Every Corporate, business,
specific brand or project needs exchange of information. It doesn’t have to be
ultra professional, neither exhaustive nor very detailed. But it should somehow
be thought-through. Corporate communication is a discipline often neglected in
an organization. The focus lays on other departments that have their direct
impact on a company’s health: finances, sales, HR and marketing (although the
latter is also cutting budgets). Although these specialties are indeed key for
an organization to stay alive, a lack of corporate communication might be as
fatal and sudden as a heart attack. A corporate communication strategy has
a huge impact on every corporation’s visibility and reputation.
There are many techniques and
possibilities for drawing up a corporate communication strategy, and all
of them probably prove their effectiveness. The most important thing is to have
some kind of communication guidelines in place, and keeping in mind the
following key elements in the process of drawing up your strategy.
- Identify the purpose of your communication: why do you want to communicate and what do you expect to get out of it for your business?
- Identify your target audience: to whom do you want to communicate? Which target audience might benefit the most from your information?
- Design your message: what do you want to talk about? What are the content, mood and language of your message?
- Identify the channels: reach your audience by placing your message where they will read it.
The basis of corporate
communication is all about the above four key elements for getting your
message across. But apart of these key elements, there are several other steps
to undertake to make sure your company’s corporate communication avoids
pitfalls and keeps its positive effect on your reputation.
- Check your resources: do you have the budget and the (right) people in place for your communication campaign?
- Anticipate issues and obstacles: draft a crisis plan so you’ll know exactly what to do when a crisis occurs. Who takes responsibility for what?
- Identify your relations with media, consumers, clients, suppliers and other stakeholders: who will help you spread your message?
- Create an action plan: bring all previous steps together, and take action.
- Evaluate your corporate communication strategy: make it more effective every time you implement it. What went wrong, what did you overlook and what was effective?
Your
communication campaign may consist of one important subject; but it includes a
handful of points that you want to convey in your corporate communication.
Therefore it may be a good idea to draw up a few key messages before the start
of your communications campaign.
Write them down in bulleted
format, not having more than a sentence or two per key message. These drafted
key messages have as objective to be short and comprehensible in order for the
ones who will use them (employees, managers, spokespersons, etc.) to easily
recall and repeat during conversation with stakeholders (consumers, prospects,
clients, media, etc.
Mwasandube Aden A
BAPRM 42638
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