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Crisis Management and Communications

By W. Timothy Coombs, Ph.D

October 30, 2007

Introduction

Crisis management is a critical organizational function. Failure can result in

serious harm to stakeholders, losses for an organization, or end its very

existence. Public relations practitioners are an integral part of crisis

management teams. So a set of best practices and lessons gleaned from our

knowledge of crisis management would be a very useful resource for those in

public relations. Volumes have been written about crisis management by both

practitioners and researchers from many different disciplines making it a

challenge to synthesize what we know about crisis management and public

relations place in that knowledge base. The best place to start this effort is

by defining critical concepts

Definitions

There are plenty of definitions for a crisis. For this entry, the definition

reflects key points found in the various discussions of what constitutes a

crisis. A crisis is defined here as a significant threat to operations that can

have negative consequences if not handled properly. In crisis management, the

threat is the potential damage a crisis can inflict on an organization, its

stakeholders, and an industry. A crisis can create three related threats: (1)

public safety, (2) financial loss, and (3) reputation loss. Some crises, such

as industrial accidents and product harm, can result in injuries and even loss

of lives. Crises can create financial loss by disrupting operations, creating a

loss of market share/purchase intentions, or spawning lawsuits related to the

crisis. As Dilenschneider (2000) noted in The Corporate Communications Bible,

all crises threaten to tarnish an organization s reputation. A crisis reflects

poorly on an organization and will damage a reputation to some degree. Clearly

these three threats are interrelated. Injuries or deaths will result in

financial and reputation loss while reputations have a financial impact on

organizations.

Effective crisis management handles the threats sequentially. The primary

concern in a crisis has to be public safety. A failure to address public safety

intensifies the damage from a crisis. Reputation and financial concerns are

considered after public safety has been remedied. Ultimately, crisis management

is designed to protect an organization and its stakeholders from threats and/or

reduce the impact felt by threats.

Crisis management is a process designed to prevent or lessen the damage a

crisis can inflict on an organization and its stakeholders. As a process,

crisis management is not just one thing. Crisis management can be divided into

three phases: (1) pre-crisis, (2) crisis response, and (3) post-crisis. The

pre-crisis phase is concerned with prevention and preparation. The crisis

response phase is when management must actually respond to a crisis. The

post-crisis phase looks for ways to better prepare for the next crisis and

fulfills commitments made during the crisis phase including follow-up

information. The tri-part view of crisis management serves as the organizing

framework for this entry.

Pre-Crisis Phase

Prevention involves seeking to reduce known risks that could lead to a crisis.

This is part of an organization s risk management program. Preparation involves

creating the crisis management plan, selecting and training the crisis

management team, and conducting exercises to test the crisis management plan

and crisis management team. Both Barton (2001) and Coombs (2006) document that

organizations are better able to handle crises when they (1) have a crisis

management plan that is updated at least annually, (2) have a designated crisis

management team, (3) conduct exercises to test the plans and teams at least

annually, and (4) pre-draft some crisis messages. Table 1 lists the Crisis

Preparation Best Practices. The planning and preparation allow crisis teams to

react faster and to make more effective decisions. Refer to Barton s (2001)

Crisis in Organizations II or Coombs (2006) Code Red in the Boardroom for more

information on these four lessons.

Table 1: Crisis Preparation Best Practices 1. Have a crisis management plan and

update it at least annually.

2. Have a designate crisis management team that is properly trained.

3. Conduct exercise at least annually to test the crisis management plan and

team.

4. Pre-draft select crisis management messages including content for dark web

sites and templates for crisis statements. Have the legal department review and

pre-approve these messages.

Crisis Management Plan

A crisis management plan (CMP) is a reference tool, not a blueprint. A CMP

provides lists of key contact information, reminders of what typically should

be done in a crisis, and forms to be used to document the crisis response. A

CMP is not a step-by-step guide to how to manage a crisis. Barton (2001),

Coombs (2007a), and Fearn-Banks (2001) have noted how a CMP saves time during a

crisis by pre-assigning some tasks, pre-collecting some information, and

serving as a reference source. Pre-assigning tasks presumes there is a

designated crisis team. The team members should know what tasks and

responsibilities they have during a crisis.

Crisis Management Team

Barton (2001) identifies the common members of the crisis team as public

relations, legal, security, operations, finance, and human resources. However,

the composition will vary based on the nature of the crisis. For instance,

information technology would be required if the crisis involved the computer

system. Time is saved because the team has already decided on who will do the

basic tasks required in a crisis. Augustine (1995) notes that plans and teams

are of little value if they are never tested. Management does not know if or

how well an untested crisis management plan with work or if the crisis team can

perform to expectations. Mitroff, Harrington, and Gia (1996) emphasize that

training is needed so that team members can practice making decisions in a

crisis situation. As noted earlier, a CMP serves only as a rough guide. Each

crisis is unique demanding that crisis teams make decisions. Coombs (2007a)

summaries the research and shows how practice improves a crisis team s decision

making and related task performance. For additional information on the value of

teams and exercises refer to Coombs (2006) and the Corporate Leadership Council

s (2003) report on crisis management strategies.

Spokesperson

A key component of crisis team training is spokesperson training.

Organizational members must be prepared to talk to the news media during a

crisis. Lerbinger (1997), Feran-Banks (2001), and Coombs (2007a) devote

considerable attention to media relations in a crisis. Media training should be

provided before a crisis hits. The Crisis Media Training Best Practices in

Table 2 were drawn from these three books:

Table 2: Crisis Media Training Best Practices 1. Avoid the phrase no comment

because people think it means the organization is guilty and trying to hide

something

2. Present information clearly by avoiding jargon or technical terms. Lack of

clarity makes people think the organization is purposefully being confusing in

order to hide something.

3. Appear pleasant on camera by avoiding nervous habits that people interpret

as deception. A spokesperson needs to have strong eye contact,limited

disfluencies such as uhms or uhs , and avoid distracting nervous gestures

such as fidgeting or pacing. Coombs (2007a) reports on research that documents

how people will be perceived as deceptive if they lack eye contact, have a lot

of disfluencies,or display obvious nervous gestures.

4. Brief all potential spokespersons on the latest crisis information and the

key message points the organization is trying to convey to stakeholders.

Public relations can play a critical role in preparing spokespersons for

handling questions from the news media. The media relations element of public

relations is a highly valued skill in crisis management. The public relations

personnel can provide training and support because in most cases they are not

the spokesperson during the crisis.

Pre-draft Messages

Finally, crisis managers can pre-draft messages that will be used during a

crisis. More accurately, crisis managers create templates for crisis messages.

Templates include statements by top management, news releases, and dark web

sites. Both the Corporate Leadership Council (2003) and the Business Roundtable

(2002) strongly recommend the use of templates. The templates leave blank spots

where key information is inserted once it is known. Public relations personnel

can help to draft these messages. The legal department can then pre-approve the

use of the messages. Time is saved during a crisis as specific information is

simply inserted and messages sent and/or made available on a web site.

Communication Channels

An organization may create a separate web site for the crisis or designate a

section of its current web site for the crisis. Taylor and Kent s (2007)

research finds that having a crisis web sites is a best practice for using an

Internet during a crisis. The site should be designed prior to the crisis. This

requires the crisis team to anticipate the types of crises an organization will

face and the types of information needed for the web site. For instances, any

organization that makes consumer goods is likely to have a product harm crisis

that will require a recall. The Corporate Leadership Council (2003) highlights

the value of a crisis web site designed to help people identify if their

product is part of the recall and how the recall will be handled. Stakeholders,

including the news media, will turn to the Internet during a crisis. Crisis

managers should utilize some form of web-based response or risk appearing to be

ineffective. A good example is Taco Bell s E. coli outbreak in 2006. The

company was criticized in the media for being slow to place crisis-related

information on its web site.

Of course not placing information on the web site can be strategic. An

organization may not want to publicize the crisis by placing information about

it on the web site. This assumes the crisis is very small and that stakeholders

are unlikely to hear about it from another source. In today s traditional and

online media environment, that is a misguided if not dangerous assumption.

Taylor and Kent (2007) and the Corporate Leadership Council emphasize that a

web site is another means for an organization to present its side of the story

and not using it creates a risk of losing how the crisis story is told. Refer

to the PR News story Lackluster Online PR No Aid in Crisis Response (2002)

for additional information about using dark web sites in a crisis,

Intranet sites can also be used during a crisis. Intranet sites limit access,

typically to employees only though some will include suppliers and customers.

Intranet sites provide direct access to specific stakeholders so long as those

stakeholders have access to the Intranet. Dowling s (2003) research documents

the value of American Airlines use of its Intranet system as an effective way

to communicate with its employees following the 9/11 tragedy. Coombs (2007a)

notes that the communication value of an Intranet site is increased when used

in conjunction with mass notification systems designed to reach employees and

other key stakeholders. With a mass notification system, contact information

(phones numbers, e-mail, etc.) are programmed in prior to a crisis. Contacts

can be any group that can be affected by the crisis including employees,

customers, and community members living near a facility. Crisis managers can

enter short messages into the system then tell the mass notification system who

should receive which messages and which channel or channels to use for the

delivery. The mass notification system provides a mechanism for people to

respond to messages as well. The response feature is critical when crisis

managers want to verify that the target has received the message. Table 3

summarizes the Crisis Communication Channel Preparation Best Practices.

Table 3: Crisis Communication Channel Preparation Best Practices 1. Be prepared

to use a unique web site or part of your current web site to address crisis

concerns.

2. Be prepared to use the Intranet as one of the channels for reaching

employees and any other stakeholders than may have access to your Intranet.

3. Be prepared to utilize a mass notification system for reaching employees and

other key stakeholders during a crisis

Crisis Response

The crisis response is what management does and says after the crisis hits.

Public relations plays a critical role in the crisis response by helping to

develop the messages that are sent to various publics. A great deal of research

has examined the crisis response. That research has been divided into two

sections: (1) the initial crisis response and (2) reputation repair and

behavioral intentions.

Initial Response

Practitioner experience and academic research have combined to create a clear

set of guidelines for how to respond once a crisis hits. The initial crisis

response guidelines focus on three points: (1) be quick, (2) be accurate, and

(3) be consistent.

Be quick seems rather simple, provide a response in the first hour after the

crisis occurs. That puts a great deal of pressure on crisis managers to have a

message ready in a short period of time. Again, we can appreciate the value of

preparation and templates. The rationale behind being quick is the need for the

organization to tell its side of the story. In reality, the organization s side

of the story are the key points management wants to convey about the crisis to

its stakeholders. When a crisis occurs, people want to know what happened.

Crisis experts often talk of an information vacuum being created by a crisis.

The news media will lead the charge to fill the information vacuum and be a key

source of initial crisis information. (We will consider shortly the use of the

Internet as well). If the organization having the crisis does not speak to the

news media, other people will be happy to talk to the media. These people may

have inaccurate information or may try to use the crisis as an opportunity to

attack the organization. As a result, crisis managers must have a quick

response. An early response may not have much new information but the

organization positions itself as a source and begins to present its side of the

story. Carney and Jorden (1993) note a quick response is active and shows an

organization is in control. Hearit s (1994) research illustrates how silence is

too passive. It lets others control the story and suggests the organization has

yet to gain control of the situation. Arpan and Rosko-Ewoldsen (2005) conducted

a study that documented how a quick, early response allows an organization to

generate greater credibility than a slow response. Crisis preparation will make

it easier for crisis managers to respond quickly.

Obviously accuracy is important anytime an organization communicates with

publics. People want accurate information about what happened and how that

event might affect them. Because of the time pressure in a crisis, there is a

risk of inaccurate information. If mistakes are made, they must be corrected.

However, inaccuracies make an organization look inconsistent. Incorrect

statements must be corrected making an organization appear to be incompetent.

The philosophy of speaking with one voice in a crisis is a way to maintain

accuracy.

Speaking with one voice does not mean only one person speaks for the

organization for the duration of the crisis. As Barton (2001) notes, it is

physically impossible to expect one person to speak for an organization if a

crisis lasts for over a day. Watch news coverage of a crisis and you most

likely will see multiple people speak. The news media want to ask questions of

experts so they may need to talk to a person in operations or one from

security. That is why Coombs (2007a) emphasizes the public relations department

plays more of a support role rather than being the crisis spokespersons. The

crisis team needs to share information so that different people can still

convey a consistent message. The spokespersons should be briefed on the same

information and the key points the organization is trying to convey in the

messages. The public relations department should be instrumental in preparing

the spokespersons. Ideally, potential spokespersons are trained and practice

media relations skills prior to any crisis. The focus during a crisis then

should be on the key information to be delivered rather than how to handle the

media. Once more preparation helps by making sure the various spokespersons

have the proper media relations training and skills.

Quickness and accuracy play an important role in public safety. When public

safety is a concern, people need to know what they must do to protect

themselves. Sturges (1994) refer to this information as instructing

information. Instructing information must be quick and accurate to be useful.

For instance, people must know as soon as possible not to eat contaminated

foods or to shelter-in-place during a chemical release. A slow or inaccurate

response can increase the risk of injuries and possibly deaths. Quick actions

can also save money by preventing further damage and protecting reputations by

showing that the organization is in control. However, speed is meaningless if

the information is wrong. Inaccurate information can increase rather than

decrease the threat to public safety.

The news media are drawn to crises and are a useful way to reach a wide array

of publics quickly. So it is logical that crisis response research has devoted

considerable attention to media relations. Media relations allows crisis

managers to reach a wide range of stakeholders fast. Fast and wide ranging is

perfect for public safety get the message out quickly and to as many people as

possible. Clearly there is waste as non-targets receive the message but speed

and reach are more important at the initial stage of the crisis. However, the

news media is not the only channel crisis managers can and should use to reach

stakeholders.

Web sites, Intranet sites, and mass notification systems add to the news media

coverage and help to provide a quick response. Crisis managers can supply

greater amounts of their own information on a web site. Not all targets will

use the web site but enough do to justify the inclusion of web-base

communication in a crisis response. Taylor and Kent s (2007) extensive analysis

of crisis web sites over a multiyear period found a slow progression in

organizations utilizing web sites and the interactive nature of the web during

a crisis. Mass notification systems deliver short messages to specific

individuals through a mix of phone, text messaging, voice messages, and e-mail.

The systems also allow people to send responses. In organizations with

effective Intranet systems, the Intranet is a useful vehicle for reaching

employees as well. If an organization integrates its Intranet with suppliers

and customers, these stakeholders can be reached as well. As the crisis

management effort progresses, the channels can be more selective.

More recently, crisis experts have recommended a third component to an initial

crisis response, crisis managers should express concern/sympathy for any

victims of the crisis. Victims are the people that are hurt or inconvenienced

in some way by the crisis. Victims might have lost money, become ill, had to

evacuate, or suffered property damage. Kellerman (2006) details when it is

appropriate to express regret. Expressions of concern help to lessen

reputational damage and to reduce financial losses. Experimental studies by

Coombs and Holladay (1996) and by Dean (2004) found that organizations did

experience less reputational damage when an expression of concern is offered

verses a response lacking an expression of concern. Cohen (1999) examined legal

cases and found early expressions of concern help to reduce the number and

amount of claims made against an organization for the crisis. However, Tyler

(1997) reminds us that there are limits to expressions of concern. Lawyers may

try to use expressions of concern as admissions of guilt. A number of states

have laws that protect expressions of concern from being used against an

organization. Another concern is that as more crisis managers express concern,

the expressions of concern may lose their effect of people. Hearit (2007)

cautions that expressions of concern will seem too routine. Still, a failure to

provide a routine response could hurt an organization. Hence, expressions of

concern may be expected and provide little benefit when used but can inflict

damage when not used.

Argenti (2002) interviewed a number of managers that survived the 9/11 attacks.

His strongest lesson was that crisis managers should never forget employees are

important publics during a crisis. The Business Roundtable (2002) and Corporate

Leadership Council (2003) remind us that employees need to know what happened,

what they should do, and how the crisis will affect them. The earlier

discussions of mass notification systems and the Intranet are examples of how

to reach employees with information. West Pharmaceuticals had a production

facility in Kinston, North Carolina leveled by an explosion in January 2003.

Coombs (2004b) examined how West Pharmaceuticals used a mix of channels to keep

employees apprised of how the plant explosion would affect them in terms of

when they would work, where they would work, and their benefits. Moreover,

Coombs (2007a) identifies research that suggest well informed employees provide

an additional channel of communication for reaching other stakeholders.

When the crisis results in serious injuries or deaths, crisis management must

include stress and trauma counseling for employees and other victims. One

illustration is the trauma teams dispatched by airlines following a plane

crash. The trauma teams address the needs of employees as well as victims

families. Both the Business Roundtable (2002) and Coombs (2007a) note that

crisis managers must consider how the crisis stress might affect the employees,

victims, and their families. Organizations must provide the necessary resources

to help these groups cope.

We can take a specific set of both form and content lessons from the writing on

the initial crisis response. Table 4 provides a summary of the Initial Crisis

Response Best Practices. Form refers to the basic structure of the response.

The initial crisis response should be delivered in the first hour after a

crisis and be vetted for accuracy. Content refers to what is covered in the

initial crisis response. The initial message must provide any information

needed to aid public safety, provide basic information about what has happened,

and offer concern if there are victims. In addition, crisis managers must work

to have a consistent message between spokespersons.

Table 4: Initial Crisis Response Best Practices 1. Be quick and try to have

initial response within the first hour.

2. Be accurate by carefully checking all facts.

3. Be consistent by keeping spokespeople informed of crisis events and key

message points.

4. Make public safety the number one priority.

5. Use all of the available communication channels including the Internet,

Intranet, and mass notification systems.

6. Provide some expression of concern/sympathy for victims

7. Remember to include employees in the initial response.

8. Be ready to provide stress and trauma counseling to victims of the crisis

and their families, including employees.

Reputation Repair and Behavioral Intentions

A number of researchers in public relations, communication, and marketing have

shed light on how to repair the reputational damage a crisis inflicts on an

organization. At the center of this research is a list of reputation repair

strategies. Bill Benoit (1995; 1997) has done the most to identify the

reputation repair strategies. He analyzed and synthesized strategies from many

different research traditions that shared a concern for reputation repair.

Coombs (2007a) integrated the work of Benoit with others to create a master

list that integrated various writings into one list. Table 5 presents the

Master List of Reputation Repair Strategies. The reputation repair strategies

vary in terms of how much they accommodate victims of this crisis (those at

risk or harmed by the crisis). Accommodate means that the response focuses more

on helping the victims than on addressing organizational concerns. The master

list arranges the reputation repair strategies from the least to the most

accommodative reputation repair strategies. (For more information on reputation

repair strategies see also Ulmer, Sellnow, and Seeger, 2006).

Table 5: Master List of Reputation Repair Strategies 1.Attack the accuser:

crisis manager confronts the person or group claiming something is wrong with

the organization.

2.Denial: crisis manager asserts that there is no crisis.

3. Scapegoat: crisis manager blames some person or group outside of the

organization for the crisis.

4. Excuse: crisis manager minimizes organizational responsibility by denying

intent to do harm and/or claiming inability to control the events that

triggered the crisis.

Provocation: crisis was a result of response to some one else s actions.

Defeasibility: lack of information about events leading to the crisis

situation.

Accidental: lack of control over events leading to the crisis situation.

Good intentions: organization meant to do well

5. Justification: crisis manager minimizes the perceived damage caused by the

crisis.

6. Reminder: crisis managers tell stakeholders about the past good works of the

organization.

7. Ingratiation: crisis manager praises stakeholders for their actions.

8. Compensation: crisis manager offers money or other gifts to victims.

9. Apology: crisis manager indicates the organization takes full responsibility

for the crisis and asks stakeholders for forgiveness.

It should be noted that reputation repair can be used in the crisis response

phase, post-crisis phase, or both. Not all crises need reputation repair

efforts. Frequently the instructing information and expressions of concern are

enough to protect the reputation. When a strong reputation repair effort is

required, that effort will carry over into the post-crisis phase. Or, crisis

managers may feel more comfortable waiting until the post-crisis phase to

address reputation concerns.

A list of reputation repair strategies by itself has little utility.

Researchers have begun to explore when a specific reputation repair strategy or

combination of strategies should be used. These researchers frequently have

used attribution theory to develop guidelines for the use of reputation repair

strategies. A short explanation of attribution theory is provided along with

its relationship to crisis management followed by a summary of lessons learned

from this research.

Attribution theory believes that people try to explain why events happen,

especially events that are sudden and negative. Generally, people either

attribute responsibility for the event to the situation or the person in the

situation. Attributions generate emotions and affect how people interact with

those involved in the event. Crises are negative (create damage or threat of

damage) and are often sudden so they create attributions of responsibility.

People either blame the organization in crisis or the situation. If people

blame the organization, anger is created and people react negatively toward the

organization. Three negative reactions to attributing crisis responsibility to

an organization have been documented: (1) increased damage to an organization s

reputation, (2) reduced purchase intentions and (3) increased likelihood of

engaging in negative word-of-mouth (Coombs, 2007b; Coombs & Holladay, 2006).

Most of the research has focused on establishing the link between attribution

of crisis responsibility and the threat to the organization s reputation. A

number of studies have proven this connection exists (Coombs, 2004a; Coombs &

Holladay, 1996; Coombs & Holladay, 2002; Coombs & Holladay, 2006). The research

linking organizational reputation with purchase intention and negative

word-of-mouth is less developed but so far has confirmed these two links as

well (Coombs, 2007b; Coombs & Holladay, 2006).

Coombs (1995) pioneered the application of attribution theory to crisis

management in the public relations literature. His 1995 article began to lay

out a theory-based approach to matching the reputation repair strategies to the

crisis situation. A series of studies have tested the recommendations and

assumptions such as Coombs and Holladay (1996), Coombs & Holladay, (2002) and

Coombs (2004a), and Coombs, (2007b). This research has evolved into the

Situation Crisis Communication Theory (SCCT). SCCT argues that crisis managers

match their reputation repair strategies to the reputational threat of the

crisis situation. Crisis managers should use increasingly accommodative the

reputation repair strategies as the reputational threat from the crisis

intensifies (Coombs & Holladay, 1996; Coombs, 2007b).

Crisis managers follow a two-step process to assess the reputational threat of

a crisis. The first step is to determine the basic crisis type. A crisis

managers considers how the news media and other stakeholders are defining the

crisis. Coombs and Holladay (2002) had respondents evaluate crisis types based

on attributions of crisis responsibility. They distilled this data to group the

basic crises according to the reputational threat each one posed. Table 6

provides a list the basic crisis types and their reputational threat.

Table 6: Crisis Types by Attribution of Crisis Responsibility Victim Crises:

Minimal Crisis Responsibility

Natural disasters: acts of nature such as tornadoes or earthquakes.

Rumors: false and damaging information being circulated about you organization.

Workplace violence: attack by former or current employee on current employees

on-site.

Product Tampering/Malevolence: external agent causes damage to the

organization.

Accident Crises: Low Crisis Responsibility

Challenges: stakeholder claim that the organization is operating in an

inappropriate manner.

Technical error accidents: equipment or technology failure that cause an

industrial accident.

Technical error product harm: equipment or technology failure that cause a

product to be defective or potentially harmful.

Preventable Crises: Strong Crisis Responsibility

Human-error accidents: industrial accident caused by human error.

Human-error product harm: product is defective or potentially harmful because

of human error.

Organizational misdeed: management actions that put stakeholders at risk and/or

violate the law.

The second step is to review the intensifying factors of crisis history and

prior reputation. If an organization has a history of similar crises or has a

negative prior reputation, the reputational threat is intensified. A series of

experimental studies have documented the intensifying value of crisis history

(Coombs, 2004a) and prior reputation (Coombs & Holladay, 2001; Coombs &

Holladay, 2006; Klein & Dawar, 2004). The same crisis was found to be perceived

as having much strong crisis responsibility (a great reputational threat) when

the organization had either a previous crisis (Coombs, 2004a) or the

organization was known not to treat stakeholders well/negative prior reputation

(Coombs & Holladay, 2001; Coombs & Holladay, 2006; Klein & Dewar, 2004). Table

7 is a set of crisis communication best practices derived from attribution

theory-based research in SCCT (Coombs, 2007b, Coombs & Holladay, 1996; Coombs &

Holladay, 2001; Coombs & Holladay, 2006).

Table 7: Attribution Theory-based Crisis Communication Best Practices 1. All

victims or potential victims should receive instructing information, including

recall information. This is one-half of the base response to a crisis.

2. All victims should be provided an expression of sympathy, any information

about corrective actions and trauma counseling when needed. This can be called

the care response. This is the second-half of the base response to a crisis.

3. For crises with minimal attributions of crisis responsibility and no

intensifying factors, instructing information and care response is sufficient.

4. For crises with minimal attributions of crisis responsibility and an

intensifying factor, add excuse and/or justification strategies to the

instructing information and care response.

5. For crises with low attributions of crisis responsibility and no

intensifying factors, add excuse and/or justification strategies to the

instructing information and care response.

6. For crises with low attributions of crisis responsibility and an

intensifying factor, add compensation and/or apology strategies to the

instructing information and care response.

7. For crises with strong attributions of crisis responsibility, add

compensation and/or apology strategies to the instructing information and care

response.

8. The compensation strategy is used anytime victims suffer serious harm.

9. The reminder and ingratiation strategies can be used to supplement any

response.

10. Denial and attack the accuser strategies are best used only for rumor and

challenge crises.

In general, a reputation is how stakeholder perceive an organization. A

reputation is widely recognized as a valuable, intangible asset for an

organization and is worth protecting. But the threat posed by a crisis extends

to behavioral intentions as well. Increased attributions of organizational

responsibility for a crisis result in a greater likelihood of negative

word-of-mouth about the organization and reduced purchase intention from the

organization. Early research suggests that lessons designed to protect the

organization s reputation will help to reduce the likelihood of negative

word-of-mouth and the negative effect on purchase intentions as well (Coombs,

2007b).

Post-Crisis Phase

In the post-crisis phase, the organization is returning to business as usual.

The crisis is no longer the focal point of management s attention but still

requires some attention. As noted earlier, reputation repair may be continued

or initiated during this phase. There is important follow-up communication that

is required. First, crisis managers often promise to provide additional

information during the crisis phase. The crisis managers must deliver on those

informational promises or risk losing the trust of publics wanting the

information. Second, the organization needs to release updates on the recovery

process, corrective actions, and/or investigations of the crisis. The amount of

follow-up communication required depends on the amount of information promised

during the crisis and the length of time it takes to complete the recovery

process. If you promised a reporter a damage estimate, for example, be sure to

deliver that estimate when it is ready. West Pharmaceuticals provided recovery

updates for over a year because that is how long it took to build a new

facility to replace the one destroyed in an explosion. As Dowling (2003), the

Corporate Leadership Counsel (2003), and the Business Roundtable (2002)

observe, Intranets are an excellent way to keep employees updated, if the

employees have ways to access the site. Coombs (2007a) reports how mass

notification systems can be used as well to deliver update messages to

employees and other publics via phones, text messages, voice messages, and

e-mail. Personal e-mails and phone calls can be used too.

Crisis managers agree that a crisis should be a learning experience. The crisis

management effort needs to be evaluated to see what is working and what needs

improvement. The same holds true for exercises. Coombs (2006) recommends every

crisis management exercise be carefully dissected as a learning experience. The

organization should seek ways to improve prevention, preparation, and/or the

response. As most books on crisis management note, those lessons are then

integrated into the pre-crisis and crisis response phases. That is how

management learns and improves its crisis management process. Table 8 lists the

Post-Crisis Phase Best Practices.

Table 8: Post-Crisis Phase Best Practices 1. Deliver all information promised

to stakeholders as soon as that information is known.

2. Keep stakeholders updated on the progression of recovery efforts including

any corrective measures being taken and the progress of investigations.

3. Analyze the crisis management effort for lessons and integrate those lessons

in to the organization s crisis management system.

Conclusion

It is difficult to distill all that is known about crisis management into one,

concise entry. I have tried to identify the best practices and lessons created

by crisis management researchers and analysts. While crises begin as a negative

/threat, effective crisis management can minimize the damage and in some case

allow an organization to emerge stronger than before the crisis. However,

crises are not the ideal way to improve an organization. But no organization is

immune from a crisis so all must do their best to prepare for one. This entry

provides a number of ideas that can be incorporated into an effective crisis

management program. At the end of this entry is an annotated bibliography. The

annotated bibliography provides short summaries of key writings in crisis

management highlighting. Each entry identifies the main topics found in that

entry and provides citations to help you locate those sources.

Annotated Bibliography

Argenti, P. (2002, December). Crisis communication: Lessons from 9/11. Harvard

Business Review, 80(12), 103-109. This article provides insights into working

with employees during a crisis. The information is derived from interviews with

managers about their responses to the 9/11 tragedies.

Arpan, L.M., & Roskos-Ewoldsen, D.R. (2005). Stealing thunder: An analysis of

the effects of proactive disclosure of crisis information. Public Relations

Review 31(3), 425-433.

This article discusses an experiment that studies the idea of stealing thunder.

Stealing thunder is when an organization releases information about a crisis

before the news media or others release the information. The results found that

stealing thunder results in higher credibility ratings for a company than

allowing others to report the crisis information first. This is additional

evidence to support the notion of being quick in a crisis and telling the

organization s side of the story.

Augustine, N. R. (1995, November/December). Managing the crisis you tried to

prevent. Harvard Business Review, 73(6), 147-158. This article centers on the

six stages of a crisis: avoiding the crisis, preparing to management the

crisis, recognizing the crisis, containing the crisis, resolving the crisis,

and profiting from the crisis. The article reinforces the need to have a crisis

management plan and to test both the crisis management plan and team through

exercises. It also reinforces the need to learn (profit) from the crisis.

Barton, L. (2001). Crisis in organizations II (2nd ed.). Cincinnati, OH:

College Divisions South-Western. This is a very practice-oriented book that

provides a number of useful insights into crisis management. There is a strong

emphasis on the role of communication and public relations/affairs in the

crisis management process and the need to speak with one voice. The book

provides excellent information on crisis management plans (a template is in

Appendix D pp. 225-262); the composition of crisis management teams (pp.

14-17); the need for exercises (pp. 207-221); and the need to communicate with

employees (pp. 86-101).

Benoit, W. L. (1995). Accounts, excuses, and apologies: A theory of image

restoration. Albany: State University of New York Press. This book has a

scholarly focus on image restoration not crisis manage. However, his discussion

of image restoration strategies is very thorough (pp. 63-96). These strategies

have been used as reputation repair strategies after a crisis.

Benoit, W. L. (1997). Image repair discourse and crisis communication. Public

Relations Review, 23(2), 177-180. The article is based on his book Accounts,

excuses, and apologies: A theory of image restoration and provides a review of

image restoration strategies. The image restoration strategies are reputation

repair strategies that can be used after a crisis. It is a quicker and easiest

to use resource than the book.

Business >http://www.nfib.com/object/3783593.html. >Business Roundtable s

Post-9/11 crisis communication toolkit. (2002). Retrieved April 24, 2006,

fromhttp://www.nfib.com/object/3783593.html.

This is a very user-friendly PDF files that takes a person through the crisis

management process. There is helpful information on web-based communication

(pp. 73-82) including dark sites and the use of Intranet and e-mail to keep

employees informed. There is an explanation of templates, what are called

holding statements or fill-in-the-blank media statements including a sample

statement (pp. 28-29). It also provides information of the crisis management

plan (pp. 21-32), structure of the crisis management team (pp. 33-40) and types

of exercises (pp. 89-93) including mock press conferences.

Carney, A., & Jorden, A. (1993, August). Prepare for business-related crises.

Public Relations Journal 49, 34-35.

This article emphasize the need for a message strategy during crisis

communication. Developing and sharing a strategy helps an organization to speak

with one voice during the crisis.

Cohen, J. R. (1999). Advising clients to apologize. S. California Law Review,

72,

1009-131.

This article examines expressions of concern and full apologies from a legal

perspective. He notes that California, Massachusetts, and Florida have laws

that prevent expressions of concern from being used as evidence against someone

in a court case. The evidence from court cases suggests that expressions of

concern are helpful because they help to reduce the amount of damages sought

and the number of claims filed.

Coombs, W. T. (1995). Choosing the right words: The development of guidelines

for the selection of the appropriate crisis response strategies. Management

Communication Quarterly, 8, 447-476.

This article is the foundation for Situational Crisis Communication Theory. It

uses a decision tree to guide the selection of crisis response strategies. The

guidelines are based on matching the response to nature of the crisis

situation. A number of studies have tested the guidelines in the decision tree

and found them to be reliable.

Coombs, W. T. (2004a). Impact of past crises on current crisis communications:

Insights from situational crisis communication theory. Journal of Business

Communication, 41, 265-289.

This article documents that past crises intensify the reputational threat to a

current crisis. Since the news media reminds people of past crises, it is

common for organizations in crisis to face past crises as well. Crisis managers

need to adjust their reputation repair strategies if there are past

crises-crisis managers will need to use more accommodative strategies than they

normally would. Accidents are a good example. Past accidents indicate a pattern

of problems so people will view the organization as much more responsible for

the crisis than if the accident were isolated. Greater responsibility means the

crisis is more of a threat to the reputation and the organization must focus

the response more on addressing victim concerns.

Coombs, W. T. (2004b). Structuring crisis discourse knowledge: The West

Pharmaceutics case. Public Relations Review, 30, 467-474.

This article is a case analysis of the West Pharmaceutical 2003 explosion at

its Kinston, NC facility. The case documents the extensive use of the Internet

to keep employees and other stakeholders informed. It also develops a list of

crisis communication standards based on SCCT. The crisis communication

standards offer suggestions for how crisis managers can match their crisis

response to the nature of the crisis situation.

Coombs, W. T. (2006). Code red in the boardroom: Crisis management as

organizational DNA. Westport, CN: Praeger.

This is a book written for a practitioner audience. The book focuses on how to

respond to three common types of crises: attacks on an organization (pp.

13-26), accidents (pp. 27-44), and management misbehavior pp. (45-64). There

are also detailed discussions of how crisis management plans must be a living

document (pp. 77-90), different types of exercises for crisis management (pp.

84-87), and samples of specific elements of a crisis management plan in

Appendix A (pp. 103-109).

Coombs, W. T. (2007a). Ongoing crisis communication: Planning, Managing, and

responding (2nd ed.). Los Angeles: Sage. This book is designed to teach

students and managers about the crisis management process. There is a detailed

discussion of spokesperson training pp. (78-87) and a discussion of the traits

and skills crisis team members need to posses to be effective during a crisis

(pp. 66-77). The book emphasizes the value of follow-up information and updates

(pp. 147-148) along with the learning from the crisis (pp. 152-162). There is

also a discussion of the utility of mass notification systems during a crisis

(pp. 97-98).

Coombs, W. T. (2007b). Protecting organization reputations during a crisis:The

development and application of situational crisis communication theory.

Corporate Reputation Review, 10, 1-14.

This article provides a summary of research conducted on and lessons learned

from Situational Crisis Communication Theory (SCCT). The article includes a

discussion how the research can go beyond reputation to include behavioral

intentions such as purchase intention and negative word-of-mouth. The

information in the article is based on experimental studies rather than case

studies.

Coombs, W. T., & Holladay, S. J. (1996). Communication and attributions in a

crisis: An experimental study of crisis communication. Journal of Public

Relations Research, 8(4), 279-295. This article uses an experimental design to

document the negative effect of crises on an organization s reputation. The

research also establishes that the type of reputation repair strategies

managers use does make a difference on perceptions of the organization. An

important finding is proof that the more an organization is held responsible

for the crisis, the more accommodative a reputation repair strategy must be in

order to be effective/protect the organization s reputation.

Coombs, W. T. and Holladay, S. J. (2001). An extended examination of the crisis

situation: A fusion of the relational management and symbolic approaches.

Journal of Public Relations Research, 13, 321-340.

This study reports on an experiment designed to test how prior reputation

influenced the attributions of crisis responsibility. The study found that an

unfavorable prior reputation had the biggest effect. People rated an

organization as having much greater responsibility for a crisis when the prior

reputation was negative than if the prior reputation was neutral or positive.

Similar results were found for the effects of prior reputation on the

post-crisis reputation.

Coombs, W. T., & Holladay, S. J. (2002). Helping crisis managers protect

reputational assets: Initial tests of the situational crisis communication

theory. Management Communication Quarterly, 16, 165-186. This article begins to

map how stakeholders respond to some very common crises. Using the level of

responsibility for a crisis that people attribute to an organization, the

research found that common crises can be categorized into one of three groups:

victim cluster has minimal attributions of crisis responsibility (natural

disasters, rumors, workplace violence, and tampering), accidental cluster has

low attributions of crisis responsibility (technical-error product harm and

accidents), and preventable cluster has strong attributions of crisis

responsibility (human-error product harm and accidents, management misconduct,

and organizational misdeeds). The article recommends different crisis response

strategies depending upon the attributions of crisis responsibility.

Coombs, W. T. & Holladay, S. J. (2006). Halo or reputational capital:

Reputation and crisis management. Journal of Communication Management, 10(2),

123-137.

This article examines if and when a favorable pre-crisis reputation can protect

an organization with a halo effect. The halo effect says that strong positive

feelings will allow people to overlook a negative event-it can shield an

organization from reputational damage during a crisis. The study found that

only in a very specific situation does a halo effect occur. In most crises, the

reputation is damaged suggesting reputational capital is a better way to view a

strong, positive pre-crisis reputation. An organization accumulates

reputational capital by positively engaging publics. A crisis causes an

organization to loss some reputational capital. The more pre-crisis

reputational capital, the stronger the reputation will be after the crisis and

the easier it should be to repair.

Corporate Leadership Council. (2003). Crisis management strategies. Retrieved

September 12, 2006, fromhttp://www.executiveboard.com/EXBD/Images/PDF/

Crisis%20Management%20Strategies.pdf .

This online PDF file summarizes key crisis management insights from the

Corporate Leadership Council. The topics include the value and elements of a

crisis management plan (pp 1-3), structure of a crisis management team (pp.

4-6), communicating with employees (pp. 7-9), using web sites including dark

sites (p. 7), using pre-packaged information/templates (p. 7), and the value

of employee assistance programs (p. 10). The file is an excellent overview to

key elements of crisis management with an emphasis on using new technology.

Dean, D. H. (2004. Consumer reaction to negative publicity: Effects of

corporate

reputation, response, and responsibility for a crisis event. Journal of

Business Communication, 41, 192-211.

This article reports an experimental study that included a comparison how

people reacted to expressions of concern verses no expression of concern.

Post-crisis reputations were stronger when an organization provided an

expression of concern.

Dilenschneider, R. L. (2000). The corporate communications bible: Everything

you need to know to become a public relations expert. Beverly Hills: New

Millennium. This book has a strong chapter of crisis communication (pp.

120-142). It emphasizes how a crisis is a threat to an organization s

reputation and the need to be strategic with the communications response.

Downing, J. R. (2003). American Airlines use of mediated employee channels

after the 9/11 attacks. Public Relations Review, 30, 37-48.

This article reviews how American Airlines used its Intranet, web sites, and

reservation system to keep employees informed after 9/11. The article also

comments on the use of employee assistance programs after a traumatic event.

Recommendations include using all available channels to inform employees during

and after a crisis as well as recommending organizations gray out color from

their web sites to reflect the somber nature of the situation.

Fearn-Banks, K. (2001). Crisis communications: A casebook approach (2nd ed.).

Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. This book is more a textbook for students using

case studies. Chapter 2 (pp. 18-33) has a useful discussion of elements of the

crisis communication plan, a subset of the crisis management plan. Chapter 4

has some tips on media relations (pp. 63-71).

Hearit, K. M. (1994, Summer). Apologies and public relations crises at

Chrysler, Toshiba, and Volvo. Public Relations Review, 20(2), 113-125.

This article provides a strong rationale for the value of quick but accurate

crisis response. The focus is on how a quick response helps an organization to

control the crisis situation.

Hearit, K. M. (2006). Crisis management by apology: Corporate response to

allegations of wrongdoing. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

This book is a detailed, scholarly treatment of apologies that has direct

application to crisis management. Chapter 1 helps to explain the different ways

the term

apology is used and concentrates on how it should be treated as a public

acceptance of responsibility (pp. 1-18). Chapter 3 details the legal and

liability issues involved when an organization chooses to use an apology.

Kellerman, B. (2006, April). When should a leader apologize and when not?

Harvard Business Review, 84(4), 73-81. This article defines an apology as

accepting responsibility for a crisis and expressing regret. The value of

apologies is highlighted along with suggestions for when an apology is

appropriate and inappropriate. An apology should be used when it will serve an

important purpose, the crisis has serious consequences, and the cost of an

apology will be lower than the cost of being silent.

Klein, J. & Dawar, N. (2004). Corporate social responsibility and consumers

attributions of brand evaluations in product-harm crisis. International Journal

of Marketing, 21, 203-217.

This article reports on an experimental study that compared how prior

information about corporate social responsibility (a dimension of prior

reputation) affected attributions of crisis responsibility. People attribute

much greater responsibility to the negative corporate social responsibility

condition than to the neutral or positive conditions. There was no difference

between the attributions in the positive and neutral conditions.

Lackluster online PR no aid in crisis response. (2002). PR News. Retrieved

April 20, 2006, fromhttp://web.lexis-nexis.com/universe

This short article notes how journalists and other interested parties are using

web sites during crises to collect information. The article highlights the

value of having a dark site ready before a crisis. A sample of various

criteria for a crisis web are discussed by reviewing Tyco s web site as a case

study.

Lerbinger, O. (1997). The crisis manager: Facing risk and responsibility.

Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.

This book centers on seven types of crises: natural, technological,

confrontation, malevolence, skewed management values, deception, and management

misconduct. There is a strong focus on the role of media relations in crisis

management (pp. 27-29 and pp. 31-34).

Mitroff, I. I., Harrington, K., & Gai, E. (1996, September). Thinking about the

unthinkable. Across the Board, 33(8), 44-48.

This article reinforces the value of creating and training crisis management

teams by having them conduct various types of exercises.

Sonnenfeld, S. (1994, July/August). Media policy What media policy? Harvard

Business Review, 72(4), 18-19.

This is a short article that discusses the need for spokesperson training prior

to a crisis.

Sturges, D. L. (1994). Communicating through crisis: A strategy for

organizational survival, Management Communication Quarterly, 7, 297-316.

This article emphasizes how communication needs shift during a crisis. The

first need is for instructing information, the information that tells people

how to protect themselves physically from a crisis. The next need is adjusting

information, the information that helps people to cope psychologically with the

crisis. The initial crisis response demands a focus on instructing and

adjusting information. The third and final type of communication is reputation

repair. Reputation repair is only used once the instructing and adjusting

information have been provided.

Taylor, M., & Kent, M. L. (2007). Taxonomy of mediated crisis responses. Public

Relations Review, 33, 140-146.

This article summarizes the best practices for using the Internet during a

crisis and advocates more organizations should be using the Internet,

especially web sites, during a crisis. The six best practices are: (1) include

all your tradition media relations materials on your web site; (2) try to make

use of the interactive nature of the Internet for your crisis web content; (3)

provide detailed and clear information on web sites during for a product

recall; (4) tell your side of the story on the crisis web site including

quotations from managers; (5) when necessary, create different web pages for

different stakeholders tailored to their interests in the crisis; and (6) work

with government agencies including hyperlinks to relevant government agency web

sites.

Tyler, L. (1997). Liability means never being able to say you re sorry:

Corporate guilt, legal constraints, and defensiveness in corporate

communication. Management Communication Quarterly, 11(1), 51-73.

This article discusses the legal constraints that prevent apologies during a

crisis. It is a hard look at the choices crisis managers must make between

addressing victims in a particular way and financial constraints. The article

is a reminder that crisis management occurs within the larger context of

organizational operations and is subject to financial constraints.

Ulmer, R. R., Sellnow, T. L., & Seeger, M. W. (2006). Effective crisis

communication: Moving from crisis to opportunity. Thousand Oaks: Sage.This book

is mix of lessons and case studies. Many of the cases focus on large scale

crises or what some would call disasters. Large scale crises/disasters are

unique because they require multiple agency coordination and are often managed

by government agencies. Chapter 12 (pp. 177-187) on renewal as a reputation

repair strategy after a crisis in unique and informative. Renewal focuses on

optimism and an emphasis on moving to some new and better state after the

crisis. Not all organizations can engage in renewal after a crisis. Renewal

requires that an organization have performed ethically before the crisis and

have had strong stakeholder relationships before the crisis.