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Reinventing corporate communicationTORONTO, CANADA: The closing day of the 2010 IABC World Conference, Wednesday, 9 June 2010, highlighted the role of the corporate communicator and how it is fundamentally changing, taking new technologies, methodologies, measurement practices and communication leadership into account. Steve Crescenzo, principal of Crescenzo Communications in the US, cautioned that if communicators do not take these changes into account, they run the risk of becoming irrelevant in their organisations. As social media and other factors chip away at the traditional role of the communicator as a "publisher" of information, organisations around the world are looking harder at just what they're getting from their communicators. The closing session of the conference tied up all the learnings on measurement and strategy to ask the critical question - how do we reinvent the role of communications to remain relevant now and into the future? This is why communicators need to know what organisational needs they will be asked to fill five years down the road - something that should form part of even the most basic strategy and scenario plan. Facing up to the challengeThe challenge many communicators face is the change factor, and what people have to do to reach change. Change is a destination, not a journey... transition is the journey communicators need to take, alongside their organisations, to reach change. This will invariably move people out of their comfort zone and change the playing field. "We do a lot of the same things... to get things signed off and get it out," said Crescenzo. "This won't fly any more... there is more competition than ever for eyeballs. There has always been competition, but never like it is now". The challenge facing internal communication practitioners is to sift through the clutter and make employee publications more relevant than other social media tools, and engage their audiences to the extent that they will WANT to make use of, and digest, the content being disseminated. The session reminded practitioners that measuring the process does not mean they have performed an effective campaign. Shifting perceptionsCrescenzo said the simple reality of modern day internal communication is that employees would rather read a foreign language on Facebook than read a corporate newsletter "and yet companies cannot understand why." Employees would rather follow a celebrity than their own company; and even companies that force Twitter and social media from a corporate perspective find people purposefully leaving them. The simple answer - employee communication is no longer relevant, "and may have never even been". How can organisations compete with the likes of YouTube, Facebook, front-covers of consumer magazines, LinkedIn, Twitter, and much more? They have to accept that they are not at the top of the employees' priority list when it comes to receiving messages from the organisation through dull and outdates communication tools - they are "incredibly dull, boring, and nobody reads them," said Crescenzo. We need to shift our thought processes and start thinking about the people. The old role of communicators includes being 'The party planner'; 'The private publisher'; 'The protector of the brand'; 'The producer of spin'; and 'The policy and programme promoter'. Seven crucial communication rolesThe seven ways communicators need to change in order to be relevant five years from now:
These are all practical tools that simply require communication practitioners to think differently about what they are doing today. As the paradigms of communication change, so do the methodologies and tools being used by communicators. Crescenzo concluded: "Times are changing, why aren't we? We cannot be a whiteboard culture anymore. We need to change the internal culture of organisations to better meet consumers' needs." More information, as well as podcasts and vodcasts from the 2010 IABC World Conference in Canada, will be available at www.talk2us.co.za. About Daniel MunslowDaniel Munslow is the owner and founder of MCC Consulting and former director on the International Association of Business Communicators' International Executive Board. He has 16 years' experience in business communication consulting. He has worked across Africa, as well as in the Middle East, the US, Europe, and AsiaPac. View my profile and articles... |