Title: Issues Management and Strategic Planning PRL2001
1Issues Management and Strategic Planning PRL2001
- Course Examiner - Elizabeth Dougall
- Lecture One, Week 1, Semester 2 2002
2Course Organisation
- A one hour lecture a two hour tutorial weekly
- Tutorials start next week
- Consultation Times
- Wed 900 pm 1200 noon
- Thurs 900 am 10 am
- Location Q211
- Telephone 4631 1055
- Email dougall_at_usq.edu.au
3Text and Reference Materials
- Heath, Robert L., 1997, Strategic Issues
Management - Organisations and Public Policy
Challenges, SAGE Publications, California. - Book of Selected Readings
- Library Resources - Books, Journals, Electronic
Databases. Some relevant topics include - issues management, public policy, public opinion,
reputation management, mass communication
concepts and theories.
4Course Objectives
- Clarify the purposes of an issues management
program and understand the importance of proper
and legitimate planning - Establish mechanisms and develop standards for
issues management and crisis control - Formalise an issues management structure
- Develop offensive activities that enable the
co-ordination, control, analysis and reporting of
strategic management procedures - Know how to develop positive relationships with
key publics.
5Topics
- Planning and Investigation - Developing Survival
Strategies - Concepts of Communication
- How and When to Communicate
- Understanding Public Policy
- Taking Control the Scanning Process
- The Role of Communication and Strategic Planning
- Confronting a Crisis
- The Crisis Response Mechanism
- Elements of the Crisis Management Plan
- Evaluation and Policy Design
- Principles of Effective Crisis Management
6Assessment
- 2 assignments
- 1 exam
- Tutorial presentations and group participation
will be required for the assignments. Assessment
details will be provided in tutorials.
7Objectives Week 1
- Understand the basic concept of issues management
- Explain the significance of external environments
in issues management - Define an issue
- Understand issues management within the context
of the development of public relations - Outline Renfros issue lifecycle
8What is issues management?
- There is no single, widely agreed-upon definition
of issue/issues management. - The discipline is still evolving.
- According to Yancey Crane (1995)
- An Issue is a gap between corporate performance
and stakeholder expectations. - Issues Management is the process used to close
that gap.
9Issues management is .
- The management of organisation and community
resources through public policy process to
advance organisational interest and rights by
striking a mutual balance with those of
stakeholders. - It supports strategic business planning and
management by understanding public policy, by
meeting standards of corporate responsibility
expected by key stakeholders, and by using
two-way communication to foster understanding and
minimise conflict.
10Issues management is .
- It adapts products, services, or operations. It
is not limited to media relations, customer
relations, or government relations. - It is engaged in strategic business planning
options that may change operations, products, or
services as well as communicate to establish
mutual interests and achieve harmony with
stakeholders. - It is expected to keep the firm ethically attuned
to its community and positioned to exploit,
mitigate, and foster public policy changes as
they relate to the corporate mission. - (Heath, 1997)
11What is issues management?
- The issues management process is said to have
begun in the US with Howard Chase in 1976. His
model encompasses five (5) steps - Issue Identification
- Issue Analysis
- Priority Setting
- Issue Action
- Evaluate Results
12The Evolution of Issues Management
- In the 1970s consumer and other advocacy and
activist groups, government legislators and major
stakeholders in company concerns began to demand
more accountability from corporations and from
government. - This was a direct result of the information
revolution - More than ever publics had access to media and
information that brought new knowledge
13The Evolution of Issues Management
- Publics became more vigilant of the operations of
business and government - The mass media contributed to the exposure
process. - Organisations began to attempt to respond to
these demands in various ways.
14The Evolution of Issues Management
- Originally issues management was about changing
attitudes - usually of the corporate critics such
as advocacy and activist groups. - Largely one way asymmetrical or possibly two way
asymmetrical (scientific persuasion) - Advocacy advertising was the tool with which
issues were addressed (Heath Cousino, 1990)
- Issues management is a product of activism and
the increasing intra and inter-industry pressures
by corporations to define and implement corporate
social responsibility (CSR) - as well as debate
in public what the standards of CSR should be. - (Heath Cousino, 1990)
15The Evolution of Issues Management
- ..advocates of issues management were
communication specialistsmany executives assumed
that critics of business could be shouted
down. - Issues Management started with a communication
bias which featured issues advertising. - This type of advertising produced a backlash.
- Some companies shouting loudest deserved
regulation most. - (Heath Cousino, 1990)
16The Evolution of Issues Management
- 1978 - Public Affairs Council
- Issues management is a program which a company
uses to increase its knowledge of the public
policy process and enhance the sophistication and
effectiveness of its involvement in that
process
17The Evolution of Issues Management
- The key functions identified were
- planning
- monitoring
- analyzing
- communicating
18The Evolution of Issues Management
- IM evolved alongside strategic business planning
- The functions are interrelated - environmental
scanning in particular. -
- Issues management is a comprehensive activity
which consists of specific functions, some of
which require the expertise of public relations
practitioners, and the performance of which can
strengthen the rationale for including public
relations in the dominant coalition of
corporations. - (Heath Cousino, 1990)
19The Evolution of Issues Management
- No uniform view of issues management appears in
public relations texts, the basis by which a
discipline codifies itself. Most texts which
discuss issues management treat it as a
communication tool. A few emphasize its issue
monitoring functions. What is largely ignored is
its role in strategic planning and corporate
social responsibility. - (Heath and Cousino, 1990)
- It is becoming more important to assess what is
good for the corporation in a more holistic
setting. - (Yancey Crane, 1995)
20The Evolution of Issues Management
- Heath and Cousino suggest that issues management
requires four functions - involvement of public policy experts in strategic
business planning and management - issue communication
- issue monitoring and analysis
- efforts to meet changing standards of corporate
social responsibility
21Issues and areas of concern
- Issues can take many different forms.
- They can range from having an extremely narrow,
limited focus to being broad general topics that
can affect virtually every public (stakeholder or
stakeseeker) an organisation must deal with. - For example, the environment is not an issue but
an area of concern.
22Issues and areas of concern
- Logging, wood chipping, waste management and
ozone depletion are issues the generic term -
environment - is not the issue, it is simply the
area of concern.
23The Lifecycle of an Issue . . .
- Renfro (1993) argues that the early stages of the
issues development process include - Birth - in changing personal or social values,
new technologies, new impacts, social change etc. - Definition - an event that defines and focuses
the issues in the publics mind. - Name - the development and acceptance of a single
word or phrase - Champion - a person or person who campaign the
issue - Group - formal or informal groups who participate
in the issue process - Media Recognition - helps moves the issue up the
public agenda.
24Questions for Tutorials
- Can you identify any current examples of an
organisation attempting to influence public
policy, for example,legislation regulation? - Was it successful?
- What are the implications for the organisations
relationships? - Is there any evidence of the organisation using
managed communication?
25Before next week
- READ Heaths Preface and Chapter one in order to
develop a grasp of his approach to the discipline
- in particular, his theoretical assumptions and
framework.