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ANCYL brand: organisation or person in crisis?The suspension of Julius Malema raises some interesting questions. Sure, let's leave the politics of it all to those who manage politics and focus our thinking about what this means if, as communicators, we were charged with managing the reputation of the ANCYL. But which brand is in crisis...? The organisation or the person? Following a logical train of thought, crisis communications is nothing new to a seasoned communicator. So, for the sake of this argument, let's look at what this would mean for ANCYL (Pty) Limited. In this example, the board of directors of the Youth League has requested the communications manager to assist in managing this crisis; the communications manager needs to act and act fast. Less about people, more about "business" Crudely enough, it translates directly into the headline media would expect: "ANCYL (Pty) Ltd takes decisive action against CEO". Crisis solved? Focus on other reputation drivers For the board of the fictitious ANCYL (Pty) Ltd, this balanced approach is a key measurement of its responsibility to manage a sustainable brand and sustainable business. Primary responsibility Indeed, it's not about the CEO; the primary responsibility remains with the reputation of the organisation, a reputation divorced from any one person. The first step in this journey is admitting that there is crisis at an organisational level. Following on from this, it's about beginning to communicate towards recovery (and continuing to do so until this has been achieved). About Dustin ChickDustin is partner and managing director of Razor, the PR, reputation and culture and communications agency in the M&C Saatchi Group.
Dustin is recognised as one of the top reputation managers and communicators in Europe, Africa and the Middle East - having being named by the Holmes Report / PROvoke Media as one of its top 25 innovators in public relations across Europe, the Middle East and Africa in 2019. View my profile and articles... |