It doesn’t matter whether it was started by the rumor mill, an investor recommendation, or a public announcement, the M&A process is rife for speculation. M&A inquiries require a heightened set of skills when dealing with questions. Read more
CommCore Blog and News
E-Mail Protocol Lessons From The Sony Pictures Hacking
The hacking of SONY Pictures data not only raises questions about whether threats can force a company to pull a product from the market place, but generates a host of new concerns for anyone who uses e-mail or instant messaging. Read more
Storytelling: Apply the Science
Storytelling isn’t just the hottest trend in PR messaging or a communications skill we teach.
A recent Harvard Business Review article discusses Claremont University Prof. Paul Zak’s research that suggests storytelling impacts neurological processes in our brains. Read more
Bureaucratic Jargon Doesn’t Help in a Crisis or Risk Situation
When Centers for Disease Control (CDC) chief Dr. Thomas Frieden told reporters after the first Texas hospital nurse contracted Ebola, “I think the fact that we don’t know of a breach in protocol is concerning because clearly there was a breach in protocol,” he violated a cardinal rule of crisis and risk communications – bureaucratic jargon and doublespeak tend to confuse the public and raise tension. Read more
The NFL Doesn’t Know What Type of Crisis It’s Dealing With
It Was Predicable, It’s Now Flash – Their Hope Is to Make “Chronic”
If NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell intended his Friday mea culpa news conference to put to rest public and media criticism of the league’s policies on player misconduct and domestic violence, he couldn’t have been more wrong. Read more
Crisis Communications In Developing Nations: Lessons From The Ebola Outbreak
Increasingly global companies are looking to emerging markets as rapid growth opportunities (isn’t ’emerging markets’ synonymous for developing countries?). Some, like those in West Africa affected by the deadly Ebola virus, have significant populations living in remote areas where standard communications tools don’t work as well, and bridging cultures is challenging. Read more
Communication Tactics in Politics v. Business: What Might Work for One, May Spell Disaster for the Other
With so many channels of communication available, organizations have to be aggressive to be heard above the digital din. Public relations, corporate, brand and advocacy communicators have become more active – and in some cases more assertive – when engaging target influencers and communities. Read more
The 2014 World Cup: World Class Communications Challenges
FIFA (the federation that governs international soccer ) couldn’t have asked for a worse buildup to the largest sporting event in the world – its signature quadrennial World Cup, just underway in Brazil:
- Facility and infrastructure completion problems right up to the start of the games
- Massive, violent local protests against the lack of the promised economic World Cup “trickle-down” to Brazil’s poor
- News coverage of alleged international match “fixing” by a sophisticated syndicate managing crooked referees
- The prospect of the 2022 World Cup being taken away from Qatar after revelations of $5 million in alleged bribes paid to FIFA officials to sway the selection
Question: How does an organization counter this type of spiraling bad publicity happening in real-time around a major event? Read more
The “R”s of CEO Crisis Communications
Even though she’s only been CEO for 5 months, GM’s Mary Barra probably thinks she’s been through 10 years of learnings and experience managing the current recall issues. Among other jobs, she has been the primary face of GM in Congressional testimony, employee videos and customer dealer communications. Read more
Blog Comments – Dead, Dying, or Migrating?
Sometimes an article is living proof of the very point it is making. Take Janine Popick’s recent “Three Reasons Blog Comments are Dead” article on Inc. online. Her blog was written shortly after blogging behemoth Copyblogger announced last month it would no longer publish comments because 96% them were garbage. Read more