By Julie Wright, President
If you’re at the center of a crisis when one hits, like it
did April 15 when two bombs killed and maimed spectators and participants at
the Boston Marathon, make this your mantra:
Communicate early. Communicate often. And communicate accurately.
Communicating early, when facts are still coming in and very
little can be confirmed or validated, means at least letting stakeholders know
that:
- You’re on it.
- You care.
Social media might be among the first places you let people
know that your organization is working to fact find and planning to release
more information as it becomes available and verified. If you’ve pre-planned
your crisis communications, you will have some prepared responses to many
potential crisis scenarios so that your posts are a keystroke away and do not
need vetting or wordsmithing under high stress. If you have an important
message that you need to get out, use social media and ask people to share your
message. Many people will be glad to
help.
It’s important to show people as early as possible that you are
the best and most reliable source of information about your crisis and that you
care. Do not assume that they realize you’re as upset, saddened, shocked or
dismayed as they are. Tell them so. And if your attorneys tell you not to
comment at all, just keep in mind that their primary goal is winning in the
courtroom or negotiating table. They might win there, but if you don’t
communicate early and empathetically, you lose in the court of public opinion that
may cost you more dearly than any court-mandated settlement. (Just sayin’. If
the lawyers start driving the communications strategy, it’s game over. Think of
BP in the Gulf of Mexico or Toyota with its faulty brakes.)
If people were harmed, you care deeply and are empathetic.
If people have been inconvenienced, you’re sympathetic and are working
furiously to ensure that everything is returned to business as usual.
The lawyers want to be sure that you’re not excessively admitting
to responsibility for their inconvenience or injuries. This is valid, but it is
a terrible and irreparable mistake to withhold any response and, as a result, project an image of callousness. You
cannot be too compassionate. And
compassion does not mean taking responsibility.
Think about this: What if the CEO of Carnival Cruises had
gotten himself airlifted to the ship adrift and suffered alongside his
customers? I would feel entirely differently about the problems Carnival and
its passengers have suffered through if I knew its executives shared in the
discomfort. And the headline would not be: “Boss of Carnival Adds Insult to
Misery By Going to Basketball Game as 4,000 Suffer Aboard ‘Stinking Stricken
Ship’…”.
Communicating often is essential because media coverage can
be around the clock. If it’s an evolving situation, plan to hold media
briefings every few hours. Listen closely on social media so you can correct
misinformation that is getting passed around as it happens. Use your social
media channels to release details in between media briefings. Establish a
hashtag for your crisis communications on Twitter so that people can more
closely follow the ‘official’ information source.
The frequency of your communications are a way of showing
that you care about your stakeholders and are serving their needs and not just
your own. Today, people make judgments based on your organization’s behavior
and not just a carefully crafted message labored over by your attorneys, senior
executives and others.
Inaccurate information can un-do all of your tremendous
communications. To increase the likelihood that accurate information is
presented on a timely basis, your crisis plan should have designated
spokespeople, chains of command and reporting structures so that people in the
field, on the scene or troubleshooting the issue know the protocol for
providing updates. They should have the names and contact information of the
crisis team, there should be a clear method of capturing and reporting out the
information to the crisis team, and everyone in the field should know not to
speak to but instead properly redirect the media and to limit internal
speculation.
Stress degrades decision making, so successful
communications in a crisis are typically based on a pre-existing communication
plan that reasonably anticipates various crisis situations and develops
responses so that they’re at the ready when a crisis hits.
Whether you have a plan or are planning on the fly, just
repeat after me: communicate early, communicate often and communicate
accurately.

2 comments:
A great read! Good crisis communication is more often about what doesn't happen than does. And with the planning effort usually being a fraction the cost of not having a plan when crisis hits, it ought to be a no-brainer for every organization just like general liability insurance. Another upside is that when executed well, an organization can emerge stronger and more prosperous than pre-crisis.
And here's great example of crisis mismanagement: Lil Wayne's eventual and then insufficient apology for an offensive lyric (not only is there no actual apology, but can anyone imagine these actually being his words?) resulting in Pepsi dropping him, saying Wayne's "offensive reference to a revered civil rights icon does not reflect the values of our brand.". http://www.complex.com/music/2013/05/read-lil-waynes-apology-to-emmett-tills-family
Toss in the publicist subsequently saying it was an amicable separation due to creative differences, and what a mess.
http://www.billboard.com/articles/news/1560660/lil-wayne-loses-pepsi-deal-over-emmett-till-lyric-controversy
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