When a crisis strikes, the reputation and perception of your organisation can be at risk. Existing messaging strategies and PR plans will not be agile enough to manage a fast-moving situation. Only a crisis PR plan, developed and tested ahead of time, will give you the tools to protect your organisation's reputation and public perception effectively.
The easiest way to identify a crisis that demands a crisis PR response is to assess any situation for three key characteristics.
A crisis PR plan is a set of protocols and processes that your organisation can use as a starting point for communications when a crisis strikes, giving you a much-needed head start in managing perceptions and protecting reputations. A crisis PR plan is never finished; it's continually revised, updated, and, most importantly, tested in some way.
Your crisis PR plan should include key message responses ready to be adapted to your precise circumstances. These messages will differ depending on which broad categories your particular crisis falls into, such as:
This is not an exhaustive list, but anything that could impact or halt your business continuity should warrant deliberate communications with customers, stakeholders and the public through your crisis PR plan.
The saying "no plan survives contact with the enemy" is perfectly true. Your crisis PR plan shouldn't try to list every last action in every given situation. It should function as a jumping-off point and provide you with a clear set of actions and principles to build on, keeping your communications consistent, truthful and aligned with your key messages. Your crisis PR plan will enable you to take the initiative in communications rather than being trapped in a reactive cycle of responding to misinformation, rumours, social media trolls etc.
When a crisis strikes, you rarely have time to make slow, deliberate decisions, and you are often trapped in a fast thinking pattern - that is to say, making emotional, instinctive, and reactive decisions in the teeth of an emergency. This can be disastrous for PR and reputation unless you have a clear crisis PR plan to direct your decision-making and messaging.
Your completed crisis PR plan will bring together individual crisis plans that can be activated in the event of an emergency or crisis. A crisis plan should only be able to be activated by a selected number of staff, best qualified to judge when a problem or issue requires a crisis response.
Your crisis PR Plan should:
A good crisis PR plan is reviewed periodically to account for new and deprecated risks and should be tested. You can test the whole plan through a simulation or tabletop exercise or test individual parts to ensure they function the way you expect. Having a crisis PR plan prepared, practised and ready to deploy won’t stop a crisis from happening but it will help you manage the messaging and the media during a time when you have a lot of other things demanding your attention.
If you would like to know more about how we can help you create and test your crisis PR plan, we would love to talk to you: 01433 445001