Employee Perceptions Of Internal Crisis Communication In Ghana’s Public Sector: A Study Of COCOBOD
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UniMAC
Abstract
This study examined employee perceptions of internal crisis communication at the Ghana
Cocoa Board (COCOBOD), exploring how communication practices influence trust in
management and identifying barriers to effective information flow during organisational crises.
Guided by the Situational Crisis Communication Theory (SCCT), the research adopted a
qualitative case study design, collecting data through semi-structured interviews with ten
employees across different hierarchical levels at COCOBOD headquarters in Accra. Thematic
analysis revealed that employees perceive timeliness, clarity, and adequacy as critical
dimensions of effective internal crisis communication. Delays in disseminating information
exacerbated uncertainty and anxiety, while ambiguous or incomplete messages hindered
employees' ability to respond appropriately. The study found that transparency, responsiveness,
and consistency in communication strongly influenced employee trust in management. Open
and empathetic communication fostered confidence in leadership, whereas inconsistent or
opaque messaging eroded trust and heightened scepticism. Key barriers to effective
communication included structural and hierarchical bottlenecks, limited feedback mechanisms,
and cultural constraints that discouraged open dialogue and restricted two-way communication.
The findings demonstrate that while COCOBOD has established some internal communication
mechanisms, persistent challenges related to organisational structure and culture undermine
their effectiveness. The study contributes to crisis communication literature by validating
SCCT in an internal communication context within Ghana's public sector. Practical
recommendations include enhancing communication timeliness and clarity, strengthening
feedback mechanisms, fostering transparency, addressing structural bottlenecks, and
promoting a culture of open dialogue to improve organisational resilience and employee trust
during crises.
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