http://intelligenttravel.com.au/emergency/5-crisis-management-lessons-flight-mh370
Incidents and events surrounding the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 have been complex and varied. How the crisis has been managed provides some very clear lessons for crisis leadership and crisis management development for other businesses and executive managers.
We have been monitoring the incident and it’s impact from the beginning, along with providing updated analysis and advice. Here are our 5 top crisis management lessons from flight MH370 based on the data collected and input from our expert crisis team.
Remember, we qualify a crisis as “an unplanned incident or several simultaneous incidents that significantly affect a business”. Ordinarily this event would have been coordinated by “incident management” or “priority management” teams as there would have been effective teams, plans and preparations for this scenario as a plausible outcome of operating an international airline. As we see this as lacking or ineffective, we qualify this event as a crisis.
Call Girls Service !! New Friends Colony!! @9999965857 Delhi 🫦 No Advance VV...
5 crisis management lessons from flight mh370 intelligent travel
1. Previous
5 Crisis Management Lessons
From Flight MH370
Incidents and events surrounding the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 have
been complex and varied. How the crisis has been managed provides some very clear
lessons for crisis leadership and crisis management development for other businesses and
executive managers.
We have been monitoring the incident and it’s impact from the beginning, along with
providing updated analysis and advice. Here are our 5 top crisis management lessons from
flight MH370 based on the data collected and input from our expert crisis team.
Remember, we qualify a crisis as “an unplanned incident or several simultaneous incidents
that significantly affect a business”. Ordinarily this event would have been coordinated by
“incident management” or “priority management” teams as there would have been effective
teams, plans and preparations for this scenario as a plausible outcome of operating an
international airline. As we see this as lacking or ineffective, we qualify this event as a crisis.
Home News About Us Services Contact Us
Popular Recent
Travel and
Risk
Management
Resources:
Weekly
Round Up
December 6th, 2013
How to spot
a hidden
handgun
[Infographic]
May 19th, 2013
Top 15
Worst
Terrorist
Attacks over
the Period
2002-2011
[Infographic]
October 21st, 2013
Travel and
Risk
Management
Resources:
Weekly
Round Up
#43
October 25th, 2013
The Cost of
Natural
Disasters:
US
[Infographic]
November 12th, 2013
20 Busiest
Airports in
Contact
2. See Also: The Sinister, Scary Impact of Malaysia Airlines
Flight MH370
1. Ownership & Authority
Malaysia Airlines and the Malaysian Government are not one in the same. One is the
commercial provider of services and the operator of flight MH370, the other is the country’s
government and origin for this national/flag carrier. One should be the focal point for all
communications and engagement with stakeholders, the other is a stakeholder. This
delineation has not been maintained, clear or preserved throughout the incident with each
entity communicating over the top of each other or their views and comments causing issue
for the other. The net result is that both entities have suffered due to a lack of clear
ownership of the issue and defined authority on who does what and when.
This issue should have been quickly identified and managed throughout the course of the
incident. While it may not have resolved the overwhelming negative to neutral sentiment
around the handling of the incident, modifiers and better crisis leadership measures could
have been implemented.
It should be clear to all stakeholders, including the media, who is responsible and in charge
of a crisis or significant incident such as this and that status should be maintained throughout,
unless there is very good reason to alter this status and that too much be clearly and
consistently communicated.
Sentiment Analysis: Flight MH370
2. Scenario Mapping
Numerous scenarios, interests and issues can arise from any critical incident or crisis. It is
important to map all the likely and plausible events and develop counter plans and
communications for each of these scenarios. A failure to do so means you are constantly
chasing the lead issue and responding to opinion or developing topics. This is what
happened with flight MH370. Each time there was a wild or relatively accurate assumption,
story or claim, the focus of the crisis management response was to follow and counteract the
the World
[Infographic]
October 21st, 2013
Guide to
Sleeping in
an Airport
[Infographic]
October 25th, 2013
Personal
Travel Risk
Management
Itinerary
[Updated]
October 24th, 2013
Travel and
Risk
Management
Resources:
Weekly
Round Up
#42
October 18th, 2013
How To
Protect
Yourself
From
Hackers –
Infographic
August 23rd, 2013
Where
Australian
Travellers
Died
Overseas in
2013
[Infographic]
October 13th, 2013
3. issue, not lead and plan in advance. By not having these complete scenarios in advance, it
has resulted more in “crisis pursuit” than leadership and management.
Some of the key scenarios and counter plans should have included; acts of terror, course
deviation, plausible causes, popular myths, technical facts, inter-country collaboration, etc
Topic Trends: Flight MH370
3. Public Education
Despite the public’s opinion or awareness that aviation is now a rather simple and
straightforward affair, it is simply not the case. Therefore there is a lot of education and
technical communications that needs to be presented to the public in order for them to
understand the specific answer or appreciate why things are not instantaneous. Including just
how many stakeholders are involved in even the most simple of events perceived events
when it comes to flying across multiple countries and travelling thousands of kilometres in a
single flight. This wasn’t done effectively. Too much speculation or education [both accurate
and inaccurate] was left to the public forums and media outlets to educate and dominate the
conversation, leading to even more questions and response requirements for those handling
the crisis.
Breakdown the message, separate technical data and education from the updates and
information of the event. Pre-prepare many of these elements in advance and use them
when/where relevant. Don’t just talk about the actions and plans, without explaining some
of the technical limitations or issues that affect the decision or success of the plan. Assume
nothing. Educate, inform and empathise in unison.
4. Endurance
It is surprisingly shocking how ill prepared businesses or crisis management teams are for a
protracted event. Crisis events may last for days, weeks, or months before returning to
something close to the tempo experienced prior to the event. Some businesses meet their
end as a result of a poorly managed crisis, or simply ‘limp’ along in a greatly diminished
4. capacity post incident. While there was a lot of activity and response in the initial hours and
days of the incident, the ability to maintain the tempo required faltered very quickly. Key
appointments, information updates, points of contact and many other elements of the crisis
response were intermittent in their availability or contribution, allowing for massively
significant third party influence in their absence. This in turn resulted in having to manage
that influence and respond to non-scheduled issues which in turn consumed the time and
resources of the crisis team when they did again surface.
Gone are the days where you can force a single press conference or scheduled information
update to all interested and affected parties. It is a 24/7, global news environment now and
has been over over a decade.
There are many more channels in which an effective crisis leadership response much engage
and communicate via in the modern era.
Immediately plan for sustained engagement and prolonged activity at the outset of a ‘crisis’.
You can always stand down resources or scale back but surging in fits and starts yields poor
results and will not contribute to a successful outcome. People need to eat, sleep and rest
but your priority management systems can not be permitted to do so.
Primary Media Sources: Flight MH370
5. Objective Analysis
A very, very small percentage of the audience interested in flight MH370 originated from
Malaysia. Most of the interest, pressure and news coverage originated from outside of
Malaysia. This key stakeholder group needed to be better catered for, not only due to their
interest but also the influence they had on the rest of the world and families affected.
Step away from cultural norms and internally accepted practices and consider the demand
and impact from the perspective of objective and third party influences, if necessary.
Objectively evaluate your performance and results through the eyes of those you need, must
or want to influence. This includes victims, families and directly affected stakeholders, not
just the media.
Schedule information and communication updates to correspond with key timezones and
5. Share This Story, Choose Your Platform!
About the Author: Intelligent Travel
peak periods in your stakeholder locations. i.e news updates that might be late at night or
early morning for you but morning, afternoon and evening news update periods for your
biggest or most influential audience.
Top Country Interest: Flight MH370
Our sympathies and condolences to the families and victims of flight MH370: Intelligent
Travel
Tony Ridley, CEO Intelligent Travel
We inform and educate travellers on the specific threats and hazards
associated with a particular itinerary or destination. Next we evaluate the
preparedness, treatment solutions or modifiers established by the traveller
or company’s risk management team. Finally, we provide risk management
advice, alternatives and resources to make informed decisions around travel risk. Our
approach to travel risk management is like no other. We comprehensively reference all the
relevant international conventions and risk management solutions, consolidate various
disciplines and technical methodologies for evaluating risk, then apply this superior model to
each and every individual’s itinerary, journey or travel plan.
6. Copyright 2013 Intelligent Travel | All Rights Reserved | Contact Intelligent Travel
RECENT POSTS
5 Crisis Management Lessons
From Flight MH370
International Coffee Drinking
Guide for Travellers
[Infographic]
What is the cost-benefit-
analysis or ROI for travel risk
management?
Travel Safety & Security
Video: Risk Analysis
Medical Tourism / Travel: 8
Million Travellers Per Year,
and Growing!
TRAVEL TOPICS
Travel Risk Management
Travel Management
Travel Technology
Duty of Care
Travel Security
Travel Health
Business Travel
SEARCH
Search ...
POLICY GUIDE
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use
Delivery Policy