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Chapter from: "The New Era of the CCO: The Essential Role of Communication in a Volatile World"
Published by: Business Expert Press
Originally published in: 2018

Abstract

This chapter is excerpted from ‘The New Era of the CCO: The Essential Role of Communication in a Volatile World'. The role of the Chief Communication Officer (CCO) in today's enterprise has dramatically changed over the past 30 years. Once focused on getting news out to media outlets, today's CCO has become an integral part of any enterprise-company, corporation, governmental, and nongovernmental entity. Today's CCO is responsible for internal and external communication, with creating and implementing communication strategies that help mold enterprise mission, vision, value, and character, and with building enterprise reputation through stakeholder engagement. As a part of the 'C-Suite,' the CCO must understand not only the psychology and sociology of the business, but also the role that she has in informing the C-Suite and the Chief Executive Officer what internal and external stakeholders are thinking and how this may affect corporate image in terms of credibility, confidence, trust, relationship, and reputation. In short, the new CCO must understand both the science and the art of communication and apply that knowledge to advancing her enterprise's goals and objectives through a faster and ever-larger-reaching set of media.

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Abstract

This chapter is excerpted from ‘The New Era of the CCO: The Essential Role of Communication in a Volatile World'. The role of the Chief Communication Officer (CCO) in today's enterprise has dramatically changed over the past 30 years. Once focused on getting news out to media outlets, today's CCO has become an integral part of any enterprise-company, corporation, governmental, and nongovernmental entity. Today's CCO is responsible for internal and external communication, with creating and implementing communication strategies that help mold enterprise mission, vision, value, and character, and with building enterprise reputation through stakeholder engagement. As a part of the 'C-Suite,' the CCO must understand not only the psychology and sociology of the business, but also the role that she has in informing the C-Suite and the Chief Executive Officer what internal and external stakeholders are thinking and how this may affect corporate image in terms of credibility, confidence, trust, relationship, and reputation. In short, the new CCO must understand both the science and the art of communication and apply that knowledge to advancing her enterprise's goals and objectives through a faster and ever-larger-reaching set of media.

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