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 Workshops
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:
It's an Inside Job:
Internal Crisis
Communications
Crisis: an unstable or
crucial time or state of
affairs whose outcome
will make a decisive
difference for better or
worse (Webster's New
Collegiate).
How many public
relations or Crisis
Communications
spokespersons does your
company have?
The correct answer is,
"as many employees as we
have." Sure, any
organization can and
should have a Crisis
Communications policy
whereby only certain
individuals are
"officially" authorized
to speak for the record.
If a reporter calls and
you have a designated
Crisis Communications
spokesperson policy, the
call will be probably be
routed correctly -- but
that doesn't prevent
your secretary, an
intern or a junior
executive from giving
their version of the
facts to family members,
friends, PTA members,
golfing buddies and
anyone else they know.
Internal audiences are
as, if not more,
important than external
audiences during a
crisis, and yet those
who aren't actually on
the crisis response team
often receive the least
consideration when the
stuff hits the fan. It
is vital, during the
crisis communications
planning process, to
formulate key messages
not only for employees,
but also for others who
are close enough to the
organization to be
considered "internal" --
e.g., regular
consultants and major
vendors. They're the
ones who are going to be
asked first, by external
audiences (including
reporters, when they try
to go around you),
"what's going on?"
Here are some tips for
preparing internal
audiences to be an asset
to crisis communications
response:
Develop one to three key
crisis communications
messages about the
situation which are
simple enough for
everyone to understand,
remember and use in
their day-to-day
affairs. In an extremely
sensitive situation,
messages might be
nothing more than
reassuring statements
and "nice no comments"
-- e.g., "our day-to-day
business is completely
unaffected by this," "we
know this is going to
come out well for us
when all the facts are
known," or "we're a damn
good company and I'm
proud to work here."
Brief all employees in
person about what's
happening and keep them
informed on a regular
basis. In-person
briefings say "we care
about you" in a manner
which no memo or
internal newsletter can
accomplish, although
sometimes written
communications are the
only option. And you
don't want internal
audiences to read facts,
or alleged facts, in
your local newspaper
first!
Identify your best
"unofficial crisis
communications
spokespersons" and your
"loose cannons." The
former are employees who
you know are loyal, know
when to speak and when
to keep their mouths
shut, and who are
admired by their peers;
if they feel that
they're receiving
accurate information and
are being cared for,
they'll pass that
feeling on to others
along with the key
messages you've shared.
Loose cannons are those
who just don't know when
to shut up, whose
feelings -- sometimes
disloyal/disgruntled,
sometimes zealously
loyal -- lead them to
communicate not only
facts, but rumors and
innuendo. During crises,
loose cannons need to
receive gentle, but firm
extra counseling about
appropriate
communication and/or be
particularly well
isolated from sensitive
information.
Create a rumor-control
system. Provide means by
which internal audiences
can ask questions and
get rapid responses. You
can designate certain
trusted individuals
(white and blue-collar)
as "rumor control reps"
who will field questions
and then obtain answers
from someone on the
official crisis response
team. And it's important
to also have an
anonymous means of
asking questions, such
as a locked drop box
combined with a bulletin
board on which answers
to anonymous questions
are posted. All
employees can be
encouraged to use either
communication method
without fear of
reprisal.
Successful
implementation of an
internal crisis
communications program
will carry your key
crisis communications
message better, longer
and farther than most
external communications,
while a lack of internal
communications can
completely undermine
even the best external
strategy. The two can,
and must, go
hand-in-hand.
Source:
Jonathan Bernstein
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