Partnerships and Local Collaboration

Partnerships and local collaboration trends make the likelihood of a virtual team much greater, comprising of different businesses who’ve never managed a crisis together. 

The international delivery models that we’re used to are phasing out and possibly becoming obsolete. Over the last six months, clients have required a much greater emphasis on using their in-country assets or partners. 

The local delivery model is advantageous not only due to feasibility but also cost and in some cases, it may be the only option for delivery (quarantine requirements, travel restrictions etc.) This model may involve: 

Division or agreement of Duty of Care needs to be discussed carefully as part of this model when putting your arrangements together. It has obvious implications for your crisis team, depending on who you are looking after.

In light of the recent budget aid cut announcement from the Chancellor, the days of flying international consultants in for short term visits (‘FIFO’) for quality assurance are most likely gone for now. It would be best if you used tried and tested local assets as never before. As such, there will be a shrinking of overhead costs for risk and crisis management, where businesses may reduce in-house resources either in headcount or operational budgets. However, if you can allocate assets and personnel as programme costs, it will allow the same resources to mobilise, but under a different budgeting mechanism. 

What these factors will result in, is a magnification of common problems of crisis management – what I mean by that is it is one thing to structure and train a team within your organisation, but quite another to start to join different members from different organisations who might not know each other, not understanding what is expected by them, or have the requisite skills or experience to be part of the CM team. 

VIRTUAL TEAM

The challenge organisations have with crisis management, is breaking out from your day-to-day decision-making structures and processes, and then implementing faster and leaner ways of working on getting something done quickly. That, to me, is crisis management. You may deploy a different set of responses to what you are used to, but it is a streamlined, dynamic way of getting things done. Doing it virtually is no different. 

Lots of business are structured very differently in how they communicate and make decisions, and it is essential that whatever you choose for your company is the right fit. 

CHALLENGES TO ACTIVATION

Pitfalls in Delivery

That completes the first session; we will be publishing the second next week.  If you would like to learn more about what type of Crisis Management training and support we can offer your team in person or online please contact us now.

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