In CPCU 500, effective communication begins with clarity of purpose. A core step in the communication process is toset a clear communication objective, meaning the communicator defines what success looks like and what the audience should think, feel, or do as a result of the message. The question states that Daniel “thought about the most important thing that he wanted employees to take away from the presentation.” That phrasing directly describes establishing the intended outcome of the communication—his primary takeaway message—before building the content and delivery around it.
A clear objective guides key decisions such as which points to emphasize, what examples to use, how much detail is appropriate, and what call to action is needed. For a cyber risk presentation, an objective might be to ensure employees can recognize phishing attempts, follow password and multi-factor authentication practices, or understand reporting procedures. Without a defined objective, presentations often become information dumps rather than focused messages that change behavior.
The other options occur at different stages.Analyzing the audienceinvolves considering employees’ existing knowledge, roles, motivations, and concerns to tailor the message.Identifying potential problemsis anticipating barriers (technology, resistance, misunderstandings, sensitive topics).Asking for feedbacktypically happens during or after delivery to confirm understanding and improve future communications. Since Daniel is defining the key takeaway, he has completed the step of setting a clear communication objective.