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Some of the worst-handled crises in recent memory probably looked pretty alright on an internal dashboard. Systems came back online fast, alerts went out on schedule, and someone in the room called it a win.
But what the dashboard completely missed was the four-hour window where journalists had to piece the story together from an old press release and a Reddit thread. The company never got to share its perspective - because publicly - it said nothing.
They fixed the operational crisis but ignored the public one, leaving PR teams to clean up the mess long after the systems came back online.
And yet, when most organizations go looking for crisis communications software, they end up buying another operations tool that tracks incidents, notifies employees, and manages internal workflows. Useful, yes. But not quite what PR teams need when the story is moving fast and the company needs full control of its comms.
According to Edelman, 53% of consumers assume a brand is hiding something if it fails to respond promptly. The irony is that many organizations aren't hiding anything. They just don't have the infrastructure to clear their name fast enough.
This article is about that infrastructure. We’ll cover the features that let PR teams publish verified information quickly, give journalists somewhere credible to go, and keep control of the narrative before someone else writes it for them.
Most people define crisis communication as the process of communicating during a crisis.
Technically, they're right, but practically, that’s not very helpful.
For PR teams, crisis communication is the discipline of making sure stakeholders can find accurate, verified information when uncertainty is at its highest. That includes journalists, customers, employees, investors, regulators, and, increasingly, AI-powered search systems.
Crisis communication should be treated as a proactive exercise. It requires the channels, processes, and infrastructure to publish updates quickly, maintain a single source of truth, and keep information current as a situation develops. For PR teams, an owned newsroom is often the strongest crisis communication best practice, as it is visible, credible, easy to update, and built around the way journalists already look for information.
These two shouldn’t be treated as one and the same.
Crisis management software helps the organization manage the incident, while crisis communications software supports PR teams in communicating what is happening so that they can be part of the public story.
| Crisis communications software | Crisis management software | |
| Primary goal | Communicate the incident clearly and credibly | Manage and resolve the incident |
| Primary users | PR, communications, media relations | IT, security, operations, legal |
| Focus | External communication | Internal coordination |
| Key functions | Newsrooms, updates, media inquiries, public information | Incident tracking, alerts, workflows, escalation paths |
| Audience | Journalists, customers, investors, regulators, the public | Employees and internal stakeholders |
| Success looks like | Stakeholders can find trusted information | The problem is resolved |
Both are important. But if your job is to protect your organization’s reputation, support journalists, and keep stakeholders informed, crisis communications software supports that in ways that operational tools were never designed to solve.
When a crisis breaks, it’s PR’s job to get accurate information out, keep it updated, and make it easy to find.
To make that happen, you need to be able to do three things:
According to PRSA, brands that respond within two hours see 61% better sentiment recovery than those that delay. Speed is of the essence, sure, but without credibility, it sometimes adds to the chaos.
So what does that actually look like in software?
For PR teams, the most important features are the ones that help you publish quickly, keep information accurate, manage media demand, and prove whether your response is being seen.
Let’s start with the big one.
When a PR crisis breaks, people start looking for answers fast, and a crisis newsroom gives all of them one place to go.
Instead of relying on scattered social posts, emailed statements, or PDFs that go out of date the moment they are sent, a crisis newsroom acts as the central hub for verified information. It can house your updates, statements, FAQs, media contacts, and other details that need to stay current as the situation develops.
A crisis is a terrible time to discover that your website cannot handle a crisis.
Dark sites are pre-built crisis websites that remain hidden from the public until they are needed. They can be activated within minutes to provide a dedicated source of information during an incident.
This is useful for two reasons: First, it removes the need to build a crisis communications hub under pressure. Second, it gives you a backup communications channel if your primary website is unavailable, compromised, or overwhelmed by traffic.
If you want to avoid losing trust during a crisis, don’t leave people wondering whether your information is still current. A statement published four hours ago might as well be four days old if the situation is changing quickly.
A live news feed creates a running timeline of verified updates, giving journalists and stakeholders a clear view of the latest information without forcing them to piece together a story from multiple sources.
There are two ways access control can go wrong in a crisis: everyone can publish, or nobody can. Choose the first and you create risk. Opt for the second and you’ll never get a word in.
Clearly, a middle ground is necessary.
Good crisis communications software gives teams enough control to protect the message without turning every update into a legal nightmare. Content can be drafted, reviewed, approved, and published by the right people, with clear ownership at every step.
Every PR team has lived through some version of this: A journalist emails three different people, and suddenly nobody knows who owns the request anymore.
During a crisis, media inquiries need to be managed from one central place. Shared media inquiry management gives your team visibility into every request, who is handling it, what has been said, and what still needs a response. That leaves you with a more coordinated media response and fewer unpleasant surprises.
When the dust settles after a crisis, someone will ask the inevitable question:
"How did we do?"
Without proper reporting, you’ll have no way to answer without making assumptions.
Good crisis communication software gives you a clear picture of what happened.
That visibility helps teams evaluate their response, identify gaps, and make better decisions the next time a crisis occurs.
Research shows that 60.3% of organizations now use dedicated crisis tools. The real advantage is being able to respond to a crisis AND learn from one.
Most crisis software is designed to help organizations manage the incident.
Presspage is built around crisis communication best practices for PR, giving teams the infrastructure to decide what happens next.
A Presspage newsroom lets you publish verified information quickly, keep it updated as situations evolve, and gives journalists a trusted source of truth throughout a crisis.
With features including crisis newsrooms, dark sites, live updates, shared media inquiries, role-based permissions, and crisis reporting, Presspage helps you move quickly without sacrificing accuracy or control.
Because when a crisis breaks, stakeholders want answers. And the faster you can provide them, the more likely you are to stay part of the story rather than reacting to it.
Crisis communication software helps organizations communicate during a crisis by providing tools to publish updates, manage media inquiries, share verified information, and keep stakeholders informed. Unlike general crisis management platforms, it focuses on external communication rather than internal response coordination.
Crisis management software is designed to help organizations respond to an incident through workflows, task management, employee alerts, and operational coordination. Crisis communication software helps PR teams communicate that response to journalists, customers, investors, regulators, and other stakeholders.
To comply with crisis communication best practices, PR teams should prioritize features that help them publish and manage information quickly and accurately. Key features include a crisis newsroom, dark sites, live news feeds, access controls and permissions, shared media inquiry management, and crisis reporting.
A crisis newsroom is a dedicated section of a company's online newsroom or website used to publish verified information during a crisis. It acts as a single source of truth for journalists, stakeholders, and the public, providing updates, statements, FAQs, and other critical information as events unfold.
A single source of truth helps reduce misinformation and speculation by giving stakeholders one trusted location for the latest information. It also makes it easier for journalists, customers, and AI search systems to find accurate updates without relying on outdated or third-party sources.
If you take one thing away from this piece, let it be this: Crisis communications software should make sure that when people are looking for answers, they find yours.
Journalists, customers, stakeholders, and AI search systems all need a source during a crisis. The question is whether it will be you or someone else's interpretation of events.
The organizations that come out of crises with their reputation intact have somewhere credible to publish, and something ready to go live.
Because when the pressure is on, “we’re working on a statement” is not much of a PR strategy. But having one ready - and a place to publish it - is.
Want to see how Presspage helps PR teams publish fast, manage media demand, and keep control of the story during a crisis? Request a demo.