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.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 - 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
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.
Humpty Dumpty sat on a
wall
Humpty Dumpty had a
great fall
All the king's horses
and All the king's men
Couldn't put Humpty
Dumpty together again
This past week I
attended a conference of
business leaders
desiring to take their
business to the next
level. On the second
day, I met a leader who
lives in Pensacola,
Florida and we began to
discuss the oil spill
and its impact to the
local area. As the
leader shared personal
photos taken of the
beached oil, like many
of you, we began to
discuss strategies for
cleaning up the oil and
most importantly its
long-term impact on the
Gulf Coast, the seafood
industry, the tourist
industry, the wildlife
and possible long-term
impact of such a
disaster.
And yes we did discuss
the politics of the
matter – in that this
should not have a "we
versus them" political
spin because it is a
"WE" issue. WE are all
impacted (or will be
impacted) by this
disaster … and perhaps
for generations to come.
After our discussion, I
began to wonder how many
businesses go into any
type of depth in
building a disaster
recovery/crisis
management strategy on
an organizational level
as well as on a
project-by-project
level?
You're probably
wondering what disaster
recovery/ crisis
management has to do
with Humpty Dumpty.
Think about Humpty
Dumpty being that great
project … that great
idea … that great
solution which will
propel your organization
so far ahead of others
in your industry that
they will need to spend
years just trying to
recover from your
advancement. Or the idea
which has such a global
impact that everything
will be better because
of the implementation of
that idea! Or that new
product/service which
will increase your stock
value by 200%.
This is Humpty Dumpty
sitting on the wall –
setting the standard for
extraordinary greatness!
Then something happens
within or beyond your
control which causes
Humpty Dumpty to fall
and this fall impacts
others on a grand scale.
The question becomes –
did you pull together
the best of the best
(All the king's horses
and all the king's men)
to discuss Humpty
Dumpty's fall before he
fell (strategic) or as a
consequence of his
falling (tactical)? Very
few business leaders
conduct an in-depth
program on crisis
management/ disaster
recovery/risk management
associated with the
various
projects/products/services
they desire to introduce
into the market. Of
course there are many
reasons for such
actions; however,
present history tells us
that failing to have a
disaster recovery/crisis
management plan in place
can have negative
long-term effects on
your business as well as
the global economy for
generations to come.
Leaders must plan for
crises, that is, any
dangerous events
threatening injuries,
deaths and financial
trouble which could
deeply damage or even
close your company.
However, if you can
muster specific
abilities, you can
better equip your
organization to overcome
a crisis.
Recent crises and
disasters included
events that many once
thought impossible.
These calamities
included terrorist
attacks, natural
disasters large enough
to take out a major city
and/or industry,
cyber-attacks and
corporate fraud. Today's
organizations must adopt
a mindset of being ready
when – not if – a crisis
strikes. Crises occur
more frequently now;
they have become part of
doing business. No
industry or organization
is safe, but you can
spare your organization
the most serious
consequences by
drastically changing how
it plans and handles
crisis management.
Comprehensive risk
management goes through
stages which require
advance planning and
proactive investments.
First, prevent and
mitigate a disaster's
damage before any risk
occurs. Then prepare a
robust response. Third,
build recovery
infrastructure. Fourth,
offer an adequate
response by addressing
the damages sustained
during the event –
remember to take
responsibility for your
organization's part in
the crisis. The fifth
stage, proper recovery,
requires rebuilding
infrastructures to
provide for the general
welfare. The final
stage, lessons
learned/adjusting other
strategies, based on
what occurred, what does
your organization need
to do to prevent this
from happening again?
Below you will find
Before the Fall
Strategies and After the
Fall Strategies your
organizations can
implement to ensure you
are able to put Humpty
Dumpty back together
again.
Strategies for Disaster
Recovery/Crisis
Management before the
Fall
1. Risk forecasting –
The field requires more
precise prediction
techniques
2. Communicating risk
information – Most
people assume that
low-probability
disasters will not
affect them. Enlarging
the time horizon for
disasters helps your
employees better assess
how they could be
harmed. To help the
owners of a production
facility with a 25-year
life span understand
their flood risk, show
them data indicating
that the chance of a
"one-in-100-year flood"
happening during that 25
years is greater than
"one-in-five".
Presenting the
possibility as a
"one-in-100 chance" in a
single year is not as
compelling
3. Economic incentives –
Cash can motivate people
to protect themselves
from disaster, for
example, cutting the
insurance premiums of
Mississippians who buy
flood protection.
4. Private-public
partnerships – Disasters
affect public and
private organizations,
so they should unite in
advance to create mutual
emergency strategies and
defense plans.
5. Resiliency and
sustainability –
Organizations must
determine if they will
be able to continue to
function after a sudden
disaster. This question
also pertains to
nations, notably
developing countries
burdened with
"low-quality structures,
poor land use,
inadequate emergency
response," and so on
Mitroff (2005)
recommends that business
leader's go through the
following Spinning the
Wheel of Crisis exercise
with their
leadership/project teams
before releasing a new
product or service: The
physical prop for this
exercise is a large
wheel which spins until
it hits a flexible
needle, which slows and
then stops the wheel's
motion. Once it stops,
discuss the possible
crisis which could occur
and what actions need to
be in place to prevent
such a crisis and/or
what actions should be
taken after such a
crisis occurs. This tool
should be part of every
project manager's
toolkit for success.
Each segment of the
wheel lists a major area
in which crises occur:
Economic – This crisis
affects the economy
Informational –
Information gets lost,
by break-in or computer
error (for example, Y2K,
the millennium bug)
Physical – A crisis
affects your buildings,
equipment or products
Human resources – Labor
issues, fraud or
criminal acts generate a
crisis
Reputational – Rumors
and defamation hurt your
organization
Psychopathic acts –
Violence, product
tampering or criminal
behavior strike
Natural disasters –
Hurricanes, fires,
floods or mudslides
breed crises
To ensure your
organization covers all
of its bases, combine
elements (for example
combine items #4 and
#7); what plans need to
be in place to ensure a
quick and maximum
recovery)?
Strategies for Disaster
Recovery/Crisis
Management After the
Fall
Risk-related decision
making involves weighing
probabilities and
benefits versus losses,
creating an accurate
statistical analysis and
considering alternative
actions. Follow these
principles for
perceiving, assessing
and managing the risk of
extreme events:
Appreciate the
importance of estimating
crises – While such
calculations are filled
with uncertainties,
organizations need good
information to deal with
risk
Recognize the
interdependencies
associated with the
crisis – Every risk is
connected to outside
circumstances. Such
linked dependencies
create dynamic and
evolving uncertainties
which can mutate
depending on events.
Keep your risk forecasts
up-to-date
Understand people's
behavioral biases when
developing crisis
management strategies –
People must acknowledge
their prejudices to make
mitigating them
possible. For instance,
leaders may put off
dealing with possible
catastrophes due to a
stubborn form of denial
called not in my term of
office (NIMTOF)
Recognize the long-term
impact of the
crisis/disaster – A
catastrophe can create
enduring change
Recognize transboundary
risks by developing
global strategies – In
disasters, national
boundaries are moot. The
2004 tsunami killed
people in 11 countries
Overcome inequalities in
the distribution and
effects of catastrophes
–Be ready to assist
others in need
Build leadership for
averting and responding
to disasters before it
is needed – Planning and
preparing for disasters
is far better than
waiting until
emergencies strike
Your post-crisis push is
to get back to business;
Barton (2007) recommends
the following Pillars of
Business Continuity:
When disaster strikes,
you cannot possibly
over-communicate with
victims
Be in 24/7 contact with
shareholders, employees,
customers, contractors
and vendors
Get your off-site IT
recovery operations and
EOC up and running as
soon as possible
Make sure the staff
receives full salaries
and benefits. Give the
incident commander
authority to pay for
"equipment, hotel rooms
and consulting services"
as needed
Document everything,
including damages. Plug
in your insurance
carrier ASAP
One and only one
spokesperson
communicates. Employees
should refer all
questions to that
spokesperson. Avoid
policy infractions.
Control rumors
Designate psychological
counselors and make them
available for anyone
affected
Update stakeholders
three times daily
concerning all
activities and progress
Stay on top of all
suppliers. Make sure
they aid in the recovery
in a timely manner
Make sure the disaster
is over before you
declare it done.
Consider "scenario
testing" to ensure that
things are again as they
should be. Plan a
"multi-tiered return to
normalcy
Assess event fallout.
Establish
accountability. Reward
anyone who deserves it
Now, what about "putting
all the pieces together
again" – we are living
in a time where there is
more information
available to us in one
day than our
predecessors had to wait
for years to receive.
When your organization
has trouble identifying
solutions to a crisis,
do not hesitate to put
the best brains together
(inside and outside of
your company and
industry) to come up
with the solution.
As an organization, your
responsibilities include
putting as many Humpty
Dumpty's together
through creativity and
innovation. And at the
same time be proactive
in your planning and
have a through crisis
management/risk
management / disaster
recovery strategy in
place just in case he
does fall – being
proactive in your
planning allows you and
your organization to
survive through
unplanned
catastrophes/crises.
Wisdom would say that
your best creative and
innovative ideas will
come out of how you
handle the crisis and
what you learned through
resolving the issue
which caused the
crisis/disaster.
When speaking to the
business leader last
week, I shared that my
solution for the oil
spillage crisis would be
to take the best minds
from all the oil
companies, colleges and
universities, government
and even the general
public – put them in a
room – and have them
develop a solution to
this crisis as well as
develop a standard
operating procedure for
ensuring that a crisis
like this does not
happen again. This is
how, together, we can
put "all the pieces
together again" and
making Humpty Dumpty
stronger and better than
he was before!
Source: Stephanie A
Parson, PhD
link