Are you ready for a crisis? Get your plans in place now
Experts say companies have to be ready for ‘continuum of risk.’
Experts say companies have to be ready for ‘continuum of risk.’
Stark contrasts between actions there and the responses to Katrina and the BP disaster.
Need to distribute an array of information quickly? This platform could offer solutions.
Online messaging augments and supplements traditional emergency communications.
Even in a rapid-fire news cycle, answering correctly is more crucial than answering swiftly.
IRS, FBI convey a sober tone and solid information in a post-9/11, instant-media world.
Charlotte and Mesa departments tweet events, safety information—as well as emergency information.
Mattel’s public relations debacle teaches us all that an ounce of humanity is worth a pound of consumer trust.
A Colorado clinic improvises a response to quell a potential Hepatitis C outbreak that an employee might have started.
With D.C. mayor’s office at the vortex, how did the various entities fare in the wake of the rail collision?
Less than a week into swine flu crisis, are your communications up to par?
Underplaying in-house communications can undermine even the best external strategy.
In the health-care and academic sectors, information reigned as a nation reeled.
Chrysler and Fiat chat; a burger CEO dishes advice; Jindal writes a book, sort of; Gannett’s profits plummet; AmazonFail; snakes on a plane!
Czech prime minister channels AC/DC; a Silicon Valley CEO’s sound bytes; black and white and red ink all over; KFC’s really filling.