In strategic communication management, the first responsibility of a communication leader is to clarify expectations, intent, and context before proposing solutions. Option D is the correct first step because it allows the communication manager to fully understand the executive’s concerns, priorities, and interpretation of the survey results before taking action.
Employee engagement is a complex, multi-dimensional issue influenced by leadership behavior, organizational culture, management practices, workload, and communication effectiveness. An executive’s request to “make engagement a top priority” may reflect specific concerns—such as low trust in leadership, change fatigue, or morale issues within certain business units. Without clarifying these concerns directly with the executive, the communication manager risks misdiagnosing the problem and developing misaligned or ineffective responses.
Strategic communication management emphasizes the advisory role of communication professionals. Rather than immediately designing plans or involving other functions, the communication manager should engage in a strategic conversation with leadership to clarify goals, success measures, scope, urgency, and leadership expectations. This discussion also helps establish shared ownership and positions communication as a partner in problem-solving rather than a reactive service provider.
The other options are premature. Developing plans before clarifying objectives leads to tactical activity without strategic alignment. Meeting with direct reports assumes a solution before understanding the issue. Contacting Human Resources is important, but it should follow leadership alignment to ensure efforts are coordinated and focused on the right outcomes.
By meeting first with the executive, the communication manager demonstrates leadership, strategic thinking, and accountability. This step creates the foundation for informed collaboration, targeted research, and effective communication strategies that address the root causes of disengagement rather than its symptoms.