Interested? Do you feel you will benefit?

All Rights Reserved. marcus evans ® 2019

8th GLOBAL HR EXCELLENCE  

Investing in the development of human capital
means investing in the long term growth of your
organisation.

21st – 24th October 2019

Singapore 

What our delegates think of us:

Organisers are welcoming and thoughtful. Attentive to us and recognize attendees, making
registration easy.

Ong & Ong Pte Ltd.

Networking, getting to know what is
happening in other cities; Validating some of our
assumptions.

Bosch

Job well done.

Sime Darby Property

Communicate with Your Stakeholders During a Major Crisis

How do you engage your staff?

Messages to staff from the CEO are well and good. TownHalls are great. But you need to enlist the support of all your senior management to cascade messages of reassurance to all staff, down to your people at the worksites. To do this, you need to have a well thought-through set of talking points and an even better set of Q&As that seeks to anticipate the concerns of staff at different levels of the organization and at the different business units they work in. Remember, this is an exercise that not merely attempts to shore up morale, but which also empowers them to deal reasonably and assuredly with questions that will inevitably come from friends and families. Remember, they are always your best advocates. Also, consider placing some of these messages from the CEO and senior management on selected digital and social media platforms to demonstrate to customers that you care and are serious about setting things right.

How do you take the issue head-on?

These dialogues must address the core issues around the crisis. Crises become even more difficult to manage when they involve staff in the first instance. For example, when staff are directly to blame for the incident. They will watch very carefully at how senior management is dealing with it. Will investigations stop at only finding complicity at the level of rank and file? Will it include middle and senior management? Where does the buck stop? The management of such crises gets more complex when external stakeholders get involved. Separately, have senior management speak to the media. Publicly taking responsibility, demonstrating accountability, explaining the root causes and committing to a timeline for rectification and repair will boost morale.

What values would be most critical?

  • Be considerate. When errant staff need to be disciplined, everyone else will be watching about how the company is dealing with it. If remorse is shown, will some compassion follow? You would need to follow quite strictly your internal processes. Staff may need to be dismissed. The union must be engaged throughout the entire process. They are an incredibly important partner when it comes to looking after affected staff and their families. This takes on a whole new dimension when there are injuries sustained by staff and customers. The crisis can take months or years to reconcile. This is where everyone will be watching as to how well you are working with staff, customers and their families and how sustained your efforts are in bringing the crisis to closure. Specially assigned liaison staff and care counsellors would need to be committed. Senior management will want to visit the injured at hospitals (and pay their respects at wakes and funerals). Don’t be crass with media coverage. Pay very close attention to the letters you draft as expressions of care and concern to all those affected.    
  • Be tireless. Communicating to staff around a major crisis does not end with one TownHall. The news cycle can often be protracted. Internal investigations followed by external investigations followed by court cases that will certainly appear in the press. And so, communications to staff would need to be constant and focussed. They should be the first to be told rather than reading it from the media. Social media also bears close watching. There will inevitably be various versions of the truth circulating across different platforms. You need to be actively monitoring these not just to discern perception gaps and selectively address these on social media, but more so to inform staff about what is being said and what the truth is about various allegations and assertions. Remember, they are your best advocates.  

What would we need to be careful about?

  • Your Profile. During and in the immediate aftermath of a crisis, be sure you set the right mood internally, and externally in all your engagements and on all your platforms. A sombre, contemplative mood should prevail.
  • When the incident has led to harm and injury in particular, set a solemn tone on all your public advertising, and digital and social media platforms. Assist staff with voluntary contributions and activities to help affected employees and customers.   
  • Media Campaigns. This would be okay the first time a crisis has struck. It can certainly help morale and change public perception. It can be particularly effective when staff are part of your public relations campaign. But I daresay, you can only do this once. The next time a crisis hits, your customers will be baying for blood. A much more effective effort may revolve around campaigns that profile who amongst middle and senior management are responsible for specific areas of the business!    

For registration pricing and multiple attendee discounts, please contact:

Shahlini 
ShahliniM@marcusevanskl.com 

"Publicly taking responsibility, demonstrating accountability, explaining the root causes and committing to a timeline for rectification and repair will boost morale."


Patrick Nathan
Senior Advisor
Deloitte Risk Advisory Services

Why you should attend this marcus evans conference?

SPECIAL HIGHLIGHTS 

HR DIALOGUE
Implementing HR Analytics for Improved Decision Making in the Workplace 

MINI-CRISIS SIMULATION EXERCISE
Internal Communications and Employee Engagement: Focusing on Morale in a Crisis

SOCIAL PANEL: RE-WRITING THE RULES
Anti Harassment Movements and Changing Social Stigmas

CHATROOM
Breaking Barriers: Unconscious Bias in the Workplace

Practical insights from active practitioners in your sector

Gaurav Sharma, HR Director, Coca Cola

Frederic Ducros, Chief Transformation Officer, AirAsia

Natalie Peters, HR Executive, Telstra

Sanjeev Somasundaram, APAC Lead – Talent Acquisition, Google

Hunter Morgan Davis, People Analytics Lead, Grab

Rachna Sampayo, VP of Human Resources, Oracle

Anjali Menon, Head of Talent, APAC, Nestle

Izham Ab Wahab, Head, Group Human Capital, DRB-HICOM Berhad

Subhankar Roy Chowdhury Executive Director & Head – HR & CSR, Lenovo

Fong Tuan Chen Head Human Resources & General Affairs, Samsung Electronics