Strategic communication refers to policy-making and guidance for consistent information activity within an organization and between organizations. Equivalent business management terms include
integrated (marketing) communication, organizational communication,
corporate communication, institutional communication, etc. (see paragraph on 'Business and Commercial Application' below). It involves a strategic approach to planning, developing, and eventually executing communication campaigns in order to achieve specific goals and objectives. It also includes analyzing communication needs and overall effectiveness. Strategic communication management could be defined as the systematic planning and realization of information flow, communication, media development, and image care on a long-term horizon. It conveys deliberate messages through the most suitable media to the designated audiences at the appropriate time to contribute to and achieve the desired long-term effect. Communication management is process creation. It has to bring three factors into balance: the message, the media channel, and the audience.
Academia In academic contexts, strategic communication has been analyzed through various conceptual frameworks, including the "5 Ps" model—plan, pattern, position, perspective, and ploy—adapted from Henry Mintzberg’s work on strategy and further developed in communication research. This perspective is further elaborated in Strategizing Communication: Theory and Practice, where
Ib Tunby Gulbrandsen and
Sine Just explore how communicative action and reflexive strategy-making are intertwined within the logic of the 5 Ps framework.
Business and commercial application In
business and
commercial settings, strategic communication is communication aligned with the company's overall strategy to enhance its strategic positioning. Strategic communication, sometimes known as
public relations, is a conscious, planned, and ongoing effort made by organizations. The goal is to create a receptive environment for improving cooperation, reducing conflict, and marketing products or services.
Stakeholder oriented strategic communication approach It is undisputable that strategic communication is the cornerstone for the achievement of organizational goals. It is also a fact and a well-documented stance that the problems bedeviling most African organizations emanate from heavy reliance on non-African strategic communication theories in order to solve organizational communication problems. Even though the role and impact of theories emanating from Africa is viewed as important, there is a dearth of such tools. Western informed dominant theories are not best suited to solve Sub-Saharan communication problems. In the mode of reconceptualising strategic communications, this chapter introduces a home-grown approach, the stakeholder-oriented strategic communicative control approach (SOSCCA). The approach emanates from the perspective that stakeholders strive to be in control of organisational activities. The aim of the approach is to predict elements impeding effective stakeholder communication with managers and the entire workforce. It also aims to show the importance of stakeholder control communication in ensuring the survival of organisations in stiffer competitive and crisis induced environments. The SOSCCA intends to make managers, researchers and stockholders realise the need to shift focus on managerialism. Qualitatively collected and analysed data from organisations in Sub-Saharan Africa informs this theory. Participants and organisations were conveniently sampled.
Political, legal, non-profit, non-governmental, and lobbying applications In
political,
legal,
non-profit,
non-governmental,
lobbying, and
public diplomacy settings, Strategic Communication is communication aligned with the
political campaign’s,
political organization’s,
lawyer’s,
law firm’s,
advocacy group’s, lobbying group’s,
government's, nonprofit organization’s, non-governmental organization’s, or other entity's overall strategy, in influencing
public opinion,
public policy,
grant making,
fundraising,
law,
regulations, or a specific decision or ruling in a
legal case, and to enhance its strategic positioning in order to carry out its mission.
Political communication, legal communication, and
crisis communication are some examples of different fields of communication that use strategic communication techniques in this manner.
Military, defense, and intelligence application The U.S. government outlines its use of strategic communication as "government efforts to understand and engage key audiences to create, strengthen, or preserve conditions favorable for the advancement of United States Government interests, policies, and objectives through the use of coordinated programs, plans, themes, messages, and products synchronized with the actions of all instruments of national power." Further, in the US
DoD's Principles of Strategic Communication,"
Robert T. Hastings Jr. (2008), acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs, described strategic communication as "the synchronization of images, actions and words to achieve a desired effect." NATO Policy defines its strategic communication as "the coordinated and appropriate use of NATO communications activities and capabilities – Public Diplomacy, Military Public Affairs, Information Operations, and
Psychological Operations, as appropriate – in support of Alliance policies, operations and activities, and in order to advance NATO's aims". Strategic Communication is a process that supports and strengthens efforts to achieve objectives. It guides and informs decisions rather than the organization. Considerations of Strategic Communication should be integrated from the early planning stages and be followed by communication activities. Steve Tatham of the UK Defence Academy offers an alternative view of strategic communication. He argues that while strategic communication is desirable to bind and coordinate communications together, particularly from governments or the military, it should be viewed as something more fundamental than just a process. The "informational effect" should be placed at the center of command and action should be calibrated against that effect, which includes the evaluation of second and third order effects. Tatham argues that "strategic communication" (singular) refers to the abstract concept, while "strategic communications" (plural) refers to the actual process of communicating, which includes target audience analysis, evaluation of conduits, measurements of effect, etc. ==Objectives==