Global Best Practice Organisational Communications Certificate Course

This course provides the intellectual framework for best practice of internal communications in corporate settings, and focuses also on hands-on and practical application of best practice.

<p>Designed      for practitioners in internal communications, corporate public affairs, and human resources</p>

Designed for practitioners in internal communications, corporate public affairs, and human resources

<p>Self-paced learning, interactive group      webinars and syndicate group work </p>

Self-paced learning, interactive group webinars and syndicate group work

<p>Delivered      by Centre Faculty, and Guest Faculty comprising heads of internal      communications from leading organisations</p>

Delivered by Centre Faculty, and Guest Faculty comprising heads of internal communications from leading organisations

<p>Centre for Corporate Public Affairs certificate on completion</p>

Centre for Corporate Public Affairs certificate on completion

Course modules and weekly program

1

Introduction to the Course and Orientation: Via a live webinar this module introduces you to the course, its components, assessment vehicles, how to track your progress, and the group syndicate work.

2

Workplace Anthropology & Sociology: Learn about the role of workplaces to meet social and psychological needs of people, the environments in which different people work best, and how employees perceive and understand their role in organisations.

Psychology of Communication & Semiotics: Examine how meaning is created and communicated. Why heuristics is so important to communications and messaging in organisations. Learn how people react to different modes and tones of communication, and why.

3

Organisation Communication and Issues & Crisis Management: Interrogate the centrality of internal communications to effective management of issues and crises. What best practice looks like. Examine internal communications leadership in managing significant issues and crises.

Organisation Communication & Stakeholder Engagement: Consider the role of organisational communications in the modern stakeholder corporation. Examine the role of communications and culture in the stakeholder engagement value chain. Explore what inputs are required from internal communications practitioners to realise effective stakeholder engagement by the organisation.

4

Course progress check-in & organisation communications challenges: Via a live seminar with course peers, explore how Modules 1 – 4 have shaped your perceptions of the state of organisational communications in your own workplace. Do you have a role in driving change?

5

Stewarding the Corporate Narrative & Storytelling: Explore the ‘Ten Commandments’ of a compelling corporate narrative and best practice stewarding the narrative and bringing it to life via storytelling across all levels of the organisation.

6

Leadership Communications: Establish the organisational need and role of communication in leadership, and how effective leaders use communications to lead effectively, and with purpose. Interrogate what best practice looks like.

7

Change Communications: Examine the role of organisational communications in significant change projects, and identify best practice. Examine the elements of why big change projects and efforts (including transformations, M&As, and integrations) fail, including the role of organisational communications. Interrogate the inputs, outputs, and characteristics of best practice change communications.

8

Co-producing outcomes with management disciplines. Research & Strategy: How to use research and strategy to align organisational communications focus and execution with the broader goals of the organisation. Examine how to maximise effective of outputs and outcomes co-produced with other management functions and disciplines, including HR and corporate public affairs.

9

The Role of the Practitioner: Via a live seminar with your course peers examine the role of the organisational communications practitioners in contemporary entities including the attributes and capabilities of the most effective and successful practitioners. Examine the role of professional development in career advancement and/or success.

10

New Horizons for the Organisational Communications Discipline: Examine where the discipline is heading, senior management and Board expectations of the discipline, and what is ‘coming down the pipe’ for practitioners and the way they work.

Course timetable and logistics

The course is conducted over ten weeks and will commence in the week beginning 13 November 2023. Taking into account the year-end holiday period, it will conclude in the week of 12 February 2024. Delivered via the Centre’s online learning platform, the course comprises:

  • Working in a syndicate group of other course participants is required across the duration of the course to work on an assigned case study. Participants will be assigned the case study and a syndicate group in Week 1. Completing the syndicate work is necessary to successfully complete the course.
  • Participation in four live webinars, the last of which will represent the end of the certificate course. The webinars will be conducted via an online video learning platform, will be facilitated by Wayne Burns, Executive Director - Centre for Corporate Public Affairs, and will be highly interactive.
  • Nine lectures delivered in video format. The lectures must be viewed as part of completing the tasks embedded in each week of the course.
    The lectures are highly instructive, and your engagement with them is tested in a quiz and short assignment, the completion of which allows participants to move into the next week of the course.
    Six of the lectures are accompanied by articles that need to be read to progress to the next stage of the course.
  • The syndicate group work as part of the course is self-managed by participants in each of those groups. You will be assigned a case study on which to work, and you and your fellow syndicate group members will need to work through that case study, and present your group work, during the course’s final webinar (Week 10).
  • The webinars and syndicate group sessions will be scheduled before the course begins, and the Centre will work to ensure that participants across time zones are able to participate fully in live webinars and syndicate group work via our video learning platform.
  • Webinars will be recorded for participants who may not be able to attend at the time they are scheduled live.

Learning Outcomes

1

Insights as to how workplace anthropology influences work and its purpose; the psychology of communications and semiotics

2

Models and case studies on organisational effectiveness

3

Internal communications and its role in best practice issues and crisis management and stakeholder engagement

4

Developing strategy and tactics, and measuring and reporting progress; change and leadership communications

5

Working with other management functions

6

Stewarding the corporate narrative and organisational storytelling; the role characteristics of the best of the internal communications practitioners; as well as trends and developments in the discipline

The course and its sessions are held under the Chatham House Rule to promote robust and quality peer-to-peer interaction.

This is an accredited Centre for Corporate Public Affairs program, which upon completion earns the practitioner fifteen professional development credit points, and certification that the module has been completed.

    The registration fee is A$3000 Centre-members, and A$3500 non-members.

    Director of Studies

    Wayne Burns

    Wayne is the Executive Director of the Centre for Corporate Public Affairs. He is also an experienced management consultant in Asia Pacific. He has more than 30 years’ experience in corporate advisory, consulting, public policy, journalism and political advisory.

    Wayne writes about public affairs internationally and teaches public affairs executive education in Australia, New Zealand, China, Singapore, and Hong Kong. His specialist areas of professional focus include corporate responsibility, issues management, reputation stewardship, social media and organisational effectiveness.

    He has also developed and led six international best practice study tours on reputation stewardship, corporate responsibility, corporate communications, and issues management.

    Wayne has worked in senior public affairs and management roles in leading corporations in Australia, and has also previously established and managed his own public affairs company. He sits on a number of community and statutory Boards.