Warm, stylized illustration of a nervous middle-aged woman in business attire stepping out of the Berkshire Museum of American Art, raising her hand to deflect questions as multiple reporters surround her with microphones and cameras.

🔥 Puddingstone Media Comms Tip: Crisis Communications

What Is a Crisis Communication Plan?

A crisis communication plan is a structured approach for how an organization communicates during high-stakes situations—ensuring clear, consistent messaging across internal and external audiences.

Most organizations don’t have one. This should terrify them. To the point of keeping corner office folks up nights.

It’s easy to assume:
“We’ll handle it if something happens.”

But when something does happen, it rarely stays contained.

A shocking staff incident becomes public.
A scandal involving leadership raises serious questions.
An operational problem draws outside attention.

When a Crisis Hits, Your Audience Multiplies

Within hours, you’re not speaking to one audience—you’re speaking to many:

  • Your board
  • Your staff
  • Your members or supporters
  • The public
  • The media

And each one is looking for something slightly different:
clarity, reassurance, accountability, direction.

Why Silence and Mixed Messages Make It Worse

This is where organizations get into trouble.

They default to silence, or they send mixed signals—one message internally, another externally, and nothing that fully holds together.

Legal Advice Isn’t the Same as Communication Strategy

Legal guidance matters, but attorneys have priorities that don’t always align with an organization’s obligations to the community.

“Say nothing” isn’t a communication strategy.

Silence creates a vacuum—and that vacuum fills quickly.

What a Strong Crisis Response Actually Looks Like

A strong response doesn’t mean saying everything. It means saying enough, and saying it consistently across audiences:

  • Acknowledge the situation
  • Show awareness and responsibility
  • Communicate next steps clearly
  • Keep your messaging aligned across every group you’re speaking to

You don’t need to speculate.
You don’t need to overpromise.
But you do need to show that you’re present, coordinated, and taking it seriously.

Build the Plan Before You Need It

The worst time to figure this out is when you’re already in it.

If you don’t have a plan for how you’ll communicate—across all of your audiences—now is the time to build one.

Need help sharpening your message? That’s what I do.
Available for freelance and project work. And in the case of crisis communications, now is better than when the reporters start calling.