You are on page 1of 4

International business

060

AUSTRALIAN

Business Solutions

Implementing A Crisis And Recovery Management Plan Across Borders


| By Barry Thomas |
A corporate crisis can strike at any moment and in any location. Indeed, a crisis relates to an incident, human or natural, that requires urgent attention or action to protect life, property, environment or reputation. In the age of digital media, it can be business as usual one day and, without prior warning, the following day an international corporate crisis can be in full swing. With an almost immediate news cycle these days, increased scrutiny and the high expectations of consumers and company stakeholders alike, such a crisis can transform an international companys reputation overnight. Every organisation, irrespective of where it is situated, is different and faces unique risks to its ability to function. How well a business emerges from a corporate crisis is not related to where it is located on the map, but is usually reflective of preparations and the execution of a well thought out crisis management plan. When developing a crisis and recovery management plan across borders, there are four fundamental phases to consider: Planning: There Is No Excuse Not To And The Rewards Are Significant Some markets are inherently riskier than others, and conducting a crisis management audit of each site is the first port of call to assess the organisations ability to respond to and recover from a crisis. For example, it would seem prudent to consider a continuity plan in the event of an earthquake for Japanese operations. Equally, operations that include manufacturing capabilities will have a very different risk profile to office-based sales and marketing teams. Once the risk profile of a site is understood, effective crisis and recovery management requires a plan. The plan is a living document, meaning it should be regularly reviewed and updated, and include as a minimum: instructions for activating the plan effectively; contact details for a crisis team and crisis media spokesperson; contingencies in the event members of the team are incapacitated; the roles and responsibilities for each crisis team member; predetermined performance benchmarks for external support services such as a call centre or distribution centre; company policies and instructions to manage monitoring tools, media and local online properties; and, specific market considerations such as relevant regulatory requirements. When developing your plan and nominating your crisis team and spokespeople in each market, remember to consider language as different audiences, both internal and external, may have varying requirements.

AUSTRALIAN

Business Solutions

061

International business

Training: Putting The Planning Into Practice Now you have a suitable crisis and recovery management plan established in all of your sites, it is important to ensure those with responsibilities identified in that plan are capable of performing their duties. Where necessary, incorporate regular training sessions to fill any capability gaps. These sessions should be tailored for each country to address local risk factors, for example local regulatory procedures, social media protocols, compliance issues and safety procedures. The media is also unique in every market, so it makes sense to ensure the local spokesperson is trained to get your organisations key messages across effectively. Exercise: Test And Review Your Processes Each sites ability to respond to a crisis situation should be regularly tested and reviewed. The organisation should assess performance criteria for incident preparedness and achieving operational continuity at each site and tailor an appropriate management system for it. One way to do this is to facilitate a simulation exercise, which is an incredibly effective method to test how things will be managed in a real life situation. Depending on your

organisations size and budget, simulations can be desktop exercises or full-scale emergency scenarios in conjunction with local emergency services. Each simulation should involve a typical local scenario based on the risk profile of the site. As language, operational procedures and regulatory requirements will vary from market to market, it is important to ensure each simulation is tailored accordingly. This will add to cost, but it will ensure a realistic simulation and an effective outcome in terms of preparedness. Managing The Crisis: As It Happens Once the crisis and continuity plan is activated, it is up to the crisis team leader to decide the extent to which the crisis team needs to meet and where. When the crisis is underway, there are four key stages: Information gathering and assessing the crisis situation is the first phase. This intelligence is needed to evaluate the impact of what has happened and coordinate next steps appropriately. Decision making involves how the issue will be handled, what key actions need to be taken and how the information is going to be communicated both internally and externally. Communicating crisis specific messages for internal and external stakeholders is the

next phase and when doing so, it is important to ensure that all messaging is communicated in a clear and concise manner. Monitoring is a fundamental component of crisis management. You may want to consider activating monitoring tools and specialists to observe media and stakeholder discussions about the issue and evaluate what impact the crisis has had on your organisations corporate reputation. It would be nave to think that a crisis will not happen to you or your organisation and it is important to remember that a crisis is not over until you decide it is over. Once a global issue is underway you will need to assess how it is impacting each country, as again it will vary. The most important consideration is to be able to evaluate how each market has managed the issue and to feel confident that it was done so with the highest level of integrity. Barry Thomas is the Vice President and APAC Managing Director of Cook Australia. Barry has more than two decades of international leadership and expertise in the pharmaceutical and medical device industries and he currently spearheads the worlds fastest growing region for Cook Medical. His current position sees him working to expand the opportunities for people in Asia to access Cook Medicals advanced and minimally invasive medical devices.

062

AUSTRALIAN

Business Solutions

AUSTRALIAN

Business Solutions

063

You might also like