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Crisis Training Courses
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.
Staff and customers are
an often neglected part
of both the planning and
response phases of
crisis management. David
Perl provides a
checklist of some of the
key things to consider
in this area.
In the past, business
continuity and crisis
management has focused
on tangible assets,
essentially recovery of
systems and data and
re-establishment of
facilities and services.
This all changed in the
aftermath of 9/11, where
it was realized that the
human factor was as
critical as the
technology and
buildings.
Watching the heart
wrenching suffering of
the people affected by
the Madrid bombings has
reinforced the need to
ensure your contingency
plans pay regard to the
people elements as well.
I have listed below just
a few of the many
aspects that should be
given consideration:
1. Identify suitable
skilled staff to form
your crisis management
team. Take into account
minimum numbers, in a
long running crisis
people will burn out if
not enough backups
exist.
2. Take into
consideration recent
personnel circumstances.
Young families and
elderly dependents can
all affect the
availability and
willingness of your
crisis management team.
3. Be aware that in a
crisis, your crisis
management team’s core
personality traits will
be accentuated. I have
seen internal politics,
competitiveness,
jealousy, insecurities
and a whole host of
other issues all bubble
to the surface within
crisis management teams.
4. Ensure strong
leadership during a
crisis - this will be
crucial if you are to
have any chance of
weathering the storm.
5. Develop a workable
plan - I like lots of
checklists. Your crisis
management team will not
have time to read a
thick manual in a
crisis. Remember, Noah
built the Ark before the
rains came.
6. Clearly define the
organization’s
expectations of the
crisis management teams
and in turn what they
can expect. Issues such
as overtime payments and
relocation/hardship
cover needs to be
considered.
7. Train the team around
your crisis response and
exercise the plans on a
regular basis. Human
performance increases
with training and
practice. This was
something crucial I
learnt from my medical
training!
8. Give your crisis
management team some
education on how people
react in a crisis and
how people cope with
grief - use specialists
for this.
9. Develop relationships
with the external
suppliers that you may
need to call upon,
especially if dealing
with loss of life. The
role of counseling (or
more accurately
Psychological
Debriefing) in the
aftermath of human loss
or serious injury is now
thought to do more harm
than good, but what you
will certainly need in
the immediate aftermath
are people skilled in
providing psychological
first aid.
10. Do not shirk your
responsibilities as an
employer when dealing
with real tough stuff.
Whatever the cause of
the crisis, if it
involves human
suffering, your staff
will want to know that
they are working for a
caring and compassionate
organization.
11. Consider the best
way to communicate with
all your staff on a
frequent basis - even
those not involved in
the crisis response. In
our experience, personal
face to face team
briefings are best.
12. Test your call out
notification system out
of office hours.
Dedicated systems exist
to simplify this task.
13. Ensure that all
employee records are
current and include home
and mobile numbers. You
should also have their
emergency contact number
and their relationship
with the emergency
contact listed for all
staff. Update this
information quarterly.
14. Make sure HR can be
contacted out of hours -
you will need their
input if your staff are
impacted in any way.
15. Make it easy for
staff to communicate
with your organization
during a crisis. Set up
a free phone number that
gives out a pre-recorded
message of the latest
factual information.
16. People will be
desperate for
information and in a
crisis your phones could
get jammed very quickly.
Consider outsourcing
this area to a
specialist supplier.
17. Use your website for
disseminating
information to your
staff and customers.
18. If invoking a remote
site, consider all the
practical and logistical
issues in advance;
transport,
accommodation, catering,
child care, shift
patterns etc.
19. If you have a crisis
overseas a whole host of
other issues will come
into play. Time
differences, language
barriers, variable
medical standards,
cultural differences in
dealing with death and
bereavement, poor or
non-existent local
support, involvement of
the Foreign and
Commonwealth Office etc.
will all come into play.
(My company, Docleaf,
has unparallel
experience and expertise
in this area.)
20. Be aware of the
protocols of death
notification for the
country you live in.
21. Provide ongoing
support to those who
have been personally
affected by the crisis.
This could include
regular hospital visits,
frequent communication
and possibly attending
funerals.
22. Give consideration
to the most sensitive
way of returning the
personal effects of
staff if dealing with
fatalities.
Dealing with the human
factors is perhaps one
of the most challenging
and rewarding areas of
crisis management.
Hopefully your crisis
will never involve
injury or death, as
nothing can fully
prepare you and your
crisis management team
for dealing with these
issues. However, with
good planning, training,
and a first class crisis
response, you and your
organization can deal
with the unthinkable.
The reputation of your
organization could even
be enhanced, as one that
really does care about
its people, whether
staff or customers.
Finally: The above is
just the tip of the
iceberg. Even if you
feel you have all the
above items covered, it
can still pay to have an
external specialist
company audit your
plans. Even better would
be to have specialists
conduct your annual
simulation exercise (We
presume you are testing
annually as a
minimum!?). They will
offer an objective and
non-judgmental view on
your crisis response
capabilities and give
invaluable feedback on
issues that perhaps had
not been considered.
Source:
David Perl
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