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Taking Credit Where Credit is Due 22/02/2012  

Do you feel that it’s difficult to explain—and take credit for—the contribution that your communications efforts make to the overall success of your organization? Sometimes it’s hard for communicators to take credit for big picture outcomes such as the number of new members recruited, rate of client satisfaction, revenue, or influence leading to a regulatory change. It’s one thing to say that communications exists to serve overall corporate functioning—but how can responsibility for major organizational successes be directly ascribed to the communications team? Isn’t it better to stick to performance indicators that clearly belong in the communications "column"?

My own take on this question is an emphatic no.

You shouldn’t hesitate to include in your results column performance indicators that are ultimately corporate or project outcomes, because these are your raison d’être. The merging of communications and corporate outcomes is precisely what is targeted in strategic communications. There’s no need to hold up scientific precision as a standard for attributing causality; it’s enough to show directional alignment of communications efforts to other ones that collectively achieve a corporate goal.

For example, one of your organization’s main goals during the period of your communications plan may be to boost membership recruitment rates. Effective communication may well be central to achieving that goal, but its contribution can’t in practice be isolated from the influence of other factors (i.e. membership cost, market environments or member offerings). And that’s nothing to worry about. No one can be certain about the degree to which communications made an impact in relation to those other factors, but everyone can agree that it contributes to the success.

So get comfortable with living with some uncertainty. Design your communications strategy evaluation to include the highest-level corporate outcomes, and take credit where credit is due.
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Previous Posts:

Be an Action Hero 15/02/2012  
Evaluating Outcomes - Focus on the What, not the How 01/02/2012  
Asking Questions That Count 19/01/2012  
Get up in that crow’s nest and scan 05/01/2012  
Communications Begins at Home 22/12/2011  
Fish Perceive Water Last 13/12/2011  
Strategic is a State of Mind 08/12/2011  
Raising Expectations: Can You Deliver? 01/12/2011  
At a Loss for Words 24/11/2011  
Kicking Off to a Strong Start 17/11/2011  
Thinking about Value 04/11/2011  
Talking about… Strategic Communications Planning 26/10/2011  
Message Architecture 19/10/2011  
The Communicator as Chef 12/10/2011  
Social Media in the Public Sector: Getting Comfortable with the Uncomfortable 05/10/2011  
What I’ve Learned from Not Blogging 29/09/2011  
Top 5 Suggestions to Kick-Start Your Communications Career 04/05/2011  
What does audience have to do with it? 20/04/2011  
Best Practices in Strategic Communications Planning 24/03/2011  
Consider the Source 16/03/2011  
The Power of Objectives 09/03/2011  
Stepping up your Communications Evaluation Game 01/03/2011  
The Real Impact of Social Media on Employee Engagement 10/02/2011  
Best Practices in Board Communications 04/02/2011  
Evaluation-speak 20/01/2011  
The Real Impact of Social Media 16/12/2010  
Communications as a Business Service 01/12/2010  
Everything you wanted to know about launching a technology start-up but were afraid to ask... 25/11/2010  
Creating a Communications Dashboard 10/11/2010  
Core Competencies for Communicators: Project Management 02/11/2010  
The Classic Communicator's Lament 20/10/2010  
The Multiplier Effect 07/10/2010  
Form and Function 24/09/2010  
Top Ten Questions 15/09/2010  
Making a Shift – From Activities to Results 25/08/2010  
Outside-In Thinking 18/08/2010  
Three ways to know if your communications function is in trouble - and what to do about it 13/08/2010  
Making Measurement Work for You 04/08/2010  
The Communicator and the Consultant 27/07/2010  
Communicating nothing, says something... 15/07/2010  
5 Steps to Enhancing Your Strategic Value 07/07/2010  
Connecting the Dots 25/06/2010  
Communications Leadership 16/06/2010  
A Journey Toward Results 03/06/2010  

 

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Ingenium Communications Caroline Kealey Results Map Ingenium Communications