What does the 2019 Crisis Prevention Survey say?

Three out of four companies, authorities and associations surveyed in Switzerland, Germany, Austria and Liechtenstein had to deal with at least one crisis case in the past year. Every second organization conducts regular crisis exercises. Hardly any crisis team wants to do without PR managers and managing directors. These are some of the results of the Crisis Prevention Survey 2019.

© depositphotos, Elnur

Crisis officers (35 %) and communications managers (65 %) from 85 institutions participated in last spring's survey - 75 % from companies, 15 % from government agencies, and 9 % from associations. Just over half of the survey participants hold a management position (54 %). Three out of four surveyed organizations had to manage at least one crisis case in 2018 (75 %), and more than a quarter even had to manage three or more crisis cases (26 %). "The survey participants thus have comparatively extensive crisis experience. Quasi a premium sample and thus a stroke of luck for crisis research," says Frank Roselieb, Managing Director of Krisennavigator - Institute for Crisis Research, a spin-off of Kiel University, and head of the study.

Crisis prevention pays off

Beyond the 2018 reference year, one in two crisis officers had to deal with people-related crisis cases such as accidents, deaths or pandemics (55 %) or technology-related crisis cases such as cyberattacks or fires (44 %). Although media-related crisis cases such as scandals or revelations only rank third in the list of crisis types (29 %), more than one in three respondents saw the fairness of journalists significantly decreasing in this context (36 %) and more than half of the respondents saw the intensity of media coverage significantly increasing (59 %).

Unsurprisingly, the organizations surveyed therefore rely in particular on media monitoring (81 %), crisis teams (78 %) and crisis manuals (72 %) for crisis prevention. Every second organization conducts regular crisis exercises (59 %) or keeps crisis rooms ready for emergencies (46 %). As a result, crisis prevention appears to be paying off:

  • Organizations without lived through crises use a larger number of prevention tools in parallel (7.4 versus 6.3),
  • Are more likely to use systematic issue management (48 % versus 30 %),
  • have more frequently appointed crisis officers (76 % versus 56 %) and more frequently seek DIN or ISO certification (38 % versus 23 %) than those with crisis experience.

Future agenda: hacker attacks, blackouts and online protests

In the event of an emergency, employees from an average of five departments meet in the crisis teams. The communications department (95 %) and the management (89 %) have a permanent place in almost all crisis teams. In contrast, departments with crisis-preventing tasks such as compliance management (32 %), quality management (27 %) and risk management (25 %) are surprisingly only represented in every third to fourth crisis team. Almost all organizations (95 %) require external support before, during and after the crisis. Consultants (60 %) and authorities (54 %) are contacted most frequently. There are clear differences in the quality of cooperation: While external consultants, followed by public authorities and works councils or staff councils, receive comparatively good marks, politics has to take a lot of criticism. Across all types of organization, they come last.

When looking at the future structure of their employer's crisis environment, most respondents expect a significant increase in the digitalization (76 %) and complexity (67 %) of crisis management, as well as an increasing importance of social media in crisis communication (74 %). This is also reflected in the expected development of crisis causes. According to this, increasing data integrity breaches and hacker attacks (60 %), blackouts and IT failures (48 %), and shitstorms and online protests (44 %) in particular dictate the future agenda of crisis managers. By contrast, survey participants are surprisingly relaxed about issues surrounding employee and management misconduct. Only a minority expect an increase in cases of discrimination or "MeToo" (13 %) or compliance and fraud (11 %).

Source: Crisis Navigator - Institute for Crisis Research, a spin-off of Kiel University

The long version of the Crisis Prevention Survey 2019 (22 pages) has been published in the series "Working Paper Crisis Navigator" (ISSN 1610-1855).

 

 

 

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