Effective communication can make or break your business during a crisis event. Learn what effectively communicating during an emergency event looks like.
We spend hours developing plans and strategies – preparing for possible emergency events that we hope will never happen. Many of our colleagues, and let’s be honest, even some of our management team, believe this planning is of little value. They feel that we only need the documentation to “check the box” for an audit. Your implied desire is to get this done as quickly as possible using as little resources as possible. We may fall into the trap of being influenced by those feelings, generating what seems like good documentation that, when looking deeper and more objectively, is really just a lot of words that may not be usable.
For this week’s blog, the functional item we are considering is communication. We all know that during an emergency event communication will be critical, and we understand the basic groups and type of information we must communicate. Though the items below may seem obvious, many do not take the time to ensure that the appropriate planning is in place. It’s important that you do not assume that everything will work when needed.
When done effectively, this communication will help keep your business working as normally as possible, will limit the ability of others to control the narrative, and will prevent the dissemination of incorrect information.
Have you looked at your various communication strategies – internal, external, and crisis management – and identified the risks or potential gaps? In general, the technologies or methods you plan to use will be those you already use on a day-to-day basis. These include phone (VOIP or LAN), cell, email, SMS, social media, etc.
If your technologies are cloud-based, housed in a different location, or highly available, then they are assumed to be available during an emergency event. Any of those solutions are acceptable. If they do not meet this criteria, it is a major risk to your communication capability.
Communication during an event is difficult to anticipate, train for, and exercise, but with some objective review of plans and strategies, you can minimize the impact of an emergency situation on your communication strategy.