We Speak – What Do They Hear?

Corporate Communication

What is your company saying? What are your customers hearing?

I recently hosted a program for technology companies north of Boston on corporate communications. Too often “corporate communications” is a priority for CEOs and boards only at a moment of crisis or big change — toxic spill, a lawsuit, or product launch. To be successful today, companies must purposefully manage their communications across a wide spectrum of channels including the press, social media, direct advertising, websites, and internal communications.

On September 13, the natural gas pipelines serving thousands of homes and businesses in communities north of Boston were pressurized far above safety specifications. Gas pipes burst. Over 80 homes caught on fire and one young person was killed. Hundreds of families became homeless. Today, in December, many families are still not able to move back into their homes.

Columbia Gas, owner of the gas pipelines, did not have a communications plan in place outlining what to do when there is an emergency — who speaks for the company, who must be contacted, who decides what to say, who is the point of contact for the company. Quickly dealing with the emergency on the ground is the top priority. But communicating with the public, government, the press, your employees, the directly affected families, regulators, shareholders, and public safety personnel is also a top priority.

Technology companies, in particular, are often poor communicators. Planning for a crisis is important, but every company, large or small, communicates constantly with its customers, its employees, its investors, and the broader community. The messaging may be intentional or unintentional.

As a leader of your company, here is a simplified check list of questions for your team and yourself.

* Who are your constituencies: customers, investors, staff, community?
* What do you want to say to them?
* What are you saying to them?
* What are they hearing?
* What communication channels are relevant to them?
* Do you have an emergency communications plan in place?
* Who in your company is responsible for managing your communications strategy?

What Am I Communicating?


I hope you saw the relaunch announcement for the Williams Advisory Partners website. The new site is the work product of talented folks working with me over several months. Core questions were “What do I want to say?” and “How do I say that?”

At a meeting last week, I asked several people if they had gone to the new site. Some had. The most humbling response was from someone I had quoted in a published article. “I like to get your emails because I like your photography.” I may not have gotten an award for the quality of my thinking in her mind, but she likes my photography. At this point, I will take what I can get.

Here is an image from the Monterey Aquarium, CA, taken over Labor Day weekend.