Final Report Summary - CRISCOMSCORE (Developing a Crisis Communication Scorecard)
The reservoir of practices that has been collected from the literature, as well as from the organisations studied in this section, makes a major contribution to the Crisis Communication Guide and through it also to the development of the Crisis Communication Scorecard. The best practices that have been detected during the work on this section have a broad array of roles:
1. As a pool of instructions to adopt in the Guide: The most meaningful and straightforward contribution was of specific practices; these have been included in the guide itself. This is the case with most of the practices found here. Yet even the practices that were less directly relevant to the purposes of the guide (e.g. practices that were too specific to a particular organisation or particular circumstances) made a contribution in compiling the guide.
2. As an index: The practices derived from the literature, as well as those supplied by our interviewees, have been used by us as an index or a reminder of aspects of crisis communication that should be included in the guide.
3. As an indicator of problems: Even when a practice was not directly incorporated in the guide, we have often regarded it as an indicator of the existence of a genuine problem. This impelled us to look for the solution to the problem in the literature or try to see if other interviewees had the answers.
4. As a basis for establishing other practices: Often we found a practice concerning a certain phase of a crisis that we could derive further practices from. These extra practices concerned, for example, preparations required in earlier phases to be able to make effective use of the base practice when the time comes.
5. As reinforcement: The distribution of the practices themselves, as well as the overlap between those from the literature and those contributed by our interviewees' own experience, served as an indicator of the prevalence of specific problems as well as their solution.