Sunday, May 29, 2016

Communicating the Corporate Culture

In a meeting today with a new client, a conversation arose regarding their strong and positive feelings for their corporate culture, how important they thought it was, and that the challenge now was how to communicate that culture to their audience.
Finding a way to communicate the essence of a firm's culture beyond the circle of existing clients is key to influencing prospects and talent through marketing efforts. But try as we might, telling someone how cool the corporate is, most often a lesson in futility rather than treat this as a problem of communication, then, maybe it's more helpful to think about it as a problem of transparency. We don't need to tell people about us as much as we need them to see us for who we really are.
However in communicating corporate culture, it is very important to look at the following important aspects.
Think Dynamic not Static                                                 
Doing business implies action, change, adaptation and motion. Therefore, if we want to make our business transparent it will take more than a static brochure. Blogging is useful in this regard, and is one of the best tools to ever come along to provide a means of frequently publishing new content, content that reflects an ever-evolving culture through the views of its people.  
It is not a single post that creates transparency as much as a steady stream of posts from different minds and personalities within the firm, all of which paint a dynamic representation of culture. Most beautiful characteristic of blogging is that done well it has such a powerful, authentic voice. Blogging is the voice of a human, which will always be more interesting and persuasive than a brochure. 
Think Engagement not Reach
Some marketing efforts are deemed successful when they reach their audience, others when they successfully persuade on a call to action. Transparency calls for engagement, until an audience can witness how a firm behaves in or responds to a given scenario, there's little from which to understand something so complex as culture.
Blogging, once again, often opens an avenue for conversation. But transparency is truly the domain of social media. Through one-to-one engagements taking place in a public context, transparency is born naturally, authentically, and believably. How you treat others on Facebook, is quite different to how you treat when sitting across at the conference table.
Think Now not Later
Traditionally we have created marketing collateral that has a lifespan of weeks, months or even years; be it brochures or websites. Today our most impactful collateral has hardly a day to live. Our best opportunities to persuade are only moments in time, occurring at unpredictable intervals when a customer expresses frustration on Twitter or when situations beyond our control provide immediate opportunities to get unexpected press coverage. To leverage these moments we must be prepared to act immediately, and immediacy can only be achieved through the empowerment of individuals throughout the organization to act on behalf of the organization.

Mwasandube Aden A
BAPRM 42638

1 comment:

  1. Very informative blog... Digital internal communications is an instrument of strategy and helps leaders share their vision and values with employees.

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