'You Don't Build Trust in a Crisis': How In-House Leaders Can Prepare for Crisis Management in 2020
In-house leaders typically don't serve as gatekeepers for a firm's sensitive data, but they can play an important role when it comes to advising companies and employees about the management of confidential records.
March 30, 2020 at 10:00 AM
8 minute read
From the massive data breaches to the "Operation Varsity Blues" college admissions scandal to the tragic Boeing 737 Max crashes, 2019 was a parade of major public relations crises.
As the world wades into 2020, which undoubtedly will see another series of big corporate crises, it would be a good time to think about how in-house leaders should prepare for and react to worst-case scenarios.
"For counsel, crisis is an opportunity to embrace your brand, affirm your values and, personally, it will affirm your individual relevance and show that, in fact, you should be at the table," says Jay Silver, a partner at Womble Bond Dickinson in Raleigh, North Carolina, who helps businesses navigate potential catastrophes.
Silver spoke alongside other partners at his firm, several corporate counsel and a public relations guru during a Jan. 15 panel discussion on successful compliance programs and crisis management. Womble sponsored the event for the Research Triangle Area chapter of the Association of Corporate Counsel.
While other speakers stressed the importance of planning for a crisis by, for instance, having a game plan in place before things go wrong, Lenor Marquis Segal, senior counsel of global litigation for ABB Power Grids, notes that "you can't plan for emotions."
"You can have all your playbooks and checklists, and then you get into the foxhole and you really see some people rise to the occasion and you may see folks that you thought had a lot of leadership and managerial skills and in a crisis they're just not the right person," she says. "They're better to come back to when things calm down."
Kristen Henderson, assistant general counsel and head regulatory counsel for multinational health information technology firm IQVIA Inc., adds that it's wise to not only have "key contacts lined up for if and when the crisis hits, but you will also have set out in your playbook what key steps you're going to take—and in what time frame—once that issue hits so you're not behind the ball."
Tara Cho, a Raleigh-based partner at Womble who specializes in data and privacy security issues, advises companies to have outside counsel or a forensic investigation firm on retainer as part of data breach prep.
"It can really be helpful to establish privilege at the outset of an incident," she says. "I've oftentimes had to produce a letter or some indication where a client's cyber insurer wants evidence that they have someone on retainer."
'The Message Is To Never Lie'
For Ben Heineman, former senior vice president and general counsel of General Electric Co., the key to crisis management is effective, honest communication, both inside and outside the company.
"The message is to never lie. Always tell the truth," says Heineman, who was not involved in the panel discussion. "And if you can't tell the whole truth, then say, 'We are in the process of looking at these issues and these sources of information and as soon as we have some understanding of what happened, we will be public about it and explain it.'"
He adds, "I think that applies both inside and outside."
In-house counsel also should be prepared to help companies navigate all sorts of crises, not just those that have clear legal implications, says Susan Hackett, CEO of law practice management consulting firm Legal Executive Leadership.
Hackett, who also did not participate in the panel discussion, says corporate counsel are making a mistake and missing an "opportunity to add value" when they assume that a certain crisis is a business problem or an HR issue and stay on the sidelines.
"None of these kinds of things that happen that are crises of a certain level or size are things that won't have some kind of a legal implication," she adds. "Most lawyers only think about how the law department will respond, not necessarily how they can help shape the way the company steps forward or embraces the issue. I think lawyers have a lot to contribute there." Heineman echoes Hackett's assertion, saying that he often told his legal department staff, "It's our problem the minute we hear about it. If something happens, you can't say, 'Let's send it back to the battery division and let them work it up and come back to us.'"
"If it's an important issue, the first rule of thumb is that you have to take complete control of it in all the dimensions of it," he adds. "People don't think about that sometimes."
Build Trust, Take A Breath
Taking the time to establish strong relationships with in-house colleagues, outside lawyers and experts, whether they be PR agents or cybersecurity specialists, is another essential piece of crisis prep.
"You don't build trust in a crisis," says Segal, the ABB senior counsel. "People have to be coming to you in a crisis not just because of your title but because they've always looked to you for help and advice."
And after the prep is done and a crisis hits, remember to take a deep breath and think before reacting.
"I get those calls: 'We fired the employee who sent the email,'" says Cho. "Well, now they're not going to be very cooperative with your investigation. Again, don't jump the gun or start deleting things or manipulating anything in your system until you can get the investigation completed."
Tension Between PR and Legal
Billy Warden, principal of marketing firm GBW Strategies and a former executive producer for E Entertainment Networks, mentioned during the discussion in Raleigh that one of his corporate clients has grown rapidly over the past few years, but he has yet to meet the company's top lawyer.
"I don't know the lawyer's name. So right now that company's not in a good position to deal with a crisis because the team members aren't familiar with each other. It's something I'm working on," Warden said in a follow-up interview.
"The lawyers are absolutely essential. Everybody who gets in a crisis room, to me, they're all an unreliable narrator to some degree. All of us as human beings are, to a degree, unreliable narrators," he added. "The lawyer, to me, can be the closest thing to a reliable narrator given the complex elements of a crisis and the possible exposure to legal actions."
While public relations experts can be helpful during crises, they also can be a source of tension when they're not aligned with the legal department, according to Segal. She says she's had a "mixed bag of experiences" with outside PR agents. In some instances, she believed firms "were charging us for stuff we could have done ourselves."
"There have been times when I felt like we're rewriting the statement that they come up with anyway or we're doing the same news searches that they are and finding the results faster and we know which ones matter to us more," Segal says. "There may be a natural tension between legal and PR and they're probably necessary in a real crisis. But there are definitely times when I feel that tension."
Warden acknowledges that legal departments can, in certain cases, handle the job of a PR firm. But he says effective PR agents "ask questions or make uncomfortable points that sometimes the internal folks don't want to make."
"Oftentimes these CEOs might grimace at something an employee says," he adds. "I have found that it has been useful to have third parties in the room to ask the 'dumb' questions, to make the uncomfortable points, to question 'first takes' and assumptions in the nice way and sort of float trial balloons."
GCs As 'Guardians Of The Company'
When the credibility of a company is at stake, Heineman says "you almost surely don't want a PR firm" to do the talking for the business in peril. "The CEO or one of the top officials has to speak," he says.
Putting an executive on stage during a crisis can be risky: BP chief executive Tony Hayward and Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg were both criticized and, ultimately, ousted after botching their public responses to the Deep Water Horizon oil spill and the 737 Max crashes, respectively.
As a growing number of general counsels and chief legal officers take on executive roles within companies, they're also stepping out into the spotlight more often during tumultuous times. One recent example is Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd.'s CLO Song Liuping lashing out at the U.S. government and rivals in the tech and telecom world as Huawei faces governmental bans on its equipment and allegations of trade secret theft.
"General counsels have become part of management," Heineman says. "They're the guardians of the company as the lawyers but they're also partners as part of the business team. Increasingly, they may be the ones to speak. The difficulty is what happens if they're implicated?
That's a very tricky question for the board."
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