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.
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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.
Prepare Crisis
Communications Plan
Before Disaster -
asifthebes
Nonprofits should have a
crisis communication
plan in place before a
crisis happens. A
nonprofit public
relations plan is not
complete without a
crisis component.
A crisis is both
unexpected and a threat
to a nonprofit
organization. It might
be prompted by a natural
disaster such as a
hurricane or earthquake,
or technology-based like
a power failure. It may
involve ethical or legal
wrongdoing by a
nonprofit
representative, or be an
accident due to
negligence. It could
result in legal
liability. From the
public relations
viewpoint, say Donald
Treadwell and Jill B.
Treadwell in Public
Relations Writing:
Principles in Practice
(2005), “a crisis can
result in a major change
in how publics,
including employees, see
the organization.”
A crisis demands a
response, say the
Treadwells, “if the
issue is critically
important to your
public, if your public
needs the information
immediately, or if the
information needs to
come from you.”
Nonprofits committed to
transparency for
fundraising purposes are
especially vulnerable to
criticism if they don't
respond quickly to their
publics.
Without a crisis
communication plan in
place, the crisis could
escalate unnecessarily.
During a crisis is not
the time to formulate a
plan.
Creating a Crisis
Communications Plan
It will be helpful to
brainstorm crisis
scenarios before
developing a crisis
public relations (PR)
plan. Consider different
types of crises: natural
emergencies, technology
based emergencies,
representative
wrongdoing and
accidents.
Answer these questions:
Who will be the primary
spokesperson in the
event of a crisis? Who
will be the backup?
Who are key people who
should be consulted
during a crisis?
How will the key people
be reached?
If the nonprofit’s main
facility is unusable,
where is the backup
location for meetings
and press conferences?
How will information be
disseminated to
employees? What if that
method isn’t working?
How will information be
disseminated to other
key publics, such as
clients and volunteers?
Develop
fill-in-the-blank press
releases and evergreen
background materials
about the organization.
Have these in electronic
and hard copy formats.
Create a template for
talking points. Even if
the nonprofit cannot
release many details,
it’s very important to
get out in front of the
news with whatever
messages that can be
shared. Be sure top
executives, board
members and other
possible spokespeople
have media training.
Plan to establish a line
of communication with
the media. Activate a
media hotline and
circulate the phone
number or email address.
Prepare to publish a
message and updates on
the organization’s
website. Many people
will check the website
for information.
Finally, formalize this
plan and disseminate it
internally. Create
“cheat sheets” for
employees to carry in
wallets. A crisis
communications plan is
no good if it is locked
away during a crisis.
Crisis Communications
Messages
Donald Treadwell and
Jill B. Treadwell offer
these writing
strategies:
Establish a clear
position
Be honest – and be seen
to be honest
Be concise
Look forward to the
solution
Do not assign blame
Take advantage of the
nonprofit’s good
reputation
Continue to offer the
nonprofit’s messages
after the crisis has
passed. In many cases,
it can take a very long
time for an organization
to recover from a
crisis. Tactfully seek
opportunities to set the
record straight if
misinformation was
circulated during the
crisis.
Source: Molly Schar
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