Posts Tagged ‘communications strategy’

You won a TRENDS award. Now what?

Tuesday, March 20th, 2012 by user

By Brian Clark, marketing and membership director, Asphalt Institute, Lexington, Ky.

(This is an excerpt from an article that appears in the March 2012 TRENDS.)

Each year, our association enters the annual Association TRENDS All-Media Contest. This year, I’m proud to say we won gold for our 2011 membership directory.

Over the years, we have learned that aside from the tremendous “feel good” that winning provides, there are definite advantages for our association that we try to maximize. Here are a few tips on how to make the most of your award.
1. Tell your members. This may seem obvious, but some winners overlook the opportunity to promote the news about winning their award to their members.
2. Leverage the credibility. Quite fortuitously, we learned about winning our gold award just as we were preparing the advertising opportunity announcement for our 2012 membership directory. The timing couldn’t have been better. We included an “advertise in our award-winning directory” tag in the appeal. The result: our advertising quite literally doubled this year!
3. Motivate your staff. Karen Embs, our member services manager, is the principal editor of the directory but she has never been to the TRENDS Salute to Association Excellence program, where the All Media Contest winners are honored. This year, Karen made the trip to DC to receive our award. Here is what she said about the experience:
“The reception was a real pleasure because it was in a large room where there was space to walk around and see all the winning pieces,”  she said. “I also was impressed with the award presentations for Association Partner of the Year and Association Executive of the Year. Mr. Harris and Mr. LaBranche were both very appreciative and shared great words of advice and inspiration for us all.” Details: www.asphalt.org.

Clark is a TRENDS 2008 Young & Aspiring Association Professional.

17 Commandments of Crisis Communication

Tuesday, February 22nd, 2011 by user

By Al Rickard, CAE

1. Decide if it really is a crisis – Sometimes you have to recognize something for what it is and have a sense of humor about it. Embarrassing and inconvenient do not necessarily warrant full-blown crisis intervention.

2. Use your crisis management plan – Every organization needs a crisis management plan, including a complete crisis communication component. Use the plan and communicate accordingly. Results from past crises shows that organizations with a plan fare better in terms of public perception and, in the case of publicly traded corporations, in share values.

3. Respond quickly – If a problem is festering and members, the public and others are framing the issue and defining the conversation, it’s only going to get worse. Get out there and show you care about the problem and the people it affected – even if it’s only a quick statement to say you are looking into it and will have more information soon.

4. Don’t sugarcoat the truth and downplay the problem – You don’t want to create unnecessary alarm, but it’s better to warn of the worst-case scenario and have it turn out better than to say it’s a minor problem and then have it blow up in your face. Once you’ve lost your credibility, you’re done.

5. Be real and make it personal – Don’t get caught up in corporate-speak that can make your response seem cold and calculated. Speak from your heart and show some compassion.

6. Make sure the facts are correct – Remember the West Virginia mining accident when the Governor of West Virginia announced that the miners were alive when they were actually dead? Not good.

7. Identify a spokesperson – One person should deliver updates in a crisis and the media should know who to go to. When other people attempt to speak in an official capacity, the results can be disastrous. For an association, the spokesperson is usually the chief staff executive but could be the Board Chair.

8. Don’t delegate CEO or Board Chair responsibility – One of these key leaders must be in charge in a crisis. The only time a CEO should delegate responsibility or spokesperson duties to others is if his/her credibility is damaged beyond repair, and in that case they should also resign.

9. Apologize and accept responsibility – People will accept an apology and forgive you, but just apologizing is not enough. You have to be accountable.

10. Actions matter – Communication is essential, but without action to solve the crisis, words mean nothing. Make sure you have a solid action plan that is likely to produce real, measurable results that you can report in future media briefings to show progress.

11. Be brief and be clear – We live in a sound bite world, and it’s only the memorable sound bites that break through and are remembered. Distill your messages down to the essence and deliver them boldly and in an interesting way.

12. Don’t ask for sympathy – remember the famous line from Tony Hayward of BP saying, “I’d like my life back?

13. Don’t be afraid to admit mistakes, even bad ones – When something really bad happens, people will think it is the result of one of two things – evil or stupidity. Which would you rather be – evil or stupid? If it was stupid, say so. You’ll take a short-term hit, but people will forgive you. You can fix a stupid thing by getting smarter. But there is no defense for evil intent – real or perceived.

14. Don’t lie – It never works. It seems obvious to say, but even U.S. presidents have broken this basic rule.

15. Plan social media strategy in advance – When a crisis breaks, social media will soon be buzzing with random facts, opinions, speculation, misperceptions, and even calls to action. A good social media strategy developed in advance with a strong crisis communication component will help you manage the waves of social media discussions that will occur. Trying to develop a social media strategy in the midst of a crisis won’t work.

16. Fix misperceptions – If misperceptions are festering among your key audiences, do something about it. Be transparent. State the truth. Apologize again if necessary. Explain the situation further. But if exposed to the truth, the collective wisdom of the crowd will rise to the surface in the social media.

17. Know when to let go – No negative story lasts forever, even though it may seem like it. Every story is different, but use your best judgment to assess when the story has run its course and you have done all you can to shape it. You don’t want to prolong a problem or make it worse.

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Al Rickard, CAE, is president of Association Vision, a Washington, DC-area communications company. He is a member of the ASAE Communication Section Council and Co-Chair of its Cross-Collaboration and Community Advisory Group.

Measuring your Communication Integration Efforts

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010 by user

By Al Rickard, CAE

Integrating communications across your organization – including PR, publishing, marketing, and social media strategies – is critical. To assess how your organization stacks up, consider these tips:

  • Align your communications with your organizational strategy. Do your communications efforts support major objectives?  Have you developed clear, concise, and consistent messages that carry through all your communications? Are your communications aligned with your organizational strategy?
  • Utilize all available resources. Are your communications and marketing efforts integrated across your organization? Are you taking full advantage of your own communication vehicles, including social media?
  • Consider your audience. Have you tailored your communications to each audience? Messages to members are often much different than messages to consumers or other constituents. Do you know how each of your audiences wants to receive information?
  • Efficiency and effectiveness are key. Are members and stakeholders asking questions they should already have answers to based on past communications?
  • Measure ROI. Are your communication vehicles operating as effectively and efficiently as possible as measured by the funds and staff resources required to operate them?  Are you tracking the use of each communication vehicle through metrics and surveys to see what’s working?

Your answers to these questions will reveal if your integration strategy is succeeding. If it isn’t, regroup with your senior management team to address areas that need attention.

There are several factors to consider when drafting an integrated communications plan, especially when working to streamline the message across media.

Al Rickard, CAE, is president of Association Vision, a Washington, DC-area communications company. He is a member of the ASAE Communication Section Council and Co-Chair of its Cross-Collaboration and Community Advisory Group.