Publication Type
Journal Article
Version
acceptedVersion
Publication Date
8-2009
Abstract
Purpose – One explicit leadership role the chief executive officer (CEO) can play during crisis is to assume the role of being the organization's spokesperson. What remains unclear is at what point of the crisis should the CEO step up and how does that impact crisis communication? The purpose of this paper is to examine this question. Design/methodology/approach – The meta-analysis method is used to combine different data in various studies of one topic into one comprehensive study. More than 30 crises are meta-analyzed. Findings – The CEO needs to step up to revise earlier statements or when the integrity of the organization is questioned. Additionally, the CEO should step up at the beginning of the crisis if the crisis pertains to organizational transgression or when the crisis becomes unbearable to organizational reputation. As counter-intuitive as it may, CEOs should refrain from stepping up at the height of the crisis. Research limitations/implications – It is an exploratory study. Some cases have lesser information to analyze than others. Practical implications – Instructive for both corporate communications practitioners and CEOs as they have a framework to guide them on when the CEOs should step up, and when the presence of corporate communications would suffice. Originality/value – Little has been studied to clarify the exact nature, role, and impact of the CEO as organization spokesperson in crises. This paper provides the initial template.
Discipline
Business and Corporate Communications | Organizational Behavior and Theory
Research Areas
Corporate Communication
Publication
Corporate Communications: An International Journal
Volume
14
Issue
3
First Page
234
Last Page
248
ISSN
1356-3289
Identifier
10.1108/13563280910980032
Publisher
Emerald
Citation
LUCERO, Marela; TAN, Alywin Teng Kwang; and PANG, Augustine.
Crisis leadership: When should the CEO step up?. (2009). Corporate Communications: An International Journal. 14, (3), 234-248.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/6044
Copyright Owner and License
Authors
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Additional URL
https://doi.org/10.1108/13563280910980032
Included in
Business and Corporate Communications Commons, Organizational Behavior and Theory Commons