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).
Preparing a Crisis Management Plan: How many public
relations spokespersons does your company have?
The correct answer is, "as many employees as we have."
Sure, any organization can and should have a crisis
communication training workshop or classes whereby only
certain individuals are "officially" authorized to speak
for the record.
If a reporter calls and you have a designated
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 crisis media training when the stuff
hits the fan. It is vital, during the crisis
communications training course, 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 corporate reputation
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 media public relations asset to crisis response:
Crisis Management Training Pointers
Develop one to three key 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 in a seminar or class
about what's happening and keep them informed on a
regular basis. In-person school crisis management
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!
During Crisis Training Classes Identify your best
"unofficial 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 crisis PR rumor-control class. Provide classes
by which internal employees 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 in crisis training 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 internal crisis
communications training workshops, courses, or seminars
will carry your key 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 in crisis training.
Source: Jonathan Bernstein link
Related: Crisis Training