The Critical Need for a Crisis Communication Plan for Your Business by Frank Grobmeier

What is one of the biggest mistakes any business can make? It’s believing that nothing bad will ever happen to it. As a result, leadership doesn’t prepare for the inevitable crisis. The reality is every business faces challenges that they never see coming. But taking a little time to prepare a crisis communication plan would allow them to quickly and effectively respond to their employees, customers and stakeholders with a unified message and the critical details that will protect its reputation, maintain public trust, and minimize negative impacts.

We’ve watched recent crises unfold, like the California wildfires and Hurricane Helene, which have shown us that unexpected situations can alter our day-to-day business dramatically. However, natural disasters are not the only unexpected things that can impact our business. Other crisis situations can include corporate scandals, bankruptcies, product recalls, severe weather closings, and technical failures, just to name a few.

A thorough crisis communication plan provides your employees with the knowledge and direction that guides how they appropriately respond to customers, stakeholders, and media requests.  A strong plan can help your organization maintain operational efficiency during a crisis and provide employees with clear guidelines on how to engage with first responders, contractors, and media, while minimizing damage and restoring regular operations.

The following 10 simple steps can help you develop a comprehensive crisis communication plan:

  1. Anticipate the crisis. Take your head out of the sand and begin to list out all the potential crisis situations that could put your business at risk. Today’s “anticipations” could be tomorrow’s “situations.”
  2. Assemble a crisis team. No matter how competent you are as a leader, a crisis requires multiple people to execute the plan. You should also identify backup personnel for each of those roles in anticipation of what could happen if someone on the crisis team is directly involved in the crisis.
  3. Decide on a spokesperson for the organization. This person will provide a unified message to the media, stakeholders, and if applicable, shareholders to update these key constituencies on the situation.
  4. Assign a leadership point person. This role is different from the spokesperson. This point person oversees managing the crisis situation while the spokesperson is solely responsible for informing people and speaking on behalf of the business.
  5. Create a place to centrally store the crisis communication plan. This will need to be a software / cloud storage area that can be readily accessed by the crisis management team. You will also need to develop email groups / text chains /  virtual links that the team can use to communicate with each other during a crisis situation.
  6. Protect employees. The first, critical piece of every crisis plan is to ensure the safety and security of your employees. Create an action plan that is specific to your employees and your facilities.
  7. Identify all stakeholders, other than your employees. In a crisis you will want to reach out personally to key stakeholders, such as board members, investors, vendors, and key customers. Others, such as smaller customers and prospective customers, you can alert through social media, while friends and small vendors may also be contacted via email. Rely on general media to inform industry folks and the surrounding communities. Make sure your plan identifies each type of stakeholder; the action required, for example notifying customers of warehouse closures; and the method of notification.
  8. Develop information management processes and protocols. These include how to interface with first responders, government officials, and other agencies, as well as how to protect employees, etc.
  9. Establish a company media policy and make sure employees fully understand the guidelines. In larger organizations, the Human Resources team will need to have a media policy in place not only for crises but also to guide how employees regularly represent the company in social media posts. In your crisis communication plan, your employees need to know who the spokesperson is and understand that they should not comment on the situation but direct all questions to that spokesperson.
  10. Create holding statements. While it’s not possible to create detailed statements about every potential crisis, it is possible, and even desirable, to write several crisis statement templates that can be easily and quickly reworked into specific statements and releases during the early stages of the event. Being prepared with holding statements speeds up response time during the event and increases the odds of successful communication with stakeholders—protecting the business reputation and relationships.

The whole idea of crisis planning is to mitigate risk during unexpected situations. The operative word is unexpected. So, there’s no time like the present to devote time and resources to developing a comprehensive crisis communication plan because you never know when you might need it.