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Corporate Identity and Crisis Response Strategies electronic resource Challenges and Opportunities of Communication in Times of Crisis / by Olga Bloch.

By: Bloch, Olga [author.]Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service)Material type: TextTextPublication details: Wiesbaden : Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden : Imprint: Springer VS, 2014Description: XX, 301 p. 7 illus. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783658062224Subject(s): social sciences | Applied psychology | Social Sciences | Communication Studies | Organizational Studies, Economic Sociology | Industrial, Organisational and Economic PsychologyDDC classification: 302.2 LOC classification: P87-96Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
The notion of crisis: conceptual framework -- Building up a theoretical framework: review of the relevant theories -- Corporate identity and stakeholder perceptions in crisis -- Case study: crisis response strategies of Toyota.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The history of crisis management shows that companies embark on particular strategies in response to crisis. So why are some companies’ crisis communication strategies successful, while others are not? The purpose of this book is to broaden the existing knowledge of crisis response strategies by focusing on corporate identity as one of the factors that is most likely to influence their choice. Drawing upon insights from the sensemaking and chaos theories, as well as traditional and alternative, non-European, approaches to strategy formation, Olga Bloch contends that there is a reciprocal relationship between corporate identity and crisis response strategies. This relationship is examined on the example of Toyota Motor Corporation’s communication in response to a crisis caused by a series of recalls of its vehicles in 2009-2010.   Content  The notion of crisis: conceptual framework Building up a theoretical framework: review of the relevant theories Corporate identity and stakeholder perceptions in crisis Case study: crisis response strategies of Toyota Target groups Academics, researchers, undergraduate and graduate students in organization studies, sociology, management and communication Corporate communication practitioners and company managers The Author  Olga Bloch has completed her Ph. D. at the Faculty of Humanities of the Bergische Universität Wuppertal. Ms. Bloch is a project manager at International Advisory Services of Frankfurt School of Finance & Management gGmbH.
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The notion of crisis: conceptual framework -- Building up a theoretical framework: review of the relevant theories -- Corporate identity and stakeholder perceptions in crisis -- Case study: crisis response strategies of Toyota.

The history of crisis management shows that companies embark on particular strategies in response to crisis. So why are some companies’ crisis communication strategies successful, while others are not? The purpose of this book is to broaden the existing knowledge of crisis response strategies by focusing on corporate identity as one of the factors that is most likely to influence their choice. Drawing upon insights from the sensemaking and chaos theories, as well as traditional and alternative, non-European, approaches to strategy formation, Olga Bloch contends that there is a reciprocal relationship between corporate identity and crisis response strategies. This relationship is examined on the example of Toyota Motor Corporation’s communication in response to a crisis caused by a series of recalls of its vehicles in 2009-2010.   Content  The notion of crisis: conceptual framework Building up a theoretical framework: review of the relevant theories Corporate identity and stakeholder perceptions in crisis Case study: crisis response strategies of Toyota Target groups Academics, researchers, undergraduate and graduate students in organization studies, sociology, management and communication Corporate communication practitioners and company managers The Author  Olga Bloch has completed her Ph. D. at the Faculty of Humanities of the Bergische Universität Wuppertal. Ms. Bloch is a project manager at International Advisory Services of Frankfurt School of Finance & Management gGmbH.

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