In strategic communication management, effective leadership advising always begins with clarity of purpose. When a CEO requests the development of a training program for managers, the first and most critical step is to clarify the program’s goals and align them with organizational strategy. Without this foundational understanding, subsequent actions risk being misaligned, inefficient, or ineffective.
Clarifying goals establishes what the organization expects the training to achieve—such as improving leadership communication, supporting change initiatives, strengthening employee engagement, or reducing performance gaps. It also identifies target audiences, desired behavioral outcomes, success measures, and how the training supports broader business objectives. Developing a communication strategy at this stage ensures that the training program is positioned correctly, supported by leadership, and integrated into the organization’s culture and priorities.
Options B and D, while important, are premature without strategic clarity. Drafting a course outline or researching resources assumes that the expert already understands what problem the training is meant to solve. Similarly, Option C focuses on promotion rather than substance and skips the essential planning phase required for credibility and effectiveness.
From an advising and leading management perspective, communication professionals are expected to guide leaders toward evidence-based, purpose-driven decisions. By starting with goal clarification and strategy development, the expert demonstrates leadership, manages expectations, and creates a framework for meaningful evaluation. This step also enables informed decisions about content, delivery methods, timing, and measurement.
Strategic communication is not about producing outputs quickly; it is about ensuring that every activity serves a defined organizational need. Establishing clear goals first ensures the training program is relevant, impactful, and capable of delivering lasting value to both managers and the organization as a whole.