Saturday, April 28, 2012

Crisis Management Skills


Key words and phrases: crisis management skills, leadership, business continuity, training
Getting the right people to do the jobGetting the right people to do the job is not as straightforward as it may seem. Crisis managers need to be able to perform in very stressful situations. They need to be capable of taking responsibility and to exercise leadership in often chaotic and confusing situations.
Crisis managers need:
·                                                                to be flexible.
·                                                                to apply different leadership styles on different occasions, e.g. from being a ‘Task’, ‘Individual’ or ‘Team’ oriented person, the manager may also, from time-to-time, need to swiftly adopt an autocratic, democratic or even laissez-faire style of leadership.
·                                                                to possess communicative skills and the confidence to negotiate and compromise.
·                                                                to be capable of handling and sifting large quantities of, sometimes inaccurate and sketchy information to draw up as accurate as possible a picture of the situation.
·                                                                to be capable of recognising and filtering the right information and need to know when to become pro-active in gathering data.
Our consultants possess the expertise, knowledge and skills to assess personnel’s ability to manage in crises. Not only is it possible to assess whether people have the ability to perform crisis management roles and duties, but also what training they may require to improve their abilities and enhance their crisis management skills and competence.
What is the Process?
We may approach such a task as follows:
·                                                                Evaluate Business Continuity and Crisis Management plans, teams, processes etc.
·                                                                Examine some or all of the following priorities:
o                                                                               information flow
o                                                                               decision-making
o                                                                               recording of information
o                                                                               suitability of team members, working routine, team dynamics, etc.
·                                                                Train and exercise participants, familiarising them with BCPs and CM.
As an independent external consultancy, with no political agenda we are able to view the situation from an objective position.
Crisis management is the process by which an organization deals with a major event that threatens to harm the organization, its stakeholders, or the general public. Three elements are common to most definitions of crisis: (a) a threat to the organization, (b) the element of surprise, and (c) a short decision time.[1] Venette[2] argues that "crisis is a process of transformation where the old system can no longer be maintained." Therefore the fourth defining quality is the need for change. If change is not needed, the event could more accurately be described as a failure or incident.
In contrast to risk management, which involves assessing potential threats and finding the best ways to avoid those threats, crisis management involves dealing with threats after they have occurred. It is a discipline within the broader context of management consisting of skills and techniques required to identify, assess, understand, and cope with a serious situation, especially from the moment it first occurs to the point that recovery procedures start.
Crisis management consists of:
  • Methods used to respond to both the reality and perception of crises.
  • Establishing metrics to define what scenarios constitute a crisis and should consequently trigger the necessary response mechanisms.
  • Communication that occurs within the response phase of emergency management scenarios.
Crisis management methods of a business or an organization are called Crisis Management Plan.
Crisis management is occasionally referred to as incident management, although several industry specialists such as Peter Power argue that the term crisis management is more accurate. [3]
The credibility and reputation of organizations is heavily influenced by the perception of their responses during crisis situations. The organization and communication involved in responding to a crisis in a timely fashion makes for a challenge in businesses. There must be open and consistent communication throughout the hierarchy to contribute to a successful crisis communication process.
The related terms emergency management and business continuity management focus respectively on the prompt but short lived "first aid" type of response (e.g. putting the fire out) and the longer term recovery and restoration phases (e.g. moving operations to another site). Crisis is also a facet of risk management, although it is probably untrue to say that Crisis Management represents a failure of Risk Management since it will never be possible to totally mitigate the chances of catastrophes occurring.

Types of crisis

During the crisis management process, it is important to identify types of crises in that different crises necessitate the use of different crisis management strategies.[4] Potential crises are enormous, but crises can be clustered.[4]
Lerbinger[5] categorized seven types of crises
  1. Natural disaster
  2. Technological crises
  3. Confrontation
  4. Malevolence
  5. Crisis of skewed management value
  6. Crisis of deception
  7. Crisis of management misconduct

Natural crises

Natural crises, typically natural disasters considered as'acts of God,' are such environmental phenomena as earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, tornadoes and hurricanes, floods, landslides, tsunamis, storms, and droughts that threaten life, property, and the environment itself.[4][5]

Technological crises

Technological crises are caused by human application of science and technology. Technological accidents inevitably occur when technology becomes complex and coupled and something goes wrong in the system as a whole (Technological breakdowns). Some technological crises occur when human error causes disruptions (Human breakdowns[4]). People tend to assign blame for a technological disaster because technology is subject to human manipulation whereas they do not hold anyone responsible for natural disaster. When an accident creates significant environmental damage, the crisis is categorized as megadamage.[4] Samples include software failures, industrial accidents, and oil spills.[4][5]

Confrontation crises

Confrontation crises occur when discontented individuals and/or groups fight businesses, government, and various interest groups to win acceptance of their demands and expectations. The common type of confrontation crises is boycotts, and other types are picketing, sit-ins, ultimatums to those in authority, blockade or occupation of buildings, and resisting or disobeying police.
Example: Rainbow/PUSH’s (People United to Serve Humanity) boycott of Nike

Crises of malevolence

An organization faces a crisis of malevolence when opponents or miscreant individuals use criminal means or other extreme tactics for the purpose of expressing hostility or anger toward, or seeking gain from, a company, country, or economic system, perhaps with the aim of destabilizing or destroying it. Sample crises include product tampering, kidnapping, malicious rumors, terrorism, and espionage.[4][5]

Crises of organizational misdeeds

Crises occur when management takes actions it knows will harm or place stakeholders at risk for harm without adequate precautions.[4] Lerbinger[5] specified three different types of crises of organizational misdeeds: crises of skewed management values, crises of deception, and crises of management misconduct.

Crises of skewed management values

Crises of skewed management values are caused when managers favor short-term economic gain and neglect broader social values and stakeholders other than investors. This state of lopsided values is rooted in the classical business creed that focuses on the interests of stockholders and tends to view the interests of its other stakeholders such as customers, employees, and the community.
Example: Sears sacrifices customer trust[clarification needed]

Crises of deception

Crises of deception occur when management conceals or misrepresents information about itself and its products in its dealing with consumers and others.

Crises of management misconduct

Some crises are caused not only by skewed values and deception but deliberate amorality and illegality.
Example: Martha Stewart fraud case

Workplace violence

Crises occur when an employee or former employee commits violence against other employees on organizational grounds.
Example: DuPont’s Lycra[clarification needed]

Rumors

False information about an organization or its products creates crises hurting the organization’s reputation. Sample is linking the organization to radical groups or stories that their products are contaminated.[4]

Crisis Leadership

Erika Hayes James, an organizational psychologist at the University of Virginia’s Darden Graduate School of Business, identifies two primary types of organizational crisis.[6] James defines organizational crisis as “any emotionally charged situation that, once it becomes public, invites

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