As an agency that works daily on crisis communications planning and responses, we’ve seen all types of crisis manuals over the years. Some plans were an exhausting 200 pages with numerous sections while others were only a page. However, one essential element remains missing in most – a linear, understandable process to activate a crisis communications plan. In fact, this process should include three main components – the notification, assessment and deployment phases.
First and most importantly, the plan needs an established and tested notification process in which employees and others know who to contact about an incident. Often, this type of communication is directed to the crisis team leader and key executives, which leads to additional notifications that alert team members to a developing situation.
Without a simple and understood notification process, companies can quickly fall behind in a response effort. As a result, media, opponents and others could shape the initial narrative with misleading and/or inaccurate information. Additionally, regulators, lawmakers and the public can quickly lose confidence in a company’s ability to take control of the incident.
The second part of the process includes an assessment phase where the crisis team leader and other decision makers evaluate the scope of an incident and determine appropriate response strategies and needed resources. This is one of the most important moments during any issue or crisis and when companies either set a path for success or failure. At this stage, discussions begin about available facts, impacted stakeholders, reactive versus proactive strategies and other critical aspects to better guide next steps.
Following the assessment phase, a company must establish initial assignments and protocols for deployment. During this phase, team members are activated to develop communications materials, respond to stakeholder inquiries, expand media monitoring and much more. It’s important to note, the list of assignments should be created well in advance of any incident to ensure the team knows when and what is expected once deployed. Additionally, the assignment planning will help expedite the dissemination of updates and other communications to affected stakeholders.
In sum, it is imperative that a crisis communications plan includes a clear, logical activation process for team members and resources. The development of an effective response process will help preserve public trust and demonstrate the ability to resolve an incident in an efficient and timely manner.
As design director at Cookerly, Tim serves as the creative lead in the development of branding campaigns, print collateral and digital media for clients across a broad range of industries, including consumer, professional services, healthcare and technology.
As a senior vice president at Cookerly, Mike Rieman is a strategic communications leader specializing in media relations and reputation management. With a proven track record of securing high-profile placements in top-tier outlets such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, CNN and USA Today, he excels at crafting compelling narratives that resonate across print, broadcast and digital platforms.
Mike Touhill is vice president at Cookerly Public Relations, where he helps lead traditional, social and digital media programs for B2B and B2C clients in packaging, telecommunications and technology, among other industries. As a communication leader, he develops and executes public relations strategy, provides proactive and reactive counsel to C-level executives and secures earned media coverage for client initiatives and product.
Andrew Agan is a vice president at Cookerly Public Relations, overseeing the agency’s internship program and leading media relations, content strategy and social media initiatives. He provides counsel and executes campaigns for clients across various sectors, including finance, healthcare, hospitality, technology, automotive and many others. Andrew excels at crafting compelling stories and building media relationships, resulting in clients being featured in notable outlets such as CNBC, Associated Press, Business Insider, Fox Business, HBO, Inc. Magazine, Sirius XM, The Wall Street Journal and USA Today, among others.


As vice president of Cookerly, Sheryl Sellaway uses her extensive corporate communications background to lead consumer PR efforts, deliver strategy for marketing programs and share expertise about community initiatives.