For some reason, the
word ‘crisis’ is associated with ‘panic’, and most of today’s organizations
tend to immediately get pushed into a panic mode at the distant sight of a
crisis. What then happens when there is a real crisis on hand, is anyone’s
guess.
There are examples all
over of how even the communication savvy leadership/PR team of an organization,
gifted with a fair amount of media leverage, gets into a shell and resorts to
denial mode when it’s time to speak and write more information, to be virally
sent out to every media outlet possible.
The cardinal rule in
handling PR in times of a crisis is to get immediately speaking and sending our
fact statements to the entire gamut of media houses – including web2.0 and
social platforms. The singular intent once the information/details of the
crisis is handed out is to deliberately invite media conversations, with the
intent of giving more and more details possible.
Never give a remote
sense that your organization is shying away from the media – even when the
crisis in not your own making, when you shy away, the immediate conclusion is
that the organization wants to hide facts.
While there can be well
documented papers (by your PR agency or internal communications team) of how to
respond when there is a crisis, it’s easy to manage a crisis when some basics
are in place.
Just see if these things
are in place in your organization, anytime rather always…
-
a designated
spokesperson, who will instantly be updated on any crisis that may have hit –
he is the points man for all information to be given – facts, details, images,
live feed and whatever.
-
Handpicked communication
team that swings into action – gets into an auto pilot mode in any mishap –
which is connected and networked 24/7/365 to take the crisis PR initiatives.
Stay abreast all through the crisis life cycle, and ceaselessly and tirelessly
handles all queries from every corner of the globe.
-
a communication
mechanism (call it a protocol) which communicates to all the key decision
makers and every internal stakeholder in the organization the details and
occurrences of any crisis that may have hit, how the consequences will be
managed, how internal/external stakeholder interests will be protected, what
are the cost consequences and the impact on the organizations’ fiscals et al.
-
a standard template that
captures all the finer details of any mishap that may occur, roll it out into
the form of a media release, so that the same can be handed to the media
fraternity and follow up questions taken.
-
a mechanism that ensure
that all the state authorities are informed of the mishap in the shortest
possible time, with as much details as gather-able in the least lead time.
-
a media room which gets
activated when such an event happens, where all the journalistic fraternity can
report from, with all information fed to them officially, live wire.
These may sound baby
steps – yet, in the crisis management plan, many times its lack of this
basic preparedness that brings in misery to the organization, than the actual
crisis itself.
Make sure your organization
is set ready in the first steps of managing crises.
As the old adage, being
well prepared is half the battle won.
That’s true in managing
a crisis too.
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