By Ugochukwu Ugwuanyi
Content is regarded as the undisputed King in the digital ecosystem, yet the well-worn dictum rings hollow in corporate communications. For instance, with content being expressive, there are scenarios to which thoughtful organisations respond by not putting out any content. And at the end of the day, that calculated silence over an issue critical to their brand survival saves the day!
This indicates that there is a smart that trumps content as per communications – this phenomenon is called strategy. Reputation can be built without content, but it will be dead on arrival without a strategy. The corporate communications manager who is not keen on content can make company staff brand advocates or ambassadors, yielding impressive outcomes. This is because the teams have been made to understand not just what they’re doing, but why. Leadership strategy has been translated into stories, metaphors, and messages that align everyone’s mental models.
Strategic Communication
Strategy is so germane to communications that there is a genre called strategic communication. This is the planned and intentional use of communication to achieve specific objectives for an organisation or individual. It involves aligning all communication actions with the entity’s identity, values, and objectives, both internally and externally. It is an ongoing process that aims to optimize the impact of communication to achieve desired purposes.
Strategic communication does the following:
❖ Defines accurate and measurable objectives aligned with the organisation’s vision and mission.
❖ Analyses to understand the internal and external environment, stakeholders, and industry trends.
❖ Selects the most effective communication channels to reach the target audience.
❖ Ensures consistency in messaging through clear, relevant messages tailored to the target audience.
❖ Tracks results, measure the impact of communication, and adjust the strategy based on the results.
Strategy the Sovereign; Content the Gold State Coach
Given that content embody and reflect its strategy, the latter is the king while the former serves as his ceremonial carriage. Content can’t rule in corporate communications because what is posted isn’t as important as what people believe. This belief – which is instigated by strategy – is significant because it is how organisations wield influence.
It takes strategy for content to clearly and consistently align with organisational goals and map audience journeys. The Gold State Coach could have been any other carriage but for the fact that the British monarch rides in it. Ditto for content that can only be celebrated as on-brand, ontime, on-tone, and on-culture due to the strategy put into it. With content as the voice, strategy is the force that prevents this voice from being a noise, harnessing it to consistently reflect an organisation’s journey, mission and values while resonating with its audience.
In corporate communications, strategy is the very definition and at the intersection of messaging, branding, and executive profiling cum thought leadership. The playbook aligns all communication actions with the entity’s identity, values, and objectives, both internally and externally.
For business transformation sake, companies can’t be optimising for content when what they need is counsel. With machine learning increasingly churning out AI slop nowadays, humanity must generate meaning in communications, which is what strategy guarantees.
Strategy doesn’t have to eat content for breakfast
While not at the pinnacle of the perking order in corporate comms, content still occupy a pride of place given their visibility as press releases, decks, blogs, social media reels, shorts, proof points, internal newsletters and community updates. Corporate communications integrates these fragments into a consistent identity, ensuring that every tweet, report, or speech sounds like part of one voice.
Communications hits the bull’s eye when the narrative arc coherently connects relevant touchpoints such that donors are assured of sustainable impact, field staffers see their work matters, partners spot where to collaborate, and beneficiaries hear dignity restored. This is apparently beyond the ken of content. It is a strategy that has the wherewithal to make multiple audiences see themselves in one core narrative. Be that as it may, content still do a yeoman’s job in corporate communications by mirroring real life so that audiences can see themselves in the messaging.
People remember stories, not bullet points or data. The compelling and authentic narrative that content convey has the utility of capturing attention, evoking emotion, humanising your organization, and ensuring that your voice isn’t lost in the noise.
A synergy between strategy and content is therefore required for relatable posts centering human realities, creatively adapted to each platform and expressed in clear language, not corporate speak. As strategy sets the direction and storytelling (content) delivers the impact, momentum cum movement get activated and accelerated.
Uneasy lies the head that wears the Crown
The very essence of corporate communications depicts how integral strategy is to it. Of course, it takes strategy to drive business outcomes by influencing perception and shaping narratives. You’ve also got to be strategic to align messaging with organisational goals, anticipate potential crises, and evaluate the impact of your communications. It is through strategy that you can find unique ways to connect your organisation with diverse audiences, translate complex information into meaningful conversations, and make your company memorable.
Strategy shoulders this heavy weight of communications responsibilities in the following ways:
❖ It defines the overarching goals, aims and objectives that all communications efforts are meant to achieve, ensuring that the bigpicture, helicopter view is captured.
❖ It determines the outcomes the entire team is working toward, the audiences that matter most, the messaging that supports those aims, and the techniques we’ll use to measure effectiveness.
❖ It creates alignment and clarity on what success actually looks like at the senior leadership level.
❖ It ensures that content is grounded in how influence forms: how culture moves, meaning spreads, identity is signaled, and demand takes shape inside communities before brands even enter the conversation.
❖ It helps people make sense of what the organisation does, why it matters, and how it connects to their world. It is the bridge between doing and being known.
Conclusion
With corporate communications covering how organisations are positioned and regarded over time – across consumers, partners, policymakers, and internal teams, it takes strategy – which encompasses creativity, structure, and system design – to build and align these layers.
The organisation that is strategic about communications is the one that will be able to shape perception, earn credibility, build authority, wield influence, protect reputation, and sustain long-term organisational value. Content remains critical to the foregoing and should be harnessed even though corporate communications isn’t its kingdom!
The crux of the matter is that before crafting or developing any content, be sure to have a brainstorming session with eggheads. That way, the majesty of strategy will make the final output magical.
*Ugochukwu, a Branding Strategist and Media Trainer, welcomes feedback via nmiringwu@gmail.com