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crisis management

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crisis management

Implementation of systems within an organization to deal with potential crises. The emphasis of crisis management is on planning in advance in order to take a systematic proactive approach rather than to deal with crises in an ad hoc reactive manner.

Fundamental tenets of crisis management include: being open and providing accurate information instead of attempting to cover up; reacting quickly because playing for time and indecision are counterproductive; responding from the top because CEO involvement demonstrates a company is treating the crisis seriously; and expediency. Above all it is essential to have a coherent strategy. Regardless of size, all companies may suffer crises. Major companies such as Exxon, Perrier, Intel, Johnson & Johnson, and British Airways have all had to deal with corporate crises.



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Product recall or contamination insurance would be required for loss of business income to be covered, but deciding who among the various implicated entities would foot the bill presents a challenge in itself, said Bill Harrison, a managing director with Aon Crisis Management Practice.
Given the extraordinary complexity of the risks and exposure occasioned by corporate expansion and/or relocation to foreign and sometimes hostile environs, it is essential that comprehensive crisis management planning be an integral part of the relocation strategy.
As Mitroff defines it, crisis management is more than the sum of its parts, which include risk management, business continuity planning and crisis communications.
 
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