could even be your local Starbucks. AND, to know how to operate securely from such a site. I'm pretty good at this but I don't feel competent to "train" you in the techniques. Rather, I strongly urge you to get your IT department, or even the "Geek Squad" from your local computer store, to do so ASAP.

Use of these tools and methods is guaranteed to better protect your business against crises and prepare you for a rapid response.

Source: Jonathan Bernstein link