Crisis management and the four pillars of communication

7 minute read

This may sound astonishingly euphemistic and even naïve, but it amazes me to see the number of brands that need crisis management when there are so many blueprints for exactly what not to say or do. These observations are further exacerbated when the response to a crisis causes an even greater issue than the original nightmare. Organizations pay so many important people a lot of money to lead them in effective communications, yet we still see the feverish cadence of these failures continue.

I used the word “blueprint,” but perhaps I’m wrong. Maybe there isn’t a mother of all blueprints out there that speaks directly to the dos and don’ts of communication and crisis management, and the resources aren’t as accessible as I think. These Groundhog Day events can’t just be happening everywhere organically, can they? My experience tells me that so many iconic brands repeating the same errors locally and internationally can’t all be conspiring to harm themselves the same way. This led me to write this piece because I see a tremendous educational growth opportunity for our risk, leadership, and communications/marketing teams; I want to see them succeed like never before.

This document is only available to members. Please log in or become a member.
 


Would you like to read this entire article?

If you already subscribe to this publication, just log in. If not, let us send you an email with a link that will allow you to read the entire article for free. Just complete the following form.

* required field