Crisis Communications
Crisis Communications
Crisis Communications
C.O.M.M.U.N.I.C.A.T.I.O.N.S.
JOEL B. ELLO
Safety Consultant
CRISIS
Any unexpected incident potentially upsetting an
organization’s employees, customers, operations,
REPUTATION, finances or the local/national
community.
Don’t hide from Media if you can help it. (Hangga’t maaari.)
Media is very sensitive about elusive interviewees.
But if you simply can’t be interviewed, just say, ‘wala pang
official statement’.
Promise to let Media know as soon as it is available and keep your
promise.
The Biggest Mistakes
in Crisis Communications
A powerful lesson on how NOT to handle a crisis in your business
or organization
Jargon and acronyms are but two of the ways you can be sure
to confuse your audiences, a surefire way to make most crises
worse.
The Biggest Mistakes
in Crisis Communications
A powerful lesson on how NOT to handle a crisis in your business
or organization
So, the next time you have a crisis, you're going to do the same
thing, right? Because "stuff happens" and you can't improve the
situation by attempting to improve communications -- can you?
What are
Newsworthy Events… ?
Newsworthy Events
Dangerous Commercial Products
Incidents of Public Outrage & Civil Disturbance
Criminal Investigations or trials with significant legal or
social impact
Events that yield unexpected, shocking, bizarre, exotic
details/images
Human interest stories
Stories with celebrity involvement
Stories deemed to be of public interest by news editors
Crises Menu Checklist :
•Government investigation
•Controversial law suit
•Accusation of discrimination based on race, sexual preference or gender
•Product recall
•Serious injury to someone within or outside of the organization
•Protest
•Strike
•Physical violence between co-workers
•Theft by an outsider (ideas or physical assets)
•Hostile takeover
•Outbreak of food poisoning caused by your company (maybe even at your
company picnic – this just happened this week in our area and the Country Club
where it occurred is getting hurt in the media)
•Death of top executive
•CEO gets arrested for drunk driving
•Natural disaster
•Plane crash
•Books were cooked
•Congressional hearings make something that was legal illegal, and your
company is used as an example
•Major interruptions in service
•One of your employees is accused of a high profile crime
•Sexual harassment case
•Fire
•Explosion
•Rape on your premises
•Dramatic downsizing causing significant job loss in a geographic region
•Chemical spill
•Radiation leak
•A major competitor has a huge crisis, throwing attention on your company
•Caught in a lie
•False advertising accusation
•Oil spill
•Closing of a facility
•Production sourcing internationally or at a non-union facility
•Union grievance
•And, of course, alien abduction of your entire management team (it has
occasionally occurred to me that this might be a good thing…)
Understanding the Media
News Media
serve as a
CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE
TO REPORT THE FACTS OF A
CRISIS & COMMUNICATE VITAL
INFO to responders, stakeholders &
the PUBLIC
NAKU PO, MAY MEDIA!!!
Intimidating
Aggressive
Demanding
WE’RE SCARED OF MEDIA
BECAUSE…
Baka mali ang masabi natin…
Television
-24/7 news,talk shows (live/taped)
-Video footage, site access, sound bites, pictures
-Lead time: immediate, hours, days or weeks
Media Organizations
Print Media (tabloids, broadsheets, trade mags)
-daily, weekly
-quotes, facts,leads, interviews, photos, graphics
-lead time: immediate, hours, days, weeks/months for feature stories
On-Line Media
-electronic web-conference, chats, bulletin boards
-quotes, facts, leads,photos,graphics,video
-lead time: immediate,days,weeks
Reporting Phases
Initial
Continuing
Diminishing/Resolution
Who is to blame?
Reporter/Editor/Producer Experience
Who are you and why are you speaking for the organization?
What exactly happened and when?
Is anyone hurt?
Is there any danger right now to employees or the public?
What steps are you taking to control the situation?
How long will it take?
When will you know more?
Crisis Communications Planning
•Never speculate
•Do not discuss undetermined issues
•Do not provide proprietary or sensitive information
Developing Key Messages
More importantly…..
The real issue is…..
The fact of the matter is….
What is interesting ……
Instructional Key Message
•Procedures:
•Do not set-up mic unless ready to go live
•Mention ground rules such as whether or not questions will be taken
•Managing a question & answer period
Interview Guidelines
“On Background”
Telephone Interview Tips
“ No Media – No Crisis”