Wednesday, January 14, 2009

CRISIS? WHAT CRISIS?




CRISIS? WHAT CRISIS?

Flood * Fire * Chemical Spill * Computer Glitch * Human Error * Embezzlement * Electrical Fault * Workplace Accident * Sexual Harassment * Death of a Director * Share Market Slump * Strike * Fall * Vehicle Crash * Explosion * Computer Virus * Environmental Disaster * Food Poisoning *

COULD ANY OF THESE HAPPEN TO YOUR BUSINESS?

Many SME business owners have no idea how vulnerable their businesses are to the effects of even a minor crisis. The result could be irreparable damage to the image and reputation of you, and your business. A crisis is not simply something big that attracts the attention of the media. A crisis may also be a situation that leaves your business open to criticism or negative comments – no matter how innocent or unintentional the situation is.

Insurance will not save the image and reputation of your business. You could have enough insurance to buy and sell your business ten times over – but insurance will never cover the goodwill you could lose.

This is another key mistake that businesses make; they think insurance will cover any ‘losses’ – but what’s your reputation and integrity worth? It’s priceless. The handling of a crisis is what will potentially SAVE the image, integrity and reputation of your business. And that includes information that is IN the media and information that is KEPT OUT of the media.

Even if the media doesn’t get involved (and you’d BETTER have a plan if they do), every business has a series of key audiences with whom they must communicate including;
  • staff,
    contractors,
    suppliers,
    customers,
    sponsors,
    regulatory authorities,
    unions,
    government departments, and
    special interest groups.
Whilst crises such as environmentally damaging chemical spills and workplace accidents may seem irrelevant to owners of ‘safe’ office businesses, crises such as embezzlement, sexual harassment or a computer glitch could severely affect a business.

FIRST STEPS

Scenario planning with management, co-workers or, if you have no employees, with friends is the first step you can take to develop a simple plan for your business. Think of your specific business or industry; what types of crises could affect you? Think also of your staff, contractors, suppliers, regulatory authorities, state laws, etc.

For example, contract drivers in trucks with your business name on them – what if they had an accident?

Or, a disgruntled employee sabotaging your computer data?

Or, someone infecting food you produce?

Or, someone has an adverse reaction to one of your products (food, skincare, aromatherapy)?
Or, sexual harassment at your work or home-based business?

Some will be INTERNAL and some will be EXTERNAL. What impact or effect do they have on your business? Are they potential crisis points?

OUT OF THE BLUE

Sometimes, a crisis is so unexpected and unrelated to your business that scenario planning doesn’t cover it.

Consider the real-life situation of a café owner who was having a cash flow problem. He decided to start a fire to do some damage to his café that was situated on the street level of a four level city building, close to a busy T-intersection. His plan went horribly wrong when he inadvertently caused an explosion. Not only was his café destroyed but he was killed. The business directly above his was a sports store where all the stock was destroyed due to water and smoke damage. How could the sports storeowner possibly have prepared for THAT in his scenario planning?
But wait, there was more to come.

This was now a homicide site, an explosion site, and there was structural damage to the building. There was potential that the building would collapse or that pieces of the building would fall in to the street. So not only was the entire building cordoned off, but all buildings and streets within a city block radius.

As the explosion happened at about 3.00 am, the streets were already closed and buildings blocked by the time commuters started trying to drive down the streets, enter car-parking stations and access their own businesses. Not only was the street a main thoroughfare, but in the affected vicinity there were many businesses.

How would your business handle a crisis that was not caused by anything you had done? How would you let your clients & staff know what was going on? Would you have back-up for lost data? What would be the implications for not accessing your office? How would you survive the loss of income for several days? Could you re-locate temporarily?

Some of these are insurance issues – lost income, destroyed stock, relocation.

But some are communication issues – would you have a plan to let people know what’s going on?

What would you do if you couldn’t access important material or information for many days?

KEY AUDIENCES

Key audiences are those people that interact with your business. So depending on the type of business or industry you are in, the effect of your crisis on your key audiences will be different. It is important to understand that not all crises will attract the attention of the media – but there are other groups to whom you must communicate. These include;

o Staff
o Contractors
o Sub-contractors
o Stakeholders (Board, Directors, Shareholders, Owners)
o Suppliers (those who supply products and services to your business)
o Clients
o Potential Clients
o Sponsors (companies you sponsor and those that sponsor you)
o Community Groups
o Industry Associations (banking, legal, accounting, dentistry, etc)
o Trades Associations (plumbing, electrical, transport, etc)
o Regulatory Agencies (tax, health, transport, business, employee, medical, etc)
o Geographical (local, regional, state, national, international)
o Functional (distributors, retailers, consumers, etc)
o Financial (stockbrokers, analysts, investors, portfolio managers, etc)
o Special Interest (aged, disabled, children, charities, safety, health, religious, etc)
o Government (local, state, federal)

To adequately prepare for communicating with your key audiences you will need to work with pre-prepared material. Having pre-prepared communications – statements, media releases, telephone answering script – will show you to be professional, organized, sympathetic & credible.

PRE-PREPARED COMMUNICATIONS

Prepared statements that can be read out, presented, faxed or e-mailed are very useful. Another form of prepared statement can be issued by the person answering the phone and other ‘buffer’ people. Some useful prepared statements are;

o We are preparing information and will give a media conference before 4.00pm. Please give me your name and contact details and I’ll call and let you know when the conference will take place.

o We are investigating and will release information when we know more. Please give me your name and contact details and I will call you when we have more information.

o Thank you for your enquiry. We are compiling information at this time and plan to have a media conference at 4.00 pm (or other nominated time). Please give me your name and contact details and I will ring you back if anything is to be reported before that time.

Members of the media can be pushy and demanding especially if they think they have a scoop. Your key media spokesperson MUST retain control and run to YOUR agenda not that of the media. Even if you have your prepared statements under control, some media will try to provoke a response.

So practicing the following responses in order to retain control of the situation is highly recommended

o That information is not to hand but as soon as we have it we'll let you know.
o That’s an interesting question and I’ll respond to it in a minute, but the key issue is…..
o We are investigating that, but what you need to understand is……

Retain Control

o Have a ‘buffer’ person to answer phone calls / take messages
o Return calls promptly
o Have prepared statements
o Practice prepared responses

YOUR MEDIA SPOKESPERSON

Every crisis requires someone with the ability and confidence to speak to the media. Sometimes the CEO, MD or business owner is not the right person for the job. It is important to present someone to the media with a specific set of credentials and abilities.

Some qualities are;

o Comfortable in front of cameras, microphones and journalists
o Knowledgeable about the business and the crisis at hand
o Able to establish credibility with the audience & project confidence
o Sincere, straightforward, believable, accessible
o Skilled in handling the media and directing responses to another topic (deflection)
o Skilled in identifying the key points that your business wants to push
o Available for internal staff and external stakeholders

A back-up spokesperson should also be identified to fill the position if the key person is unexpectedly unavailable. In addition to your key media spokesperson, additional expert spokespeople or advisors may be required. These resources may encompass people such as a financial expert, risk assessor, health inspector, engineer, business leader, environmental authority, or technical expert.

Depending on your crisis, remember that other parties may also be involved – police, fire department, local government, health officials, transport authority – and that they will also have their own spokespeople.

It is important to know who are your co-spokespeople. Identify them and speak with them as early as possible so statements and contact with the media can be co-ordinated. It is in the interests of all organisations that collaboration and agreement is apparent.

It is critical in retaining the good image and reputation of your business that you have a Crisis Communication Plan in place. The previous information will be useful and should certainly get you thinking about crisis communication planning and management for your business.

To help business owners assess their crisis vulnerability, the Underdog Marketing Challenge offers a unique, FREE and simple, on-line, tick-box test that will provide an instant crisis vulnerability rating to your business. You can see instantly how vulnerable your business is.

But, there's more….
At the Underdog Marketing Challenge, a course on Crisis Communication Management and Planning has been prepared by an expert and is available for all members.

Topics include;
  • Why Plan For A Crisis That May Not Happen?
    Scenario Planning
    Crisis Communication Teams
    Crisis Communication Kits
    Key Audiences
    Positioning
    Media Spokespeople
    Media Policies and Procedure
    Practising Tough Questions
    Prepared Statements Media Releases
    Collateral Materials
    Contact Logs
    Checklist for Speaker Presentations
Develop your own critically important Crisis Communication Plan with step-by-step guides and brainstorming help. Join now. Or purchase the UMC Crisis Communication Management & Planning Workbook for just $39.95.

Brought to you by the Underdog Marketing Challenge, a new, State-of-the-Art, interactive platform for SME’s, corporate marketing departments, start-ups and marketing / communication students.

Join now for exclusive, interactive courses that provide simple solutions to marketing dilemmas.

Exclusive information, videos, podcasts, interactive step-by-step guides, template & software downloads, research assistance, and marketing, brand management, public relations and internet marketing resources.

Membership includes mentoring and a members-only forum for meeting business owners from around the word. Join now for instant benefits or sign up for free up-dates at
http://www.underdogmarketingchallenge.com/

Monday, December 15, 2008

STOP WASTING MARKETING TIME & MONEY

  • STOP WASTING MARKETING TIME & MONEY
  • There is one element of marketing that could make a huge difference to your business but is largely forgotten by business owners. It’s a small detail that could make a big difference and enable you to gain more business with less effort. This is something we use for clients in my marketing and public relations business and it’s also a skills development course on our on-line marketing resource (Underdog Marketing).

    It’s so simple but often overlooked. Plus, this concept is taught in the University Master of Marketing degree, but we have re-formulated it to suit small business needs. There are six elements that must be included in any marketing plan to give you the greatest chance of success.

    We have called it CRISSE©

    In every marketing plan, include communication with people in these six categories;

Customers
Referrers
Influencers
Suppliers
Society
Employees


Customers – most businesses focus on customers and clients, which is fine, but there are five other areas that can greatly increase your market share and public profile

Referrers – clearly, people who can refer business to you. Current and past customers, friends, networking affiliates, etc. Market to them and ask them for their support I referring business to you.

Influencers – different from referrers, these people actually wield influence to the way people think of and interact with your business. Your local Mayor or President of the Chamber of Commerce? They may not be a customer, they may never have used your business, but they can influence other people’s feelings about your business; market yourself and your business to them in a positive manner.

Suppliers – this is possibly the most under-utilised segment. Suppliers interact with you regularly and have the capacity to refer and influence business. Don’t see this segment as JUST a supplier; she them as a partner in promoting your business.

Society – if you work in the community, support charities, or have a philanthropic role, then market that as a positive component of your business. I don’t mean outright bragging and showing off, but allow this part of your business to be a marketing tactic. Many customers and potential customers, will value a business that cares about it’s community.

Employees – can be your BEST ambassadors. Internal public relations will be the subject of another blog, but never treat your staff worse than your clients. Treat your staff as valued and empowered people. Share your (appropriate) fears and your dreams with them; tell them and show them how they can help you, and they will take that message far and wide. Treat them badly and they will take that message far and wide too.

Marketing isn’t just about paid advertising. In fact, that’s only one small tactic of a competent and wide-reaching marketing plan. You CAN market your business on a budget and reap huge rewards. CRISSE© is just one leading-edge strategy.

For more, sign up for free up-dates or join global members of the Underdog Marketing Challenge – a 12-step mentored marketing program that’s interactive, on-line, dynamic and it WORKS! You can easily develop great skills to increase the market share of YOUR business and sky rocket your profile.

Good luck implementing this simple tip. Another hot tip is to join Ecademy where 200,000 professional business people meet - check my profile for more details. Cheers, Penelope

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Pure PR: KEY AUDIENCES KEY TO PUBLIC RELATIONS

Pure PR: KEY AUDIENCES KEY TO PUBLIC RELATIONS

KEY AUDIENCES KEY TO PUBLIC RELATIONS

Unlike Bridget Jones, PR people don’t “just fanny around with the press releases". Dealing with the media is only one element of public relations and being single-minded about this will be a big mistake for your business.
As a public relations consultant, I know that PR can be a bit of a minefield, and media relations is the most common area of misunderstanding. In order to operate and grow your business even more successfully and for you to have a great image and reputation, I’m happy to share with you some simple things to remember.

WHAT PUBLIC RELATIONS IS NOT!

§ free advertising
§ pretty women giving out samples
§ lunches and cocktail parties
§ editorial coverage that can be bought with advertising bookings
§ being good at dealing with people
§ a solution to a problem
§ the same as advertising
§ publicity that can be measured in column inches

PUBLIC RELATIONS IS –

§ what every business needs
§ qualified and professional communications
§ an opportunity to inform, influence & change attitudes
§ one of the most powerful tactics in your marketing strategy

PUBLIC RELATIONS IS HOW YOU ‘RELATE’ TO YOUR ‘PUBLICS’.

Every business has ‘key audiences’ to whom they must relate and interact – these are your ‘publics’. Who are yours? Make a list from the headings below because your key audiences are the people you need to be impressing. They will include –

· Staff
· Ex-employees
· Contractors
· Suppliers
· Customers
· Past customers
· Government departments
· State and county authorities
· Board members and other stakeholders
· Regulatory bodies
· Unions and Industry Associations
· Sponsors
· Special interest groups (ie: the disabled)
· People in your building or immediate area
· Visitors to your website
· Anyone to whom you gave your business card
· Anyone to whom you sent a letter
· Anyone who has anything to do with your business EVER!

Note that I didn’t include the media?

Many people think public relations is only about column inches and media attention. The media relations component of public relations is the most high profile, but it’s only one element. Public relations is how you project your image to anyone – and how your staff and colleagues project the company image - and how your key audiences view your reputation.

Therefore, when you give out a business card, answer the phone, write a letter, respond to a complaint or issue a media release, you are engaging in a form of public relations. When it all goes pear-shaped, that’s when you need crisis communication – an under-utilized form of image and reputation saving.

(On the Crisis Communciation point, for a simple, on-line checklist to assess your crisis vulnerability go to http://www.underdogmarketingchallenge.com/ and undertake a simple, tick-box survey. Click on Crisis Management. It's confidential, we don't record the information, and you will receive an instant crisis assessment rating - and it's totally FREE).


So it pays to recognize who are your primary and secondary ‘publics’ and develop a strategy around communicating with them. Further, public relations is not about ‘telling’ people something, it’s about developing their awareness, influencing and helping others to form opinions.

The late Frank Jenkins, a well known British PR teacher and author, said this; “Public relations consists of all forms of communication outwards and inwards between an organization and its publics for the purpose of achieving specific objectives concerning mutual understanding”.

Public Relations professionals have a two-way attitude to communication whereby they issue information but also feed it back. PR people often are required to counsel business on public attitudes, needs, expectations and concerns. Unlike advertising, which primarily is communication one way, usually designed to sell a product or service, public relations seeks to inform and, in turn, be informed.

For example, apart from being good public relations, customer satisfaction surveys are an ideal way to show consideration and caring and receive valuable information. However, the information must be acted upon otherwise the ‘public relations’ element could get tarnished.

For more a 12-step mentored marketing program that includes extensive PR skills development, visit http://www.underdogmarketingchallenge.com/ . The 'Underdog Marketing’ book will be published soon. Reserve your copy on the website.


If you want more free advise on public relations visit http://www.pronlinetools.com/. If you want to increase your market share and are looking for cool tools and unique information on marketing, internet marketing, brand awareness and public relations, visit
http://www.underdogmarketingchallenge.com/ and sign up for FREE up-dates. Or, to REALLY skyrocket your business, sign up as a member of the Underdog Marketing Challenge.


Have a great week. Cheers, Penelope

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Public? Relations? What the...?

I am often asked what public relations actually is. Most people think public relations is media exposure but that's only one element - the media relatons bit. Media exposure is one thing (dollop of Paris Hilton anyone?.....well, that's just OVER exposure) but public relations is how you 'relate' to your 'publics' - yes, you have publics too, it's not just a playground for JLo and Madonna. Public relations is not the domain of the rich and ridiculous (altho that does help when you want to gain more exposure).



Public relations is about your image, reputation and credibility. You can dress for success all you like but if everyone hates you then you have a public relations problem.



Think Good Public Relations: Tom Hanks, Oprah, Mother Theresa, World Wildlife Fund, Greenpeace, Richard Branson.



Think Slightly Dodgy Public Relations: Sarah Palin, Bill Clinton, Eminem, virtually any sitting Politician, movies about Cajun country (a la 'Deliverance'), cruise ships.



Think BAD Public Relations: Lindsay Lohan, Tom Cruise (of late), Heather Mills, Scientology, Japanese whalers, Exon, oil companies.



PR is such a great thing because you CAN turn bad PR in to good PR (and vice versa) - who thought Bill Clinton would have got out of THAT one? In fact, his PR was way better than Monica's - how does that work? Great spin doctors! Image, reputation and credibility.



It's very easy to get a bad name, Heather Mills, and very hard to get a good one, Heather Mills. The problem with Heather is that she IS a whinger and no-one likes rich whingers - but mostly because the public never really saw another side of her (unless they watched dubious movie sites, alledgedly). But lets give her the beneft of the doubt. She maintains she was doing charity work long before she met Paul McCartney. But no-one knew anything about it because she had no PR cache. She had minimal image and zero reputation and bugger all credibility (that's not to say she WASN'T credible but she had no PR track record to speak of).



Along comes Paul, and she's thrust....er....impaled upon......er.......flung in to the spotlight (which she hates, achem). The profile started to gain momentum and all people really saw was her basking in his ambient light and being MRS McCartney (and Stella not liking it one bit). The marriage was too short-lived for her to do anything really meaningful and then - voila - pitchforks at 2 paces as they thrashed around in ignominious, well-past coitus interruptus disharmony - and the fangs came out and she whinged endlessly and that's all people saw - plus the "gold digging bitch if she can't live off $50 million she didn't earn" - not good PR, in fact bad, bad PR - and she's having a hell of a job convincing anyone of anything different than that viewpoint. Dancing with the Stars wil NEVER compete with a picture of Princess Diana and a land mine - and let's not forget those pictures of Diana hugging children with HIV/Aids- very, very memeorable - very, very good PR. Sorry Heather, you'll never win. At least we have memories of Britney being FABULOUS and many people want to see her return to that triumph - that's good PR gone dodgy heading toward bad but being catapulted back toward good.



So if you can't be good, be careful!