Friday, November 22, 2019
Now is no time for silence - Emphasis
Now is no time for silence   Now is no time for silence  Managers are failing to update their staff just when they need to  most, it seems. The training manager of a blue-chip multinational was  telling us recently how many managers had gone curiously quiet.  It seems that their tongues (or their keyboards) have gone west along  with the firms profits, just as their teams were looking to them for  information and leadership.  Lets face it, anyone can lead in the easy times, she said. Its at times like these that managers prove their worth.  The problem is, of course, that the managers are just as worried and  uncertain as everyone else. But harsh though it may seem, its no good  drawing a managers salary if all you can do when times get tough is  clam up and hide under the same black cloud as everyone else. If a team  cant turn to management for leadership, then they quickly begin to  wonder if anyones at the helm at all.  These sentiments were echoed recently by the Association of  Communicators in Business (CiB), which represents internal  communications managers. They warned that organisations should redouble  their internal-communication efforts during uncertain economic times  rather than putting them on the back burner.  They have a point. Internal communication may seem the least of a  companys worries when sales are in free fall. But failing to keep your  people in the loop can seriously demotivate them. And this effect can  last long past the end of the recession, creating a corporate hangover  that slows recovery. Worse still, although job security fears could keep  them around for now, they may quickly jump ship as soon as the outlook  improves.  You have to ratchet up your commitment to engage with staff, says  CiB chairman Paul Brasington. People are usually mature enough to  understand bad news. The worst mistake is to say nothing.  Among the steps you can take to improve internal communication in a recession are:      explaining the direct impact of the recession on your industry  and organisation, and saying what the firm will need to do to weather  the storm  telling people about job or budget cuts as soon as possible, along with the reasons and timescales  keeping up the information flow, and making sure its two way: silence breeds rumours  moving quickly to correct inaccurate information  making sure employees hear news first, before you communicate it externally.    Related links:  High-impact writing  Effective email writing    
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