With every day bringing more headlines of disruptions in major industries, corporate leaders of any organization should be considering the potential impact of these disturbances. Communications executives are uniquely positioned to take a leading role in helping their organizations plan for, and respond to, these shocks. Here are a few things to keep in mind:

Take Your Seat at the Table!

Communications leaders should recognize this opportunity to add value to their organization in this environment. With their unique perspective into stakeholders' perceptions of their organization - be they employees, customers, community partners, investors, or others - they should be willing to share these insights with their fellow leaders to anticipate how these groups will be affected by any of these disruptions. Communications executives will also be able to develop a coherent, consistent narrative across these different stakeholder groups and equip executives to tailor their messages for their specific audiences. Finally, Communications leaders should take the lead on managing ongoing listening to spot potential crises before they "blow up" and provide real-time feedback for their fellow executives.

Of course, these major crises can also impact the way that Communications leaders manage their own team. The most glaring potential consequence is the loss of resources available to them, from budget cuts to layoffs on their team. Cost optimization is something that leaders always need to consider, not only in a crisis. That way, they can budget smartly, without resorting to layoffs. We provide leaders with a number of tools to help them when facing this challenge, including our Communications Activity Value Assessment and Cost Optimization for Communications Leaders.

Managing External Communications: Consider Reputation and Risk

In the early days of the most recent bank crisis, especially with regional banks, it was really about moving quickly and signaling stability given how uncertain everything felt. This kind of communication is best conducted via owned channels both for speed and to serve as a central source of truth. Narratives across earned media predicting a potential ripple effect reinforced the need for swift and transparent external communications from bank's owned channels.

In the shaky times that have followed, transparency and messaging around stability are still important. Communications leaders should continue to monitor audience sentiment and behaviors-through social media, call center data and other relevant sources-and respond accordingly on the appropriate channel. From a proactive perspective, any external communications initiatives or brand campaigns should be reevaluated based on overall industry sentiment and conversation themes. Any proactive communications that may come off as tone deaf to the current environment should be adjusted or paused in order to protect the organization's long-term reputation and ensure they're signaling what's intended.

Help Your Employees Navigate Uncertainty

Long before the current crises popped up in the news, employees were already reporting record levels of change fatigue, with workers experiencing an average of 39 work-related changes per year. Faced with this onslaught of disruption, communicators need to avoid the temptation of thinking that more is always better when it comes to sharing messages with employees; our recent research into information overload highlights the dangers of this approach. Rather, leaders should not only share information in enterprise-wide communications to keep all employees aware of relevant news, but also includehowcertain organizational decisions have been made, or at least the inputs into what will go into decisions that might be in the process of being made. That way, employees will be more likely to understand the "why" behind organizational strategy, potentially negating the need for constant information sharing about specific details.

Communications leaders should also recognize that not all employees will be equally anxious, or affected, by certain changes. To that end, they should be identifying segments of the workforce to potentially turn up the engagement for them without sending more "push" communications to the entire employee population. They should also rely on their sources of employee listening to help senior executives address any potential rumors or clarify misassumptions of employees.

Most of us cannot forecast systemic banking failures any more than we can predict a global pandemic or natural disaster. What Communications leaderscando is recognize their unique value in preparing their organizations to respond to these changes and rely on their expertise to hold a steady hand in managing their corporate reputation, helping their employees navigate the environment, and keeping their own team engaged as effectively as possible.

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Gartner Inc. published this content on 30 March 2023 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 30 March 2023 16:49:52 UTC.