Friday, April 16, 2010

8 Steps for Creating a Corporate Communications Strategy

Over the past few months several people have asked for pointers about how to develop a communications plan for their respective organizations. In response, here are eight basic steps that outline how to create a corporate communication strategy.

1. Assess Corporate Strategy
A communication plan should begin with corporate strategy. Assess your organization’s current goals and then determine how internal and external communications can best support them. For example, if a corporate goal is to attract more clients in Taiwan, then create communication objectives in support of this goal.

Hint: Be able to summarize your communication plan - and its relevance to corporate strategy - in three to five succinct, compelling bullets.

2. Identify Communication Channels and Initiatives
Consider internal and external communications. How is information delivered/received in your organization? Communication channels include email, a company intranet, an external website, blogs, newsletters and more. Who is each channel's intended audience? It is important to understand the difference between a message and a communication channel. Having a twitter feed and a Facebook page is fine, but once you have one, what do you want to say?

Next, identify existing communication initiatives. This is the time to follow up with that colleague in Asia and ask about the project he was working on a few months back. Then ask if he’s seen any interesting news being communicated in his region. The larger the organization, the higher the probability that there is information already available that you can leverage more broadly. Be proactive about utilizing your network to find it.

3. Assess Current Channels and Initiatives
So department X has a webpage on the company intranet. What was the original purpose of the page? Is it still valid? When was the last time it was updated? How many hits is it receiving a month? Assess the purpose and effectiveness of all communication channels and initiatives.

4. Clarify Objectives
You’ve already identified your high-level communication goals. Now, based on what you’ve learned through identifying and assessing your communication channels and initiatives, outline how you will meet those goals. Note the relative priority of various initiatives; this will help you effectively respond to those urgent, unpredictable and inevitable requests.

5. Create a Calendar
Create a master editorial calendar in line with your fiscal year. This could include external communications such as client letters, website strategies and press releases, and internal communications such as newsletters, intranet features, and educational campaigns. Outline deliverables month by month, and be as specific as possible. Applicable information for your calendar might detail communication owners/writers, project managers, necessary legal or regulatory checks, and channels through which the information will be delivered.

Hint: A well planned communications calendar is the single most effective way to create a streamlined communications pipeline.

6. Build Consensus
This applies to every step of the process; it's placed here as a reminder. Building consensus is the single most important factor in the success of any project, and it’s also one of the easiest to overlook when budgeting time.

Share your plan with key stakeholders and be sure to focus on the WIIFM factor (What’s in it for me?). Back to our earlier example, suppose you meet with the Asia marketing director. Mention the initiative to increase client numbers in Taiwan, then show her mock-ups of the marketing materials and internal education campaign that could support her efforts.

7. Estimate Costs and Create a Budget
Budgets are a standard part of any project plan, so I won’t spend more time discussing them here.

8. Measuring Success
Communication success is measurable, it's just a matter of defining the metrics! For example, success could be defined through web hits, employee/client knowledge as determined through surveys or focus groups, decreased production time of deliverables, or increased number of available resources. Take the time to establish what success would look like for you, establish how and how often you will measure your plan's effectiveness, and then stick to it.

Communication strategies are as diverse as organizations themselves. Use these guidelines as a starting point, but let your company's unique attributes guide what is most appropriate for your particular organization.

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