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It’s not going to come as any big surprise to most of you that the lingering pandemic, combined with growing geopolitical tensions, never-ending technological disruption, and an accelerating climate crisis has created all sorts of opportunities (opportunities!) for communicators. 

There has never been a time in history where business leaders have been forced to confront this kind of complexity, nor had to deal with conflicting messages they’ve heard their entire careers about not communicating values to communicating values. 

They must navigate all of these challenges while creating resilient companies that can thrive in any economic, social, political, or technological environment—and allow them to drive forward with values and purpose. 

While it really does provide us a great opportunity for 2022 and beyond, there isn’t an established playbook to help us navigate changing stakeholder expectations while advancing the business interests of our companies—or that of our clients.

A new report from Edelman, The Future of Corporate Communications, seeks to change that by understanding what senior communicators are experiencing on the front lines. 

Their research reveals that the role of the communicator has forever changed, with new expectations and rules of engagement.

The message from nearly 250 of the world’s most senior communicators is clear: to meet the challenge of this moment, the communications function must advance from operating as a transactional cost center delivering on a communications agenda to being an indispensable partner generating measurable business value. 

The report has some notable insights that will help each and every one of you plan for career growth for the rest of this year and into the next.

Insights from The Future of the Corporate Communications Report

The Future of the Corporate Communicator report has some notable insights.

They include:

  1. The role of communications has become more materially important to every leader—from CEOs and boards of directors to everyone in the C-suite, including CFOs. 
  2. The modern corporate communications function is agile, multidisciplinary, and insights-driven.
  3. CommsTech will usher in a new era and communicators will use it to deliver quantifiable value to the business, which means, y’all, you can’t be using spreadsheets to track results.
  4. The increased focus on the workplace, workforce, and well-being of employees isn’t a pandemic fad. We’ve seen this represented in The Great Resignation and it’s not going to slow down anytime soon.
  5. Expectations around social issues have shifted the leadership agenda, and stakeholders are holding companies accountable. 
  6. A modern organizational structure only gets you so far. 
  7. Communicators are increasingly acting as change agents, enabling ongoing transformation.
  8. The lines between communications and marketing continue to blur, creating both challenges and opportunities.
  9. In an increasingly complex and activist multi-stakeholder world, the corporate brand matters now more than ever.

What a glorious time to be alive—and work in this industry!

I won’t go through all nine of the insights—you can download the report to read them all for yourself and begin to build your 2022 playbook from them—but I will choose my four favorites.

The Communicator Is More Important Today

Let’s start with the first one—the role of the communicator has become more materially important to every leader. In 2014, only 34% of chief communications officers reported to the CEO. Today that number is nearly half—46%.

However, significant variability exists in the perception of communications as a business driver depending on industry and organizational maturity. 

We see this in the work we do with clients. They want to know how ALL of the work we do is translating directly to sales. We are constantly talking about the importance of the brand and its awareness—and how challenging it is to directly translate those efforts to revenue.

That is an uphill battle that isn’t going away anytime soon.

But there are some things you can do:

CommsTech Will Usher In a New Era

The second insight I like is that you need a tech stack to be successful. Not spreadsheets. Not a whiteboard that has your prospects listed on it (that’s a real thing one of our clients used to do until I freaked out on them about it). But actual software that will make you more strategic and effective. 

Nearly three-fourths of respondents reported that CommsTech is a top area of investment for the coming year, while more than half reported increased use of communications technology. The challenge, though, is nearly half report only a baseline measurement of media impressions (oy vey, my friends, oy vey), and only 30% are mapping revenue growth back to their core activities. 

All to say, we still have a long way to go to catch up with our marketing brethren when it comes to technology. 

There are a few things you can begin to think about for 2022:

Create a Modern Organizational Structure

One of the biggest shifts I’ve seen internally with our clients in the past 20 or so months is how they’ve restructured their marketing and communications departments. In some cases, I’ve been personally asked to come in and audit the structure, their processes, and the gaps they have in resources. 

Just like in the Edelman report, we would see three types of structures in the before times: centralized, matrixed, and decentralized. There is a case to be made for each of them, but my opinion (and the report backs this up) is that centralized structures tend to have a better understanding of the broader business and are keyed into all departments in a way that keeps them top-of-mind versus an afterthought. 

As you think about creating a modern organizational structure, there are some things to consider:

The Marketing and Comms Lines Continue to Blur

I’m not telling you anything new when I say that the marketing and communications lines continue to blur. Consumers don’t know if what you’re doing is marketing or communications or sales; neither do executives. 

BUT! Organizational leaders are under immense pressure to take a stand on various social issues on behalf of the broader enterprise. However a consumer or other stakeholder sees it, that is all driven by communications, and so is defining a platform that not only articulates what you stand for but, more importantly, drives trust and engagement.

Think about these things as you prepare for your 2022 plans:

And there you have it! The four most important insights from this report, according to me. If you’d like your own copy of the report—and to go through the rest of their insights, you can download it here.