flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

A COVID-19 task force focuses on crisis communications

Coronavirus

A COVID-19 task force focuses on crisis communications

The Castle Group is partnering with leading health experts to help companies factor science and medicine into their response messaging and actions.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | April 19, 2020

Sandy Lish, principal of The Castle Group, a P.R. firm with expertise in helping companies formulate their internal and external messaging during stressful situations. Images: The Castle Group

As the construction industry tries to figure out how to start working again under pandemic conditions that are still prevalent in many parts of the country, companies are left to sort out evidence- and science-based facts and possible solutions from quick-fix remedies and instinctual responses that, in the long-rum, could do more harm than good.

To assist construction companies in these efforts, The Castle Group, a communications strategy firm, has created a COVID-19 Crisis Response Task Force, which provides medical expertise, alerts and analysis, weekly briefing calls, company specific projects, and business recovery planning and continuity.

In forming this task force, The Castle Group collaborated with Dr. David Shulkin, FACP, the former Secretary of the U.S. Department if Veterans Affairs, who is currently president of a consulting firm that works with healthcare organizations and companies to innovate and improve wellbeing for patients.

Its other partner in this endeavor is Dr. Michael R. Jaff, DO, the chief medical officer of a global medical device manufacturer, and a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School.

Sandy Lish, The Castle Group’s principal, notes that her firm can bring to the table expertise in crisis communications that, in the case of several construction firms she’s heard from, often lack reliable medical information. Castle’s areas of expertise touch on human resources, best practices, and employee re-assimilation.

 

Dr. Michael R. Jaff, one of the medical experts collaborating with The Castle Group on its COVID-19 Crisis Response Task Force.

 

Last month, The Castle Group sent out an email blast to its database about the task force’s services. Jaff says that its first client was an assisted-living facility that wasn’t satisfied with how it conveyed information to its customers. “We changed the course of their situation by encouraging them to change their strategy from reactive to proactive,” says Jaff.

Lish and Jaff point out that what’s also missing in many companies’ messaging is the “looking ahead” at what might happen medically, which is something the task force can also help its clients with. “Being able to anticipate shifts gives you the ability to be nimble” in response to those shifts, says Jaff.

He goes on to say there’s a “desperate need” for consistent information platforms, in terms of available testing, therapies, and so forth. “Otherwise, you end up with what we have now,” he says: an uncoordinated hodgepodge of public and private sector actions.

Over the next six to 12 months, Castle’s COVID-19 response team’s mission could broaden to include other diseases and ailments that employees might contract, regardless of how quickly a vaccine for COVID-19 emerges. “Companies need longer-term communications strategies,” says Lish.

Related Stories

Coronavirus | Apr 2, 2020

As virus spreads across North America, software providers step up with cost-free offerings

The goal is to keep construction projects moving forward at a time when jobs are being postponed or canceled.

Coronavirus | Apr 2, 2020

SBA and Treasury begin effort to distribute $349 billion in emergency small business capital

The new loan program will help small businesses with their payroll and other business operating expenses.

Coronavirus | Apr 2, 2020

Informed by its latest Crane Index, Rider Levett Bucknall anticipates the effect of coronavirus on the construction industry

While total crane count holds steady, turbulent economic conditions indicate a recession-based drop in construction costs.

Coronavirus | Apr 1, 2020

How is the coronavirus outbreak impacting your firm's projects?

Please take BD+C's three-minute poll on the AEC business impacts from the coronavirus outbreak.

Coronavirus | Apr 1, 2020

Opinion: What can we learn from the coronavirus pandemic?

The coronavirus pandemic will soon end, soon be in the rear-view mirror, but we can still take lessons learned as directions for going forward.

Coronavirus | Apr 1, 2020

Three reasons you should keep sewing face masks (as long as you follow simple best practices)

Here are three reasons to encourage sewists coast to coast to keep their foot on the pedal.

Coronavirus | Apr 1, 2020

TLC’s Michael Sheerin offers guidance on ventilation in COVID-19 healthcare settings

Ventilation engineering guidance for COVID-19 patient rooms

Coronavirus | Apr 1, 2020

February rise in construction outlays contrasts with pandemic-driven collapse in March as owners, government orders shut down projects

Survey finds contractors face shortages of materials and workers, delivery delays and cancellations.

Coronavirus | Apr 1, 2020

Green cleaning and the coronavirus

If your cleaning teams use bleach to disinfect buildings from Coronavirus, will you put your LEED certification at risk?

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category




halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021