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Having a war-room for PR is a good to-do! |
None of us want a crisis to strike us or our organization… but
that is an ideal scenario! Many time, a crisis strikes out of the blue,
making the core management team of the organization run for cover! Not just
that – when a crisis hits, there is chaos all over, that adding to the already
vitiated organization eco-system.
The organization eco-system includes all the stakeholders – the
organization and its product and services, the market place, the positioning
vis a vis competition, the employee, the financial institutions that have
invested in the company, the stock market, and every single public
shareholder…. The list is partial, and will depend on the size and scale of the
organization.
While the occurrence of the crisis per se, cannot be
predicted, the response to such a situation can be planned in advance –
and this is what we call a war-room for crisis management. This war-room
(primarily comprising of your internal communications pro’s) is ever prepared,
and swings into action when there is a crisis – if at all there is one.
This war room will/must have people drawn from the top leadership
of the organization (sales, marketing, finance, HR and so on) who will work in
tandem with the core communications professionals and will
caliberate the response for any crisis.
The crisis team (the war-room) will be well prepared with all
the facts pertaining to the product, service, people, infrastructure, the
dynamics of the various markets it which they are present, the relevant
information of the prime-competitors etc.
Apart from the communications teams which is well trained to
interact and speak appropriately to the media, key resources in the
organization are identified time and again (once a year minimum), and they are
imparted with the communication finesse in handling all kinds of media queries,
when the situation warrants.
A mechanism is put in place is such a way that once any event
(crisis) occurs, all the key stake holders in the war-room are connected
seamlessly and appraised of the events, the facts, the implications, and the
consequences plus the actions that will e taken y the organization in the
aftermath of such a situation.
This fact brief to the core team –
irrespective of where and when the crisis occurs – must all be
done in 30 to 60 minutes. And post that the team hits the road in tackling the
PR front with ease.
While it is the responsibility of the leadership of the
organization to calibrate the response to any crisis, the ability to get the
message across, in the best way, to all the internal and external stake
holders is the key winner in the long term.
That happens seamlessly only if there is a war-room mechanism in
place at your organization. With media staying connected 24/7/365, carrying out
their social responsibility of disseminating information as it occurs, it is
only a crisis war room that can save the day for your organization.
Not just that, your war room will actually impact your long terms
interests in a positive way!
So, does your organization have a communication war-room?!
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