Crisis Communications Playbook
<!-- dual-compat:start -->
Use when
- Generates a complete social media crisis response playbook covering severity classification, per-level response protocols, holding statement templates, platform-specific actions, and a post-crisis review process. Also outputs a one-page Crisis Quick Card for the client to print. Invoke this skill when onboarding any new client (proactive setup), when a client reports a crisis already in progress, or when reviewing crisis preparedness for an existing account.
- Use this skill when it is the closest match to the requested deliverable or workflow.
Do not use when
- Do not use this skill for graphic design, video production, software development, or legal advice beyond the repository's stated scope.
- Do not use it when another skill in this repository is clearly more specific to the requested deliverable.
Workflow
- Collect the required inputs or source material before drafting, unless this skill explicitly generates the intake itself.
- Follow the section order and decision rules in this ; do not skip mandatory steps or required fields.
- Review the draft against the quality criteria, then deliver the final output in markdown unless the skill specifies another format.
Anti-Patterns
- Do not invent client facts, performance data, budgets, or approvals that were not provided or clearly inferred from evidence.
- Do not skip required inputs, mandatory sections, or quality checks just to make the output shorter.
- Do not drift into out-of-scope work such as code implementation, design production, or unsupported legal conclusions.
Outputs
- A structured markdown document, plan, playbook, or strategy ready for client-facing or internal use.
References
- Use the inline instructions in this skill now. If a directory is added later, treat its files as the deeper source material and keep this execution-focused.
<!-- dual-compat:end -->
Required Input
Collect the following before generating the playbook:
- Client name and business type
- Social media manager — name and WhatsApp/phone number
- Client approver — name, title, and WhatsApp/phone number (the person who approves all public statements during a crisis)
- PR or legal contact — name and contact details (note if not applicable; advise the client to identify one before a crisis occurs)
- WhatsApp number for crisis-related customer contact (may be the same as main business number)
- Platforms in scope (Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp Business, LinkedIn, X/Twitter, TikTok, Google Business Profile)
- Country/city — defaults to Uganda/East Africa if not specified
Foundational Principle
Apply the acknowledge → investigate → update cadence to every crisis at every level. The first response acknowledges the issue and signals seriousness. The second response (4–8 hours later) confirms an investigation is under way and provides any available facts. The third response (within 24 hours) provides resolution or a detailed update. Never go silent between updates.
1. Crisis Severity Classification
Level 1 — Minor Complaint or Negative Post
Definition: An unhappy customer posts publicly. Under 50 interactions. No media involvement. Isolated to one or two posts.
Response: Community management team handles within 2 hours. Use the standard complaint template from playbook-community-management. Take the conversation offline via DM or WhatsApp. No public statement required.
Escalation: Notify client within 4 hours by WhatsApp. No pause to the content calendar. Monitor for 24 hours in case the post gains further traction.
Level 2 — Viral Negative Post or Media Attention
Definition: A post has reached 200+ interactions or is spreading via shares, OR a media account (journalist, news outlet, public figure) has shared or commented on it. Could include a local journalist tweeting about the brand.
Response: Pause all scheduled posts immediately. Social media manager alerts client within 30 minutes. Client and social media manager prepare a holding statement together within 1 hour of identification. Do not post any further content until the holding statement is agreed.
Escalation: Client leads all public responses from this point. Social media manager executes, monitors, and tracks all mentions and interactions. Social media manager does not craft or publish responses independently.
Level 3 — Major Reputational Threat
Definition: National or regional media coverage, significant public figure or government official involved, legal implication or allegation, public safety issue, or criminal allegation against the company or a named employee.
Response: Pause all social activity across all platforms immediately. Client contacts PR counsel and/or legal counsel before any public statement is issued. A holding statement is issued within 2 hours. 24-hour monitoring is put in place. Social media manager does not act independently under any circumstances.
Escalation: Client and external counsel lead all communication. Social media manager is operational support only — monitoring, reporting, and executing approved responses.
2. Response Protocol by Level
Level 1 Response Timeline
First 30 minutes:
First 2 hours:
First 24 hours:
Level 2 Response Timeline
First 30 minutes:
First 2 hours:
First 24 hours:
Level 3 Response Timeline
First 30 minutes:
First 2 hours:
First 24 hours:
3. Holding Statement Templates
Level 1 Holding Statement
"Thank you for bringing this to our attention. We are sorry to hear about your experience. Please send us a direct message so we can resolve this for you."
Level 2 Holding Statement
"We are aware of the concern raised about [topic]. We take this seriously and are looking into it urgently. We will share an update within [timeframe — recommend 4–6 hours]. If you have been personally affected, please contact us directly on [WhatsApp number]."
Level 3 Holding Statement
"We are aware of the reports circulating regarding [topic]. We are taking this very seriously and are working urgently to understand the full situation. We will provide a comprehensive update by [specific date and time]. [If applicable: we have engaged the relevant authorities.] We appreciate your patience and understanding."
Customisation note: Replace bracketed fields with specifics before publishing. Never publish a holding statement with placeholder text visible. The client approver must sign off on every Level 2 and Level 3 statement before it goes live.
4. What NOT to Do in a Crisis
Follow these rules without exception during any Level 2 or Level 3 event:
- Do not delete negative comments. Deletion signals guilt, inflames the audience, and creates a Streisand effect — the post will be screenshotted and shared more widely. Delete only clear hate speech or harassment, and document each deletion.
- Do not go silent. Silence reads as guilt or indifference. Even if you have no resolution yet, a holding statement is better than nothing.
- Do not be defensive or blame the customer publicly. The audience is not only the complainant — it is every potential customer reading the exchange.
- Do not use humour in a serious crisis. Levity in a Level 2 or Level 3 situation is almost always misread and amplifies the reputational damage.
- Do not post normal content while the crisis is unfolding. A cheerful promotional post during a public controversy is tone-deaf and will be screenshot and mocked.
- Do not let multiple people respond differently. Agree one voice and one message before any statement goes out. Contradictory responses are more damaging than a delayed response.
- Do not over-promise on resolution timelines. If you cannot resolve in 24 hours, say "we are committed to resolving this and will provide updates as we have them." Do not say "we will fix this today" if you cannot.
5. Platform-Specific Crisis Actions
All Platforms
Pause all scheduled content immediately on identification of Level 2 or Level 3. Use Buffer or Hootsuite draft mode — do not delete scheduled content, only pause it. Resume only with client approval.
Facebook
For Level 3: consider enabling the strong profanity filter (Settings → Privacy → Profanity Filter → Strong). For specific posts under heavy negative attack, comments can be turned off on that post via the three-dot menu. Use this only when comments have become abusive or coordinated — not to suppress legitimate criticism.
Instagram
Use the restricted words list (Settings → Privacy → Hidden Words) to automatically hide comments containing abusive language. Hide — not delete — specific comments that are threatening or contain personal abuse. Document all hidden comments.
WhatsApp Business
Pause all pending broadcast messages immediately. Update the away message to: "We are aware of the current situation and are working to address it. For urgent enquiries, please message us here and we will respond as soon as possible."
X / Twitter
Mute notifications from the specific viral post to allow focused monitoring without being overwhelmed. Do not deactivate the account — deactivation reads as fleeing and amplifies the story. Monitor all mentions via the search function for the brand name, not just notifications.
LinkedIn
Level 2 and 3 crises rarely originate on LinkedIn in the East African context but can spread there. Monitor comments on all recent posts. Pause any scheduled articles or posts.
6. Post-Crisis Review
Conduct this review 48–72 hours after the crisis is resolved. The social media manager compiles it; the client approves it.
Answer these questions in writing:
- What triggered the crisis — what happened and when?
- At what point was it identified, and by whom?
- Could it have been prevented? If yes, what would have prevented it?
- How did the response go? What worked well?
- What did not work — slow response, unclear ownership, missing contact details?
- What needs to change in policies, products, or communications as a result?
- Are there any outstanding customer issues still to resolve?
Document the answers in a one-page incident report. File it. Use it to update this playbook annually.
7. One-Page Crisis Quick Card
Generate this as a standalone section the client can print and keep accessible. Fill in all fields with the client's actual details before delivering.
[CLIENT NAME] — SOCIAL MEDIA CRISIS QUICK CARD
Crisis Levels at a Glance
| Level | Trigger | First Action |
|---|
| 1 — Minor | Under 50 interactions; no media | Community manager responds within 2 hours |
| 2 — Viral | 200+ interactions OR media involved | Pause all posts; alert client within 30 minutes |
| 3 — Major | National media, legal, safety, public figure | Pause everything; call client and counsel immediately |
First 30-Minute Checklist (Level 2 / 3)
Holding Statements (Ready to Use)
Level 1: "Thank you for bringing this to our attention. We are sorry to hear about your experience. Please send us a direct message so we can resolve this for you."
Level 2: "We are aware of the concern raised about [topic]. We take this seriously and are looking into it urgently. We will share an update within [timeframe]. Please contact us on [WhatsApp number] if you have been personally affected."
Escalation Contacts
| Role | Name | WhatsApp / Phone |
|---|
| Social Media Manager | [Name] | [Contact] |
| Client Approver | [Name] | [Contact] |
| PR / Legal Contact | [Name] | [Contact] |
What NOT to Do
- Do not delete comments (screenshots first if you must)
- Do not go silent — always issue a holding statement
- Do not post normal content during a crisis
- Do not blame the customer publicly
- Do not let multiple people respond with different messages
Quality Criteria
Output meets production standard when it satisfies all of the following:
- All three crisis levels are defined with clear, quantifiable triggers — no vague language such as "significant" without a threshold
- Each level has a distinct, actionable timeline checklist in tick-box format, not prose instructions
- All three holding statement templates are complete, customised with client details, and contain no visible placeholder text before delivery
- The "What NOT to Do" section includes the rationale for each prohibition, not just the rule
- Platform-specific actions are tailored to the platforms listed in Required Input — unused platforms are omitted
- The Crisis Quick Card is formatted as a genuinely standalone, printable section — not a summary of the main document
- Post-crisis review questions are specific enough to produce a usable incident report, not generic reflection prompts
- All content uses British English; no American spellings appear anywhere in the deliverable