NH Business Review May 08, 2020

Page 11

11

MAY 8 - 21, 2020

Communicating in this time More than ever, it’s vital that businesses communicate effectively, internally and I’m sitting at my dining room table writing this piece while my wife works downstairs and our two kids remote-learn in the next room. Meanwhile, our two dogs alternate between antsy and listless, wondering why their humans are hanging out with them every day. To say Covid-19 has upended our personal lives is a dramatic understatement, and the business world has also been turned upside-down. Millions of Americans, including many friends we know here, are suddenly unemployed and hurting while long-established companies and startups alike struggle to hang on. More than ever, it’s vital that businesses communicate effectively — internally and externally — to weather the storm and be ready for the changed world that follows. Here are 10 points to keep in mind: 1. Engage. In this era of countless communication platforms generating massive amounts of content, it may feel too overwhelming to try and break through. You might think it’s easier to sit back and ride this out. Don’t. Your communications reflect

BY JIM MERRILL

Communicating Effectively your values and help you promote your company and interests at a critical time, while defining your standing as a business and community leader. Get in the game. 2. Plan. If you didn’t have a communications plan in place before Covid-19 hit, it’s not too late to build one or improve upon it. Build your core communication team, develop your top message and talking points, determine who you want to target, set metrics for how you want to communicate and work your plan. 3. Be flexible. Once your plan is in place, regularly evaluate your communications efforts. What’s working, what isn’t? What new circumstances demand a course correction? Be nimble enough to adapt, depending on the challenge or opportunity presented. 4. Target. Always keep in mind who you’re speaking with — employees, other businesses, customers or clients, vendors, regulators or legislators. Some points may resonate with one audience but fall flat with another. Be aware, know your audience and modify as necessary.

5. Boss out front. Employees want to hear from the boss. Studies show employees trust their employers to keep them reliably informed. Rely on experts, avoid gossip or rumor, and always be transparent and honest. You won’t always have all the answers — it’s OK to say so. 6. Communicate regularly. Let your employees know what’s happening, what it means and what you’re doing about it. Are you changing the way your employees work remotely? Explain it. Are there relevant state or federal updates? Share them. And if there is a Covid-19 infection in your workplace, carefully guard the employee’s legally protected privacy but share the news generally, and explain your plan to clean and contact trace in accordance with state and federal guidelines. Your employees are anxious enough as it is — reassure them that you have things covered. 7. Be creative. With your external communications, be thoughtful and try to avoid the standard “in these _____ times” types of lines that are clogging inboxes across this great land. Email isn’t your only tool. Use video, plan webinars, earn media through writing, show a lighter side on social media, personalize your language, share anecdotes, and always work to be relatable and authentic. 8. Pick up the phone. The art of the phone call has been lost in recent years, in lieu of a quick text, a generic email or, worst of all, passively monitoring Facebook or Instagram feeds for updates. Call your key customers, clients or vendors. Call old friends or people you’ve always meant to connect with but never have. People will be grateful you reached out, and you may pick up valuable insights in the process. 9. Keep your elected officials in the loop. Whether the governor and his administration, your board of selectmen or anyone in between, keep them apprised of how you are and what you’re doing. They will appreciate your proactive outreach, and they can help you get your message out to other stakeholders. 10. Plan for the future. At some point, the economy is going to open again. How are you going to own those first 30, 60 and 90 days? Map out a post-Covid communications strategy now, so you can flip a switch when it’s time and seize the moment. Remember: Everyone is under a lot of stress, so be kind and patient. We are all being tested. Take care of your families, love your neighbors (from a healthy sixfoot distance), and work your communications plan now and for the future. Jim Merrill, managing shareholder of the Bernstein Shur law firm in New Hampshire, is a longtime public affairs and communications consultant for businesses and nonprofits.

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Q&A INTERVIEW

2min
page 30

In NH jobless data, 72% of claims are in three industries

1min
page 3

Breweries face revenue losses as kegs go stale

2min
page 2

Is it time for New Hampshire to have a state bank?

3min
page 27

NHHFA recognizes top loan officers, lenders

1min
page 26

New ownership sees opportunity for Belknap Mall

2min
page 25

What happens after Covid-19?

3min
page 24

NHDES and some towns pave way for large-scale solar

3min
page 23

Videoconferencing: How to ensure privacy and security

3min
page 22

For families with shared custody, it’s business as usual

3min
page 21

Startups learn to adapt under Covid

9min
pages 1, 20

Under Covid, paid leave becomes a reality in NH

9min
pages 1, 18-19

Remote learning isn’t working for special education students

2min
page 17

Collect renewable energy payments for rooftop solar

3min
page 16

NH Campaign for Legal Services is even more essential

3min
page 16

Distributive work gets a boost

3min
page 15

The characteristics of leaders

3min
page 14

Should state business tax triggers be repealed?

7min
pages 12-13

Communicating in this time

3min
page 11

Mind your Zoom background

3min
page 10

Growing Pains

10min
pages 8-9
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