In strategic communication management, a well-formed objective must meet the SMART criteria: specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and time-bound. Option C—“Sixty percent of employees enroll in ethical behavior training by 12 June”—clearly satisfies all five elements and therefore represents a strong communication objective rather than a tactic or activity.
This objective is specific because it identifies a precise outcome: employee enrollment in ethical behavior training. It is measurable because progress can be tracked numerically as a percentage of employees enrolled. It is time-bound, with a clear deadline of 12 June, which allows communicators and leaders to plan, monitor progress, and evaluate success. The objective is also achievable and relevant, assuming the organization has access to training resources and the goal aligns with broader ethics and compliance priorities.
The other options fail to meet SMART standards. Producing a brochure and holding a town hall describe activities or outputs, not outcomes. They explain what will be done, not what change in knowledge, attitude, or behavior is expected as a result. Increasing staff awareness is closer to an objective, but it is vague and not measurable; without a defined metric or timeframe, success cannot be objectively assessed.
Strategic communication management emphasizes outcome-based objectives because they connect communication efforts to organizational value. SMART objectives provide clarity, accountability, and a basis for evaluation. They also enable communication leaders to demonstrate impact to senior management by linking communication efforts to tangible results.
By focusing on a measurable behavioral outcome within a defined timeframe, option C exemplifies best practice in strategy development and ensures communication activities are purposeful, assessable, and aligned with organizational goals