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单词 crisis management
释义

Definition of crisis management in English:

crisis management

noun
mass noun
  • The process by which a business or other organization deals with a sudden emergency situation.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Of 146 companies and executives surveyed, 64 percent said they have a crisis management plan in place, and 62 percent have designated a crisis management team.
    • Companies must also have a crisis management plan which is tried and tested to the satisfaction of the board of directors.
    • He also serves on the university's assessment committee, co-chairs its institutional response team and serves on a five-member crisis management team.
    • It's become so widespread throughout the community that Miscellany was told recently that some crisis management experts are recommending it as an interview tactic for corporate spokespeople.
    • If you do not practice risk management, you can expect to get a lot of practice at crisis management.
    • It has to be done in this administration in that the bubble of income is only available in this next four-year window, or we'll go into crisis management.
    • Doing crisis management often means curing a sickness that has left behind clouded visions and sluggish people.
    • It is important to point out that, despite brief flare-ups and distractions, the crisis management team in the Situation Room worked well together.
    • Business continuity and crisis management has moved beyond being a security issue to being a well-understood business resilience issue: Security is just one layer of the onion.
    • As an example, let's say you are putting the finishing touches on an upcoming promotion for the client, and suddenly another need arises requiring strategic crisis management.
    • Murerwa admitted: ‘We have virtually moved to the practice of crisis management in place of sustainable planning for development.’
    • There are big issues of governance, debt, aid, trade and development that will have to be addressed once the immediate crisis management is over.
    • On the eve of the Second World War, many of the ambassadors serving the United Kingdom abroad did their share of crisis management.
    • Also, a crisis management team has now been created.
    • However, business-as-usual has taken a back seat to the demands of crisis management.
    • Fewer than 10 per cent have crisis management, business recovery and business resumption plans in place.
    • And they have both the crisis management processes and the underlying standards of behaviour that are likely to soften the impact of such risks when they do happen.
    • Yet policies tend to be attached to the central features of crisis management.
    • Apologizing for chronic or acute malfeasance is popular in public-relations courses and in PR firms' case studies, but it rarely works in true crisis management.
    • The health system has simply been crisis-ridden and characterised by crisis management.
    • He's one of the world's foremost experts on crisis management, terrorism and homeland security.
    • Atsuyuki Sassa, an expert on crisis management, gave a lecture on emergency rescue operations in which he emphasized importance of integrated command authority.
    • Doctors are sceptical about this promise, saying the Health Department was stuck in an endless cycle of crisis management.
    • A decision to so dramatically change direction smacks of crisis management.
    • The plan deals with both crisis management and subsequent business recovery.
    • These days, much of his time is devoted to crisis management.
    • The company has had plenty of practice in crisis management since it launched in October 1998, but it obviously hasn't learnt many lessons.
    • The Treasury's current crisis management proposals are short-term, unplanned for, and likely to plunge service delivery into disarray.
    • I haven't even mentioned crime investigations, crisis management and business continuity.
    • But once students and staff return to start the new semester, one of the first orders of business will be to reconvene the crisis management team.
    • A Nigerian newspaper commented recently: ‘We have a crisis on our hands, which only expert crisis management can solve.’
    • The second is based on a premise that modern medicine is generally practised as crisis management: wait until the diagnosis, then start treatment.
    • If anyone is an authority by now on crisis management, they should be.
    • In any of these cases, confirmation of the information by another sensor is necessary to identify the detected vehicle or to discriminate between civilians and military in a crisis management situation.
    • Besides, it will remain under crisis management until it can regain critical mass in the PC industry - and that's a long way off.
    • The biggest problem now, purely from a crisis management point of view, is that we have got the information.
    • For months, the government has been about crisis management, and leadership has been in survival mode.
    • She said that the incidents in Newcastle and Birmingham were the results of crisis management and not cost cutting.
    • They want to work in an environment that presents them with a sense of safety and protection, and for a company that is committed to administering and implementing a crisis management strategy.
    • Since September 11, business is more receptive to the value of crisis management strategy and business continuity planning.

Definition of crisis management in US English:

crisis management

nounˈkrīsis ˈˌmanijmənt
  • The process by which a business or other organization deals with a sudden emergency situation.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Yet policies tend to be attached to the central features of crisis management.
    • There are big issues of governance, debt, aid, trade and development that will have to be addressed once the immediate crisis management is over.
    • Doing crisis management often means curing a sickness that has left behind clouded visions and sluggish people.
    • A Nigerian newspaper commented recently: ‘We have a crisis on our hands, which only expert crisis management can solve.’
    • Murerwa admitted: ‘We have virtually moved to the practice of crisis management in place of sustainable planning for development.’
    • I haven't even mentioned crime investigations, crisis management and business continuity.
    • She said that the incidents in Newcastle and Birmingham were the results of crisis management and not cost cutting.
    • Also, a crisis management team has now been created.
    • Doctors are sceptical about this promise, saying the Health Department was stuck in an endless cycle of crisis management.
    • If you do not practice risk management, you can expect to get a lot of practice at crisis management.
    • The second is based on a premise that modern medicine is generally practised as crisis management: wait until the diagnosis, then start treatment.
    • These days, much of his time is devoted to crisis management.
    • However, business-as-usual has taken a back seat to the demands of crisis management.
    • Companies must also have a crisis management plan which is tried and tested to the satisfaction of the board of directors.
    • For months, the government has been about crisis management, and leadership has been in survival mode.
    • If anyone is an authority by now on crisis management, they should be.
    • The health system has simply been crisis-ridden and characterised by crisis management.
    • The company has had plenty of practice in crisis management since it launched in October 1998, but it obviously hasn't learnt many lessons.
    • The Treasury's current crisis management proposals are short-term, unplanned for, and likely to plunge service delivery into disarray.
    • Fewer than 10 per cent have crisis management, business recovery and business resumption plans in place.
    • A decision to so dramatically change direction smacks of crisis management.
    • Apologizing for chronic or acute malfeasance is popular in public-relations courses and in PR firms' case studies, but it rarely works in true crisis management.
    • The plan deals with both crisis management and subsequent business recovery.
    • In any of these cases, confirmation of the information by another sensor is necessary to identify the detected vehicle or to discriminate between civilians and military in a crisis management situation.
    • On the eve of the Second World War, many of the ambassadors serving the United Kingdom abroad did their share of crisis management.
    • Since September 11, business is more receptive to the value of crisis management strategy and business continuity planning.
    • The biggest problem now, purely from a crisis management point of view, is that we have got the information.
    • Of 146 companies and executives surveyed, 64 percent said they have a crisis management plan in place, and 62 percent have designated a crisis management team.
    • Atsuyuki Sassa, an expert on crisis management, gave a lecture on emergency rescue operations in which he emphasized importance of integrated command authority.
    • It is important to point out that, despite brief flare-ups and distractions, the crisis management team in the Situation Room worked well together.
    • Besides, it will remain under crisis management until it can regain critical mass in the PC industry - and that's a long way off.
    • It's become so widespread throughout the community that Miscellany was told recently that some crisis management experts are recommending it as an interview tactic for corporate spokespeople.
    • They want to work in an environment that presents them with a sense of safety and protection, and for a company that is committed to administering and implementing a crisis management strategy.
    • It has to be done in this administration in that the bubble of income is only available in this next four-year window, or we'll go into crisis management.
    • And they have both the crisis management processes and the underlying standards of behaviour that are likely to soften the impact of such risks when they do happen.
    • He also serves on the university's assessment committee, co-chairs its institutional response team and serves on a five-member crisis management team.
    • But once students and staff return to start the new semester, one of the first orders of business will be to reconvene the crisis management team.
    • As an example, let's say you are putting the finishing touches on an upcoming promotion for the client, and suddenly another need arises requiring strategic crisis management.
    • He's one of the world's foremost experts on crisis management, terrorism and homeland security.
    • Business continuity and crisis management has moved beyond being a security issue to being a well-understood business resilience issue: Security is just one layer of the onion.
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更新时间:2024/12/27 17:18:01