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Corpcomms—and communicators—increasingly taking center stage at top companies

by | Sep 4, 2019 | Public Relations

A confluence of technological, economic, and societal factors is rapidly elevating the influence of corporate communications within the world’s C-suites and boardroom, according to new research from The Conference Board.

The org’s new report, Corporate Communications Practices: 2019 Edition, offers a global portrait of the communications function’s growing strategic importance in creating value and improving business outcomes.

Among the key findings in this year’s study:

Center stage, in the strategic spotlight

The business world continues to grow more communications-driven, with modern technology delivering information about companies to consumers, and consumer data to companies, at unprecedented speed and volume. In response, large public companies are putting their corporate communications functions into a stronger position to influence business strategy by ensuring more senior communicators are among key corporate decision-makers.

Distinguishing substantive datapoints from “vanity” numbers in social media metrics

The easy availability of social media metrics has spurred a rapid increase in companies using such analytics to measure success. Companies need to avoid the temptation to confine themselves to easy-to-reach “vanity” metrics and instead look for data that directly translates to improved business outcomes.

Articulating clear social media policies

While 43 percent of companies still inhibit employee social media use, 89 percent of companies that do permit it have formal guidelines on how their workers can do so. Such guidelines should be aligned with corporate goals to best position the company for success.

Future-facing communications

The ability to write clearly remains the most sought-after communications skill, but future-facing teams understand that it is necessary but not fully sufficient. Modern communications demands not only the ability to write longer reports and thought leadership pieces but also shorter, digestible pieces suitable for social and mobile consumption. Traditional writing skills, therefore, should be accompanied by abilities that can translate into visually appealing storytelling. However, the survey shows that such modern communications skills remain low on the ranking of what teams seek.

Corpcomms—and communicators—increasingly taking center stage at top companies

“We live in a time when stakeholders demand companies take public positions on critical issues, communications technologies deliver data and information faster than ever, and employees trust their employers more than any other institution,” said Alex Parkinson, author of the report, in a news release. “These are the realities that govern modern corporate communications and are driving communicators to evolve into broader business strategists.”

The report—the third in a series of analyses documenting the changing role of corporate communications—also highlights the need for adaptability and collaboration among corporate communicators, supported by data and visualizations of key forward-looking insights for what’s ahead, including:

  • Companies should consider putting more emphasis in modern areas that still trail behind on the list of most sought-after communications skills, including social media (ranked #17), visual communications, (#23), and mobile (#26).
  • Large organizations can take a cue from smaller companies, which have led the way on communications integration—48 percent of companies below $1bn in revenue now report having a fully integrated corporate marketing and communications function.
  • Companies can do more to maximize the growing power of employees as brand advocates—43 percent of companies still prohibit employees from using social media at work or require pre-clearance.
  • Organizations may need to augment their teams to keep pace with the competition—42.8 percent of companies grew the size of their corporate communications departments in the last fiscal year, compared to 32.1percentreporting no change and 25.1percentreporting reductions.
  • Manufacturers, in particular, can gain a leg-up by focusing on centralizing communications functions and strategies—just 28.9 percent of manufacturing companies currently describe their corporate communications as centralized, compared to 70.0 percent in financial services.

The full report is available for purchase here.

The research draws from a survey of nearly 150 major private and public companies.

Richard Carufel
Richard Carufel is editor of Bulldog Reporter and the Daily ’Dog, one of the web’s leading sources of PR and marketing communications news and opinions. He has been reporting on the PR and communications industry for over 17 years, and has interviewed hundreds of journalists and PR industry leaders. Reach him at richard.carufel@bulldogreporter.com; @BulldogReporter

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