Business Ethics and Communication During Emergencies
Communications Directed at Different Audience Members and Stakeholders
Anytime a serious incident threatens the lives of employees, the organization must carefully consider how to communicate information to various audiences and stakeholders (Haddow, Bullock, & Coppola, 2010). In doing so, it must balance the interests of the general public and news services against the interests and sensibilities of those who may be affected emotionally by the release of information or the characterization of the situation. On one hand, there is an obligation to the news services and to the general public to provide factual information; on the other hand, the release of certain information could be potentially harmful to family members and other individuals in the lives of the workers affected directly. The last thing that the organization would want to do in these types of situations would be to release information publicly that adds unnecessarily to the emotional anguish of loved ones worried about the fate of their family members.
In fact, the Chilean mining incident provides a perfect illustration of why it is so important to be judicious in the release and characterization of information based on incomplete facts or on speculation. Immediately after the accident, it did not appear that there was a high likelihood that any of the miners, let alone all of them, had survived the initial mine collapse. An organization that publicly discloses such dire conclusions before they are confirmed stands the risk...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now