What is Crisis Management?
Crisis management is the art and science of leading an organization through its worst
moments with speed, clarity, and control. The difference between a crisis that destroys an
organization and one it survives is rarely the severity of the event. It is almost always the
quality of the response.
Every organization will face a crisis. A cyberattack that takes down critical systems. A
product failure that injures customers. A geopolitical event that severs a critical supply chain. A
regulatory investigation that lands on the front page. The nature of the crisis is unpredictable.
What is entirely predictable is that organizations without a tested, structured crisis management
capability will take longer to respond, communicate poorly, make decisions that compound the damage,
and spend years recovering from consequences that a better-prepared organization would have
contained in days.
Crisis management is the structured process of preparing for, responding to, and
recovering from events that threaten an organization's operations, reputation, people, or long-term
viability. It sits at the intersection of leadership, communication, operations, and risk. And it
requires all of them to work in concert, under pressure, faster than what feels comfortable.