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Article

What America’s AI Action Plan Means for Leaders Now

July 24, 2025
By Josh McConnell

Don’t think of this as just a policy reset. It’s a reputational crossroads. In a deregulatory moment, the real challenge isn’t compliance. It’s communication plain and simple: how to explain, defend and lead through what comes next.

The U.S. government has issued its clearest signal yet that it intends to lead the world in AI through acceleration over regulation.

America’s AI Action Plan, unveiled this month, reframes U.S. tech policy around three pillars: innovation, infrastructure, and international competitiveness. It rolls back many of the Biden-era safety and fairness frameworks, instead emphasizing open-source development, rapid deployment and private-sector partnership. For CCOs and CMOs, this isn’t just a policy update. It’s a pressure shift. With fewer federal rules in place, the burden of defining and defending responsible AI now falls squarely on companies themselves. That means your narrative, transparency and readiness matter more than ever.

How To Respond Ahead of the Spotlight

1. From frameworks to frontline comms, you can feel scrutiny shifting
With Biden-era guardrails rolled back, there’s more ambiguity and reputational risk. Review your systems, filtering practices and content neutrality positions ASAP. Comms teams need clarity and defensibility, especially where DEI, safety filters and model transparency intersect.

2. Prepare your public narrative before the news cycle tests it
Build messaging that goes beyond launches and investor decks. Emphasize ethical foresight, safety, training transparency and societal value in your comms. Assume watchdog groups, press and policymakers are already watching and look at your narrative through their eyes and position accordingly. Even consider a virtual audience simulation that will pressure test messaging for different mindsets. It’s ultimate defense as offense.

3. Make your company part of the national story
This plan isn’t just tech policy. It’s economic and diplomatic strategy. Companies that align their messaging with national priorities like innovation, infrastructure and workforce development will carry more weight with policymakers, partners and procurement leaders.

And in today’s generative search environment, those narratives aren’t just for press releases. They’re a crucial part of brand discovery. Organizations are can shape how they are surfaced, summarized and evaluated in search. If your brand isn’t telling a clear story, it’s likely that AI will try to do it for you or ignore you completely.

4. Engage now, not later
If your teams haven’t opened dialogue with NIST, OSTP or other agency stakeholders, now is the time to start. Participation in federal consultations and comment periods will shape procurement standards and signal leadership. You don’t want silence to be interpreted as an absence of a point of view.

5. Signal leadership through your talent
AI-readiness isn’t just about model performance. This is all about workforce planning. Use this moment to communicate investments in retraining, apprenticeships and education. This is reputational insulation and long-term eligibility for federal partnerships.

6. Strengthen your risk and compliance narrative
This plan includes stricter export controls, national security filters and new expectations for “secure by design” standards. Global comms must now reflect both regulatory divergence (EU, China) and internal alignment across legal, engineering and policy.

7. Know where your infra story fits
For companies in data centers, chips or energy, this is also an opportunity moment. Comms teams should coordinate early with government affairs, bid teams and legal to ensure eligibility positioning aligns with public messaging.

8. Plan for federal-state friction
As state-level bias audits, content governance and privacy laws expand, tensions with federal policy will grow. Your public narrative and internal compliance playbook must account for that dual reality.

So what comes next?

The companies that lead through this moment won’t be those that publish the longest policies. They’ll be the ones who explain their role with the most clarity, credibility and consistency both internally and externally.

The policy shift is clear: the U.S. is betting on speed, scale and innovation. But for communications leaders, the implications run deeper.

The questions coming next about explainability, bias, security and global alignment won’t be answered by engineers alone. They’ll require strong narratives, clear values and messages that hold up under scrutiny. Communications team won’t follow this story. They’ll help define it.

Josh McConnell  Josh McConnell is a VP of Technology based in New York where he helps companies navigate complex narratives at the intersection of innovation, reputation and culture. He brings over 15 years of experience across journalism and corporate comms, with leadership roles at Uber and Xero. As a journalist, he regularly interviewed tech leaders including Tim Cook, Satya Nadella and Jack Dorsey.

 
Article

Protecting Relationships During a Cyber Crisis

June 3, 2025
By Cody Want

When a cyber incident hits, IT and legal are often the first to get the call—for good reason. IT teams must act swiftly to contain, remediate and investigate the breach, while legal teams must ensure compliance with regulatory and contractual obligations and manage legal exposure.

But a strictly technical or legal lens can narrow your field of vision. Without broader perspective, you risk overlooking the long-term impact on trust and reputation. In the critical early hours of a response, you need someone in the room to ask: “Now that we know what we’re required to do—what else should we do?”

How you manage the technical and procedural aspects of a cyber incident is essential—it’s foundational to restoring operational confidence. But reputation isn’t built on competence alone; it’s a true test of values. In a crisis, stakeholders are paying attention not only to what you do, but how you engage—and whether your actions reflect the commitments you’ve made in steadier times. The impressions formed in these moments of uncertainty can endure far beyond the incident itself.

Think of cyber incident response as a three-legged stool: IT, legal and communications. Without that third leg, your response may be technically compliant—but misaligned and disconnected from the broader reality of stakeholder expectations. That imbalance can compound risk.

Communicating through a cyber crisis is rarely straightforward. There’s significant pressure to provide clarity on the situation, but forensic investigations take time, threat actors cover their tracks and facts change. The difficulty of navigating these considerations—and the potential impact of a misstep—doesn’t mean you should downplay the need to communicate. It means it’s more important than ever to fill that space, especially when the demand for communications is highest.

That complexity isn’t a reason to step back from communication—it’s a signal to step in more thoughtfully. In moments of high uncertainty, demand for transparency rises.

The right communications strategy acknowledges these challenges while ensuring that trust and relationships aren’t casualties of the crisis. Here are three principles to guide your approach:

  • Be stakeholder-centric: Start with a clear understanding of who your stakeholders are and what they need to hear from you. Reputation is shaped in the details of how you communicate—how you time employee updates, brief partners and how you equip and support customer-facing teams.
  • Avoid media tunnel vision: The headlines matter, but they’re not the whole story. In most incidents, your long-term reputation is shaped more by internal and stakeholder communications than by a single news cycle. Media relations is just one part—often a small part—of a much broader response.
  • Think of future conversations: Imagine explaining your decisions months from now to a key stakeholder. They might not be fully satisfied, but will they understand and respect how you handled the situation given the constraints you were facing?

When and How to Communicate

Cyber incidents create uncertainty. If you don’t provide information to your stakeholders, others will do it for you—customers on social media, employees in break rooms, journalists on deadline.

More On Planning For Uncertainty: Meet the Global Executive Advisory

This doesn’t mean sharing everything, with everyone, all at once. It means thoughtfully assessing what your stakeholders likely know or assume, what you know and can responsibly say, and how best to bridge the gap. There’s no perfect answer. Often, it’s a day-by-day judgment call.

Understanding every stakeholder’s perspective and expectations in this level of detail takes work—but it’s work that always pays off. In a crisis, you’ll never regret having spent time preparing your communications strategy.

Some of the key questions to ask:

  • Clients & Partners: Should high-value relationships get a direct update or a 1:1 call? How are you supporting them through operational disruption?
  • Customers: Are they worried about incompetence—or their data? How are you addressing concerns, inquiries, and frustration?
  • Employees: Do they know what they can and can’t say? Are they prepared to respond to external questions or internal uncertainty?
  • Media & Digital: Should you respond to inquiries, or would that validate speculation? How do you monitor and address unverified rumors before they escalate? What should you do about blogs and anonymous accounts?
  • Board & Investors: How do you keep key stakeholders informed without escalating concern or overpromising outcomes?
  • Regulators & Authorities: Beyond mandated disclosures, what messaging aligns with your broader corporate values?
  • Other Key Audiences: Who else expects to hear from you? Have you considered suppliers, industry associations, or even competitors who might be affected?

More Than a Response—A Reputation Strategy

IT and legal are essential to resolving the technical and regulatory dimensions of a cyber incident. But stakeholders don’t measure your performance by minimum requirements—they measure it by how you made them feel. Ask yourself: are you communicating in a way that reassures and retains trust?

The best responses manage short-term pressures without compromising long-term relationships. Even within the constraints of investigation and legal risk, organizations that integrate communications expertise are better positioned to emerge with credibility intact—and often stronger.

Cyber incidents may be inevitable. Reputational damage doesn’t have to be. The real question isn’t just whether you responded— it’s whether you’re responding in a way that strengthens trust and credibility in the long run.

Cody Want Cody Want is FleishmanHillard’s U.S. Cyber Crisis Lead with extensive experience in cyber incident response and preparedness. He has helped clients through a wide range of crisis and issues situations, including undercover media investigations, major restructures, union disputes and many other regulatory and reputational challenges.

 
Article

FleishmanHillard Launches Global Executive Advisory to Help Brands Navigate an Uncertain Marketplace

May 29, 2025

FleishmanHillard today announced the launch of its Global Executive Advisory, a strategic network of senior counselors designed to help C-suite leaders navigate special situations, high-impact issues and transformative change. The group is now operational and actively engaging with clients managing risk and opportunity in the face of global volatility, geopolitical uncertainty and increasing stakeholder scrutiny.

With more than 50 senior advisors across the United States, EMEA and APAC, the Global Executive Advisory pairs relevant specialists with global client leaders and sector experts to deliver precise, high-velocity counsel. The group provides integrated advisory across financial communications, crisis and issues, ESG and responsible business, talent and transformation, public affairs and brand impact. The Advisory group also taps into omniearnedID’s proprietary analytics platform — including genAI-enabled solutions that accelerate insight, risk evaluation, narrative development and decision-making.

“FleishmanHillard thrives by anticipating what our clients will need next — and by showing up with the right people to help them lead through it,” said J.J. Carter, president and chief executive officer. “The Global Executive Advisory is an extension of that legacy. It brings together first-rate advisors and modern solutions from across our network to meet the demands of this moment — leaders who understand not just communication but the weight of decision-making in a time of profound uncertainty and unpredictability. This is about accelerating impact, elevating counsel and unlocking the full value of our collective expertise.”

Rachel Catanach, head of the Global Executive Advisory, shared that while these are deeply uncertain times FleishmanHillard’s stake in the ground is clear: strategic communication is a key driver for companies wanting decision advantage despite the dilemmas they face.

“Whether it be navigating geopolitics, supply chain arbitrage, identifying new cross-industry partners, communicating new pricing or embedding AI into all operations, the winners and losers in times of uncertainty are often defined by the quality of their communication. In navigating uncertainty, the most grounded leaders focus on what aspects of their operations are immutable: the constants—people, purpose, values—that act as anchors – and then look to innovate and find a third way for those areas requiring a pivot. From an organizational perspective, that means focusing on your people and providing as much assurance as possible even if you can’t provide all the answers,” Catanach said. “That requires honesty, vulnerability and discipline. Share what decisions are being made, what’s on hold and why. Under-promise and over-deliver. That builds trust.”

Read More From Rachel: Turning Uncertainty into Opportunity

“A brand is more than a message — it’s an experience,” added Jim Joseph, global head of Brand Impact. “And in uncertain times, it’s often the brand experience that either connects people or loses them. That’s why executive counsel like this drives business results. We’re helping leaders reinforce what’s true in the world today and relevant in the moment so they can navigate complexity, lead with confidence and keep their brand experience connected to what matters most.” 

Built for flexibility and scale, the Global Executive Advisory enables FleishmanHillard to rapidly assess client needs and activate the right mix of internal and external experts. In addition to its in-house capabilities, the firm will draw on select partners across the Omnicom network including Daggerwing Group, Maslansky + Partners and public affairs firms PLUS, DDC, VOX Global and Mercury where specific expertise is required.

The cohort of advisors is equipped with proprietary tools and frameworks to solve complex challenges, and can also access resources across the full FleishmanHillard, OPRG and Omnicom network quickly. Some of these tools and frameworks include Connectivity Diagnostic, which allows clients to assess how aligned their organization is with the many outside forces that are shaping their story; Risk Radar, which is a forward-looking telemetry system that will help organizations spot reputational issues before they break; and the Two Truths framework, which is designed to help clients navigate competing belief systems to build trust in a highly polarized environment.

The Global Executive Advisory reflects FleishmanHillard’s commitment to delivering the highest level of counsel with the pace and precision today’s leaders demand. It will accelerate how the firm delivers value to clients — by putting the right talent, experience and thinking in place to guide them through their most consequential moments.

This launch also represents a broader evolution of FleishmanHillard’s Corporate Affairs model, which connects capabilities across five advisory pillars: Financial Communications; Crisis, Issues and Risk; Talent and Transformation; Responsible Business; and Public Affairs. The approach deepens the firm’s relevance to the C-suite and strengthens its positioning in special situations.

“Yes, caution is warranted. But the future won’t wait for certainty. It belongs to those who lead through the uncertainty, navigating with strategy, innovation, courage and integrity,” shared Catanach. “Let others chase the trend. We build relevance that lasts.”

FleishmanHillard Executive Advisory Board

Article

Communicating Through Dilemmas: Turning Uncertainty into Opportunity

By Rachel Catanach

I recently finished reading a book by Australian author Richard Flanagan called Question 7. The book explores his family and sense of place, set against the geopolitics of World War II. One detail that gave me pause was the title. Question 7 refers to a metaphysical puzzle posed in a short story by Russian writer Anton Chekhov:

“Wednesday, June 17, 1881, a train had to leave Station A at 3 a.m. in order to reach Station B at 11 p.m.; just as the train was about to depart, however, an order came that the train had to reach Station B by 7 p.m. Who loves longer, a man or a woman?”

Chekhov’s point is that the writer’s job is to ask the deepest questions without purporting to answer them.

Why is this relevant to communicators? Question 7 made me think about the kinds of dilemmas CEOs and C-suite leaders face every day in today’s uncertain, unpredictable environment. In a world where we have data, data everywhere, the C-suite has never faced such hard dilemmas that call on all their leadership powers and demand judgment beyond logic. They require clarity, conviction and communication.

They are operating in a world where the the new reality is … uncertainty.  They can no longer trust the models they’ve always relied on. Stakeholder views are in constant motion and increasingly polarized. Customer demands are elevated, consumer perceptions have become unpredictable and technology is driving consumption at a dizzying speed. Multiple truths are operating simultaneously, creating complexity, confusion and a need to navigate and scenario-plan in new ways at each turning point.

The escalating daily dilemmas and heightened risk will paralyze some CEOs but bring competitive opportunities for others—when tackled with decision advantage as opposed to decision regret.

That challenge is playing out at a global scale. According to the World Economic Forum’s May 2025 Chief Economists Outlook, 82% of chief economists say global uncertainty is currently “very high,” with trade, monetary and fiscal policy cited as the most volatile factors. Meanwhile, 79% expect recent U.S. policy shifts to create long-term global disruption, and nearly half of all organizations are planning to delay decisions or diversify operations in response.

For communicators, this only raises the stakes. In this kind of environment, decisiveness without alignment becomes a liability. It’s not just what leaders decide—it’s how they communicate it, who they bring with them and how ready they are to pivot when conditions shift again.

That’s why communication isn’t downstream support. In this high-risk environment, it’s often the strategic driver of success or failure. Of winning—or, at the very least, not losing. In this uncertain environment, there will be both. Yes, strategy is important.  But communication that is truly tailored to stakeholders, without compromising values, but accounting for trade-offs, is the name of the game.

Whether the challenge is market-facing or deeply internal and out of public view, communication is often the foundation of no-regret decisions that maximize opportunity as well as minimize risk.

This is where an integration of corporate affairs and brand impact matters most. At its best, communication unifies narrative, reputation and growth strategy—linking what an organization believes to how it behaves.

That’s the inflection point where communication becomes irreplaceable—not just as messaging, but as muscle. The strongest leaders today aren’t aiming for omniscience. They’re imagining new scenarios. They’re staying open to multiple truths, acting with purpose and adjusting with speed. And they’re asking their communication teams to be part of that front line, not the follow-up. 

As audiences approach brands from countless side doors—media, employee channels, investors, influencers and policy arenas—alignment can’t be an afterthought. Communication must connect narrative to value, decipher signals from the noise and turn leadership intent into audience impact. It marks a shift from defensive, reactive cycles to deliberate, plotted momentum.

Creating Anchors in an Uncertain Environment: Hear More From Rachel on the It’s No Fluke Podcast

This is how resilience is built. Not just in risk management, but in the discipline to return to your anchors—people, purpose, values—and communicate them clearly, especially when answers are incomplete. The most credible leaders today are the ones who say, “Here’s what we know. Here’s what we’re watching. Here’s how we’ll stay ready.” The credible leaders are those who understand context and how it connects to community and culture and drives decision-making.

Because let’s be honest: no one has a crystal ball big enough for this moment. But those with a process, a plan, the predictive tools and a point of view? They’re the ones leading with confidence—even in a time of shared ambiguity.

And they’re not doing it alone. They’re surrounding themselves with trusted partners who bring clarity to complexity. Who understand both the risk landscape and the human context. Who know that in a fragmented, high-pressure environment, communication isn’t just the playbook—it’s the platform.

Cody Want Rachel Catanach leads FleishmanHillard’s New York and Boston offices and the Global Executive Advisory, counseling CEOs on leadership transitions, board engagement and high-stakes issues. A global PR industry advocate, she has spoken at Davos, moderated at Cannes Lions and co-authored The Page Society’s Beyond Communication report. She was also a 2024 PRWeek Woman of Distinction.

 
Article

Ready for What’s Next: Corporate Preparedness & Resilience in the Age of Permacrisis

May 23, 2025
By Vipan Gill

Crises are no longer episodic disruptions. Today, they form a continuous backdrop – an evolving dynamic that threatens organizational resilience and corporate reputation. Organizations that embed crisis preparedness as a core strategic capability – not simply an insurance policy – will be positioned not just to weather future challenges, but to lead through them.

That’s because risk today is faster, more complex and amplified across more dimensions than ever before. We are operating in a state of “permacrisis”. While crises are not necessarily new, it’s the speed, complexity, and amplification of risks across many different channels that have changed. Every organization faces compounding risks, whether they make headlines or not. Yet many companies remain underprepared. Insights from this month’s PRWeek Crisis Comms Conference 2025 revealed that nearly half of all companies still lack a formal crisis plan.

Readiness is Cultural, Not Just Tactical

In a world where every day feels like a crisis, many leaders mistake constant exposure for readiness. But resilience isn’t built in the moment. It’s embedded over time. Today’s risks demand deeper planning and perspective. Organizations must embed clarity of ownership, decision-making agility, and cross-functional coordination well before a disruption occurs.

At FleishmanHillard, this belief is core to how we guide clients. The conference reinforced what we see in our daily counsel; the absence of a crisis playbook isn’t the only risk. The bigger vulnerability is failing to operationalize crisis readiness as a living, evolving part of the business. In an era defined by disruption, resilience is the ultimate differentiator.

From Reactive to Resilient: Redefining Crisis Leadership

Historically, crisis management was shaped by high-profile, acute events. Today’s most damaging issues often simmer below the surface, emerging gradually, escalating quickly, and leaving little time for response.

World-class crisis outcomes now hinge on proactive, sustained investments in organizational preparedness, not just reactive action during a major event. Resilient brands do not just defend their reputation during crises; they proactively strengthen it through everyday actions.

To move from reactive to resilient, organizations need a modern readiness framework that embeds resilience into day-to-day operations. Core elements include:

  • Real-Time Risk Sensing: Implement tools to monitor traditional media, social platforms, fringe forums, and the dark web for emerging threats.
  • Reputation-First Scenario Planning: Develop scenarios that address both operational and reputational impacts, with predefined decision-making criteria.
  • Authentic Language Frameworks: Ensure communications reflect organizational values, particularly on sensitive or contentious topics to maintain credibility.
  • Strategic Spokesperson Planning: Prepare visible leaders who can act as credible, empathetic representatives under pressure.
  • Continuous Crisis Training: Treat readiness as a muscle to be exercised regularly, not a skill activated during emergencies alone.

In today’s attention economy, fringe narratives can move mainstream within hours. Resilient organizations sense what’s coming and shape the narrative before others do.

Proactive Narrative Management: Preparing for AI-driven Risk

AI is changing how reputations are shaped. Machine learning models, news algorithms, and social amplification systems serve as frontline interpreters of a brand’s behavior and its reputation. These systems don’t wait for formal updates, they ingest, index and amplify whatever narratives are most readily available.

That’s why prebunking– establishing credible narratives proactively–is essential. Organizations can no longer rely solely on reactive corrections during an active crisis. Instead, building trusted reputational foundations early on improves how audiences, and AI systems, interpret emerging narratives.

A strong crisis preparedness program ensures that communications strategies are not merely reactive after an incident, but active, strategic, and values-led well in advance.

Elevating the Role of Communications in Crisis Strategy

The role of communicators has evolved.  In a permacrisis environment, we are not just message managers, we are strategic stewards of corporate reputation—proactively guiding organizations through uncertainty, informed by data, technology, and human judgment.

While technology provides powerful tools, the true advantage lies in how organizations interpret those signals and act on them. Human insights remain essential. Context. Empathy. Judgement. These are the ingredients of trusted, decisive leadership in the moments that matter.

Our Approach  

Our global crisis and issues management team combines real-world, local market experience with global reach—guiding clients through uncertainty across time zones, sectors and cultures. We help organizations build and operationalize readiness, so that when it matters most, you’re not reacting—you’re leading.

FleishmanHillard Executive Advisory Board