When Leaders Speak Out on Social Issues
One of the hardest parts of being an effective?leader right now is speaking out on social issues. Choosing to speak out or not to requires striking the right balance of courage and humility, between discipline and heart. It requires balancing competing interests of different constituencies, some very loud, some often quiet.
Increasingly over the last few years?I've coached many leaders on how to find the right balance for them and for their companies in speaking out. It's hard, and it's different for every company and every leader. There is no single owners manual or playbook for when to speak out on matters of conscience and to put the weight of your company behind your words.
At a recent gathering of top communications and marketing professionals that I was a part of, this topic?was one of the most-discussed challenges?all of us?is dealing with. Many communications leaders struggle with how and when their leaders should speak out on everything from elections to?the war in Ukraine, to?anti-semitism, racism and sexism, especially when more employees and customers are vocal about wanting their leaders to speak out.
Speak out in the right moments....?and you may make a positive impact on a hard situation. You may engender a powerful sense of connection and goodwill among your employees, customers, and consumers. You may set a good example for others to follow.?
Speak out poorly, or in the wrong moments (or too frequently)...and you may water down the impact you can have. You may alienate employees, customers, and consumers. With words that seem empty, you may hurt your brand.
Some leaders have developed detailed?decision matrices or complex playbooks for how to do this. These may help justify?decisions and insulate yourself from criticism. But for leaders themselves, using your platform and your voice is still very personal and a matter of personal conscience.??
At the end of the day, THE DECISION TO SPEAK OUT AND?KNOWING WHAT TO SAY BOILS DOWN TO THREE QUESTIONS:?
FIRST:?Does this situation relate directly to one of our core competencies???
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SECOND:?Is there a way we can be helpful, or of service, in this situation?
THIRD: When I do speak, how can I be as human and relatable as possible??
I'd love to hear what you think. What's worked for you???
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Speaking of leadership communication: I'm going to be featured in a special Power Speaking LIVE Online Seminar this THURSDAY October 27 at Noon ET/9am PT:?C-Suite Communication Matters.??Sign up for free to join us.
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Founder @ Offshore | Posts on Product and Growth | Helping Early Stage Founders Drive Sales w/ Cold Email + Offshore Talent
2 年Great tips, Andrew. Knowing a perfect balance would be helpful in speaking about these kinds of issues.
Executive Communications Leader I Reputation & Thought Leadership I Issues & Change Mgmt I C Suite Comms Coach & Advisor I Narratives I Brand I Fintech
2 年I also push leaders to revisit their company core values to help guide and stay true as well. Either way, there is no playbook, it is different for each company.
some great points here Andrew! I especially like the point about being of service. thanks for sharing your perspective!