Scenario:
You are an intern at Company X, and your boss wants the company’s executives to be versed in corporate crisis communication. She has given each of you a crisis to research and present to the C-suite team in a “teaching” context.
Your task:
- Introduce the details of the crisis you’ve been assigned. Make sure your audience understands what happened SPECIFICALLY (who, what, when where, why, and how). Explain why the incident is a crisis.
- Give an overview of the company’s responses to the situation (e.g., these can be company statements, correspondence, published materials, TV commercials, online [web] responses, etc.). Be specific. If possible, show examples of the responses, good or bad.
- Conclude by arguing the one most appropriate action that the company took and the one most inappropriate action, as well as the “takeaways” we can get from those actions – what is important for your audience (Company X’s executives) to understand about the crisis response of the company you studied? What could the company have done instead?
Guidelines:
· No more than ten slides (not including your title slide and a “Sources Used/Cited” slide)
· The 6X6 guideline – no more than six bullets per slide, no more than six words per bullet
· Seven minutes maximum
· No notes!
Sources requirements:
· You must use credible primary sources (company press releases, statements, videos, advertisements, etc.) and/or crediblesecondary sources (news coverage of the crisis).
· You must refer to a crisis communications expert (either one of the experts we have read, such as Timothy Coombs, or another you find on your own) during your presentation.
· You may NOT use Wikipedia as a source (though I encourage you to mine Wikipedia to gather initial information)
· You may NOT use garbage websites (pro/con.org, askjeeves.com, etc.)
List your sources on your last slide (does not count towards the ten maximum) APA style