Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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The Two Biggest Communication Blunders During a Reorg

Leaders of reorgs typically fall into one of two traps when communicating with their employees. We’ll call the first one wait and see and the second ivory-tower idealism. Perhaps you have seen one, or both, in your own reorgs.

In the first trap, wait and see, the leader of the reorg thinks everything should be kept secret until the last moment, when he or she has all the answers. The leader makes the reorg team and leadership swear to secrecy and then is surprised when the news leaks to the wider organization (it always does, we’re afraid). As the reorg team starts to engage with the rest of the organization, the rumors round the water cooler increase: “They were asking what my team does”; “I had to fill in an activity analysis form”; “I hear that 20 percent of jobs are going to go.” Everyone thinks the real reason for the reorg is job losses (whether it is or not). The leader, desperate to get in control of the situation, pushes the team to develop “the answer” so that he or she can tell the organization. Without an “answer,” the leader feels that any communication would come across as defensive. At most, the executive approves some question-and-answer sessions on the reorg. But a full-scale communication needs to wait. Eventually, the leader has the answer: the reorg team produces a high-level org chart. The leader then announces the new organization: here are the new leaders, here is the structure, some job losses are necessary, but this is going to help us deliver fantastic results. Employees, hearing this, hear only that their boss’s boss’s boss is going to change and that some of them are going to lose their jobs. Nothing their leader has said counters the impressions they formed at the water cooler.

Ivory-tower idealism fares little better. In this version, the leader of the reorg is finally getting a long-achieved objective: all the issues of the old organization will finally get fixed; everything the leader wanted to do, but was held back from, can now be achieved. The leader can barely contain the excitement. So psyched up by the possibilities that the reorganization offers, the leader decides to start the process with a webcast to all staff, telling them about the exciting business opportunities it will open up. The leader follows this up with a series of walk-arounds in the major plants and offices, discussing the opportunities and getting input on some of the challenges that people face in the organization today. The leader puts a personal blog on the company intranet....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Two biggest blunders durring a re-organization? "Wait-and-see" and "ivory tower." Both lead to failure.

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Want To Find Brand Ambassadors? Start With Your Employees

Want To Find Brand Ambassadors? Start With Your Employees | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
The 2012 Edelman Trust Barometer, a trust and credibility survey that collects data from more than 30,000 people, found that regular rank-and-file company employees have more credibility than executives. While this might seem like bad news for companies – it should be considered a fantastic opportunity. By turning employees into trusted brand ambassadors, companies bring their strongest asset and their most vocal internal advocates in direct contact with their customer base....
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Employee Advocates for Brands | Social Media Today

Employee Advocates for Brands | Social Media Today | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Now more than ever, brands are influenced not by the ads or image they put out to the public, but what consumers are actually saying about the brand.


... Leading brands are turning to employees to amplify brand content, engage on behalf of the brand, curate content, listen to conversations, and even to help with recruiting. Employees have unique experience and expertise that can be extremely valuable to customers and prospects.


Check out these numbers from Cisco’s employee program:

-  Employees have 10x more followers vs. corporate accounts. Plus only 2% of the employee’s audience overlaps with the audience of the corporate accounts.

-  Employees share 29% more URLs about the company vs. corporate accounts

-  Employees URL reach is 2x vs. corporate accounts...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Learn more about the power of employee advocates for communications and marketing.

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Engaged vs Disengaged Employees | Visual.ly

Engaged vs Disengaged Employees | Visual.ly | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Do you think your employees love their work? Think again! These are the telltale signs that your employees are starting to disengage. ...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

How sociial works with employees. This is a really interesting infographic for employee communicators, PR and internal communication specialists.

Florence Boy's curator insight, August 21, 2013 9:11 AM

C'est bizarre, non ? Pourtant les baromètres sociaux des entreprises ne sont pas si mauvais... Les collaborateurs mentiraient-ils sur leur motivation réelle ? Il y a sans doute des modes de management à changer...