Director/VP Level (16-20 years)

Director, Global Policy Communications

This isn't just about drafting press releases; it's about being the C-suite's go-to advisor on how global policy shifts will hit our business. You'll own the narrative for our most complex regulatory challenges, from Brussels to Westminster, ensuring our voice is heard and our reputation protected. Think of yourself as the chief storyteller for our policy positions, translating dense legal speak into compelling arguments for everyone from journalists to parliamentarians.

Job ID
JD-PRPO-DIRPRPO-006
Department
Public Relations Communications
NOS Level
Strategic Leadership
OFQUAL Level
Level 8
Experience
Director/VP Level (16-20 years)

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

The Director, Global Policy Communications, is here to shape and protect our company's reputation and commercial interests in the face of ever-changing global regulations and political landscapes. You'll be the architect of our policy communications strategy, translating complex legislative and regulatory challenges into clear, compelling narratives that resonate with key audiences worldwide. This role sits right at the intersection of public policy, legal, and executive leadership, acting as the critical bridge between our internal strategy and external perception. When you do this job well, we'll see favourable media coverage on complex policy issues, our executives will be seen as trusted voices in critical debates, and we'll successfully mitigate significant regulatory risks before they become major problems. If it's not done right, we risk damaging our brand, facing stricter regulations, and losing our 'licence to operate' in key markets. The challenge is immense, honestly—you're often fighting battles on multiple fronts with limited resources, trying to influence outcomes that can feel out of your control. The reward, though? Seeing your strategic comms work genuinely shift public opinion or influence a legislative outcome that protects our business and benefits our customers.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: Your work directly shapes our company's ability to operate and grow in regulated markets. You're essentially the guardian of our policy reputation, influencing public and political opinion to create a favourable operating environment. Get it right, and you protect revenue streams and open new markets; get it wrong, and you could cost us millions in fines or lost opportunities.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Favourable Legislative/Regulatory Outcomes
  2. Desc: Directly correlating comms activities to favourable amendments or the prevention of problematic clauses in key legislation or regulatory proposals.
  3. Target: Influence 2-3 significant legislative or regulatory outcomes annually, with clear evidence of comms contribution.
  4. Freq: Annually, reviewed quarterly with Legal and Government Relations.
  5. Example: Successfully advocating for the removal of a data localisation clause in a proposed EU regulation, with media coverage reflecting our arguments and a positive outcome in the final text.
  6. Metric: Executive Confidence Score for Policy Comms
  7. Desc: Executive leadership's confidence in your team's ability to navigate and communicate on complex policy issues, especially during a crisis.
  8. Target: Achieve a 9/10 average confidence score from the executive leadership team (CEO, CLO, COO) via anonymous quarterly survey.
  9. Freq: Quarterly, via a brief, anonymous survey to C-suite and relevant VPs.
  10. Example: After a challenging parliamentary hearing, the CEO rates the comms team's preparation and rapid response as 'excellent' (10/10) in the survey.
  11. Metric: Reduction in Negative Share of Voice (SoV) on Critical Issues
  12. Desc: Measuring the percentage reduction in negative media mentions and sentiment related to specific, high-priority regulatory or policy issues for the company.
  13. Target: Reduce negative 'share of voice' on 3-5 critical regulatory issues by 30% year-over-year.
  14. Freq: Monthly, using media monitoring tools like Meltwater or Cision.
  15. Example: Our SoV on 'data privacy breaches' dropped from 15% to 10% over 12 months, despite increased industry scrutiny, due to our proactive comms strategy.
  16. Metric: Key Message Pull-Through in Tier 1 Media
  17. Desc: The percentage of your core policy messages (e.g., 'innovation requires balanced regulation') that appear verbatim or are clearly reflected in top-tier media coverage.
  18. Target: Achieve >75% message pull-through in Tier 1 media coverage for major policy announcements or campaigns.
  19. Freq: Per campaign/announcement, analysed post-launch.
  20. Example: Following our AI ethics policy launch, 4 out of 5 major articles (FT, WSJ, BBC) directly quoted or paraphrased our key message about 'responsible AI development through public-private partnership'.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Strategic Counsel & Proactive Risk Identification
  2. Desc: Your ability to anticipate policy shifts and proactively advise the C-suite on potential comms challenges, not just react to them.
  3. Evidence: You're regularly invited to C-suite strategy sessions. The CEO asks for your opinion on emerging geopolitical issues. You've got a track record of flagging potential comms crises months before they materialise, allowing us to prepare.
  4. Metric: Coalition & Third-Party Influence
  5. Desc: The effectiveness of your team in building and activating industry coalitions and securing third-party validation for our policy positions.
  6. Evidence: Our policy positions are consistently echoed by respected think tanks, academic experts, and industry associations. We're seen as a reliable partner in joint advocacy efforts. You can point to specific instances where a third party's voice amplified our message significantly.
  7. Metric: Crisis Communications Leadership
  8. Desc: Your calm, decisive leadership during high-stakes policy-related crises, ensuring a coordinated and effective communications response.
  9. Evidence: You're the first call when a policy crisis hits. You can quickly assemble and direct a 'war room' team. Post-crisis reviews consistently praise your strategic thinking and ability to manage media pressure. Your team feels supported and clear on their roles during intense periods.
  10. Metric: Team Development & Agency Management
  11. Desc: Your success in mentoring your team, fostering their growth, and ensuring our external agencies deliver exceptional value.
  12. Evidence: Your direct reports are consistently hitting their development goals and taking on more complex work. Agency reviews show clear KPIs being met and a strong collaborative relationship. You've successfully negotiated better terms or identified more effective agency partners.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Shaping the Narrative
  2. Daily: You'll get a real kick out of seeing your carefully crafted message appear in a major news outlet or hearing a policymaker echo our talking points. It's about influencing the conversation on critical issues.
  3. Motivator: Navigating Complexity & Risk
  4. Daily: You thrive on dissecting intricate global policy challenges and figuring out the best way to communicate our stance to diverse audiences. The higher the stakes, the more engaged you are.
  5. Motivator: Protecting & Building Reputation
  6. Daily: There's a deep satisfaction in knowing your work directly contributes to safeguarding the company's brand and ensuring we're seen as a responsible, innovative leader, especially when facing regulatory headwinds.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, this role isn't for everyone. You'll often feel like you're fighting with one hand tied behind your back, trying to defend a corporate position that you know is weak or hard to justify, caught between the legal department's caution and the executive team's ambition. You'll spend a significant chunk of your time being the 'internal translator,' explaining the political and regulatory risks of a new product to engineering and marketing teams who are convinced it's the greatest thing ever, only for them to ignore your advice. Months of careful, behind-the-scenes coalition building and messaging strategy can be instantly vaporised by a single out-of-context tweet from a high-profile politician, and you'll have to pick up the pieces. The 'Hurry Up and Wait' whiplash is real: frantic, all-hands-on-deck sprints for a legislative vote or hearing that gets postponed at the last minute, followed by weeks of silence. If you need clear, direct attribution for every win, you'll struggle here; it's nearly impossible to prove that your comms campaign was the *decisive* factor in getting a problematic clause removed from a bill.

Common Frustrations

  1. The 'Internal Translator Tax': Constantly explaining geopolitical risks to teams who just want to ship product.
  2. The 'Tweet Derailment': A single politician's tweet undoing months of careful strategy.
  3. Fighting with One Hand Tied: Defending corporate positions that are inherently difficult to justify.
  4. The Attribution Black Hole: Difficulty proving direct ROI for comms efforts in policy wins.
  5. The 'Hurry Up and Wait' Whiplash: Intense sprints followed by sudden delays, messing up planning.
  6. The Cost Centre Stigma: Only getting executive attention and resources when a five-alarm fire has already started.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. A predictable, 9-to-5 routine with minimal external pressure.
  2. Instant gratification or clear, immediate wins for every effort.
  3. Complete autonomy over corporate policy decisions (you advise, you don't decide).
  4. A quiet, solitary work environment; this is a highly collaborative and visible role.

ADHD Positives

  1. The high-stakes, rapid-response nature of policy comms, especially during a crisis, can be incredibly engaging and stimulating, playing to strengths in hyperfocus and quick thinking.
  2. The need to juggle multiple, diverse policy issues and stakeholder groups simultaneously can be a strength, offering constant novelty and varied tasks, which can prevent boredom.
  3. The role often requires connecting disparate pieces of information (e.g., a new regulation, a geopolitical event, a product launch) into a coherent narrative, which can suit divergent thinking patterns.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Maintaining focus on long-term, slow-burn policy campaigns can be challenging; we can help by breaking down large projects into smaller, more manageable sprints with clear interim milestones.
  2. The sheer volume of information (media monitoring, legislative updates) can be overwhelming; we can provide tools for automated summarisation and prioritisation, and encourage delegation.
  3. Organisational demands for meticulous documentation and reporting can be tedious; we'll provide templates and AI tools to streamline these processes, focusing on outcomes over perfect adherence to form.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. Strong verbal communication and storytelling skills, often associated with dyslexia, are invaluable for crafting compelling policy narratives and delivering impactful presentations.
  2. The ability to see the 'big picture' and make connections that others might miss can be a huge asset in geopolitical risk analysis and integrated campaign design.
  3. Creative problem-solving, especially under pressure, is a key strength that aligns well with crisis communications and developing novel advocacy approaches.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. The role involves significant reading of dense legislative texts and drafting of detailed responses; we offer access to advanced text-to-speech software, proofreading tools, and dedicated editorial support.
  2. Meticulous attention to spelling and grammar in high-stakes public documents is critical; we ensure there are multiple layers of review and encourage the use of AI-powered writing assistants.
  3. Organisational tasks like managing complex project plans might be easier with visual tools; we use platforms like Asana and Miro extensively for visual planning and tracking.

Autism Positives

  1. A deep, analytical focus on policy detail and regulatory frameworks can be a significant strength, allowing for thorough understanding and precise communication of complex issues.
  2. The ability to identify patterns and logical inconsistencies in policy arguments or media narratives can be incredibly valuable for strategic counter-messaging.
  3. A preference for direct, factual communication, when applied appropriately, can cut through political noise and deliver clear, unambiguous messages to internal stakeholders.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. The highly social and often ambiguous nature of stakeholder engagement and media relations can be draining; we support a hybrid work model and provide clear guidelines for social interactions where possible.
  2. Unexpected changes in policy or crisis situations can be disruptive; we aim for transparent communication about shifts and provide structured response plans to minimise uncertainty.
  3. Navigating unspoken political dynamics and 'inside baseball' can be tricky; we offer explicit coaching and context-setting for complex political situations and encourage direct questions.

Sensory Considerations

Our main office environment is a modern, open-plan space, which can sometimes be noisy, though we also have quiet zones and private meeting rooms for focused work. We operate a hybrid model, allowing for 2-3 days of remote work weekly, giving you flexibility to manage your sensory environment. Expect frequent video calls and occasional travel to Brussels, London, or other key policy hubs for meetings and events, which can be busy and stimulating.

Flexibility Notes

We believe in offering flexibility where it makes sense. We're happy to discuss specific accommodations to help you thrive, whether that's adjusting working hours, providing specific software, or structuring tasks differently. Your well-being and productivity are paramount.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: Director, Global Policy Communications (L6)
  2. Responsibilities: Own the global policy communications strategy for the entire organisation. This means you'll be the one mapping out how we talk about everything from AI regulation to data privacy across all our key markets, making sure it all hangs together.
  3. Act as the principal advisor to the C-suite (CEO, CLO, COO) on all policy comms matters. They'll come to you for honest, unvarnished advice on how emerging regulations or political events could impact our reputation and business. You'll need to translate complex policy into actionable comms plans for them.
  4. Drive the development and execution of integrated advocacy campaigns. This isn't just about media; it's about orchestrating earned media, executive keynotes, digital grassroots mobilisation, industry coalition building, and direct lobbying support to influence specific legislative or regulatory outcomes.
  5. Lead our rapid response and crisis communications efforts for policy-related issues. When a negative committee hearing or a leaked memo hits, you'll be the one in the 'war room' directing the comms strategy, drafting holding statements, and managing media inquiries under intense pressure.
  6. Represent the company to top-tier media outlets (e.g., BBC, Financial Times, Wall Street Journal) and senior regulators. You'll be the public face and voice for our policy positions, often on the record, so you need to be articulate, credible, and unflappable.
  7. Build and lead a high-performing global policy comms team, including managers and senior specialists. This means setting clear objectives, providing strategic guidance, fostering their development, and making sure they've got the resources they need to succeed.
  8. Manage and optimise our relationships with external PR and public affairs agencies globally. You'll be accountable for their performance, ensuring they deliver strategic value and align with our overall comms objectives, and you'll be the one negotiating contracts and budgets.
  9. Supervision: You're largely autonomous on day-to-day execution and strategic direction within your domain. Your monthly check-ins with the VP are for strategic alignment, major escalations, and resource discussions, not micro-management. You're expected to bring solutions, not just problems.
  10. Decision: You'll have full authority over the global policy communications strategy, including messaging, campaign execution, and media engagement. You'll manage a significant budget, typically in the range of £2M-£10M+ for your function, including agency spend and campaign costs. Hiring and firing decisions for your direct reports are yours, as are vendor selections up to a certain threshold. Major strategic shifts or comms responses to enterprise-level crises will require C-suite alignment, but you'll be leading the recommendation.
  11. Success: Success looks like our company being recognised as a thoughtful leader in policy debates, with our key messages consistently reflected in top-tier media. It means successfully mitigating major regulatory risks through proactive communications and seeing your team's work directly contribute to favourable legislative outcomes. Ultimately, it's about protecting and enhancing our reputation and commercial interests on a global scale.

Decision-Making Authority

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Tool: Legislative & Regulatory Summariser

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Tool: Sentiment & Trend Forecaster

Benefit: AI tools can analyse real-time social media, news coverage, and policy discussions to identify emerging negative narratives or shifts in public opinion on our key policy issues. It'll flag these trends before they hit the mainstream, giving you a crucial 24-48 hour head start to prepare a pre-buttal or adjust your comms strategy. Imagine knowing a potential crisis is brewing before anyone else does.

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Tool: Strategic Stakeholder Backgrounder Bot

Benefit: Before a high-stakes meeting with a senior policymaker, regulator, or top-tier journalist, prompt an AI to generate a concise briefing document. This includes their voting record, recent public statements, key staff, pet issues, and even potential angles they might take. This means you walk into every meeting armed with deep, relevant insights, ready to influence.

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Tool: First Draft Factory for Policy Comms

Benefit: Generate multiple first-draft versions of a press release, blog post, op-ed, or social media thread tailored to different audiences and tones (e.g., 'Explain our stance on AI regulation to a tech audience' vs. 'to a skeptical consumer audience' vs. 'to a European Commissioner'). This dramatically cuts down drafting time, letting your team focus on refining the strategic message and nuance, rather than starting from scratch.

Expect to save 15-25 hours weekly across your team by automating research, summarisation, and initial drafting tasks. Weekly time savings potential
We typically use 3-5 core AI tools, with a monthly investment of around £50-£200 per user. Time to value? You'll see benefits within 1-2 weeks of adoption. Typical tool investment
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12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

At this level, your foundation skills are about strategic leadership, influencing at the highest levels, and navigating complex organisational and political landscapes. It's less about doing the work yourself and more about directing it, shaping it, and ensuring it lands effectively.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

These are the specific capabilities you'll need to master the craft of global policy communications at a Director level. It's a blend of deep domain knowledge, strategic application, and expert use of our tech stack.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

You should be able to walk into this role having already run major policy comms campaigns end-to-end, having managed teams, and having advised senior leaders. This isn't a role where you'll be learning the ropes of policy strategy; you'll be defining them. We're looking for someone who's already been in the trenches and knows how to win.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

The Director of Global Policy Communications needs to be a futurist, not just a communicator. Your ability to anticipate, adapt, and integrate new tools and approaches will define our success in an increasingly complex and digitally driven policy landscape. It's about leading the change, not just managing it.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need roughly 16-20 years of progressive experience in public relations, public affairs, or policy communications. This should include a substantial period (at least 5-7 years) in a leadership role, managing teams and advising C-suite executives on complex global policy issues. We're looking for someone who has genuinely owned the policy comms function, not just contributed to it, and has a proven track record of navigating high-stakes regulatory environments, ideally within the technology, SaaS, or FinTech sectors. Experience working across multiple geographies (e.g., EU, UK, US, APAC) is absolutely essential.

Preferred Certifications

Recommended Activities

Career Progression Pathways

Entry Paths to This Role

Career Progression From This Role

Long Term Vision Potential Roles

Sector Mobility

Your deep expertise in navigating complex regulatory environments and shaping public opinion is highly transferable. You could move into similar senior public affairs or communications roles in other regulated industries like pharmaceuticals, financial services, energy, or even into government or international organisations.

How Zavmo Delivers This Role's Development

DISCOVER Phase: Skills Gap Analysis

Zavmo maps your current competencies against all requirements in this job description through conversational assessment. We evaluate your foundation skills (communication, strategic thinking), functional skills (CRM expertise, negotiation), and readiness for career progression.

Output: Personalised skills gap heat map showing strengths and priorities, estimated time to competency, neurodiversity accommodations.

DISCUSS Phase: Personalised Learning Pathway

Based on your DISCOVER results, Zavmo creates a personalised learning plan prioritised by impact: foundation skills first, then functional skills. We adapt to your learning style, pace, and neurodiversity needs (ADHD, dyslexia, autism).

Output: Week-by-week schedule, each module linked to specific job responsibilities, checkpoints and milestones.

DELIVER Phase: Conversational Learning

Learn through conversation, not boring modules. Zavmo uses 10 conversation types (Socratic dialogue, role-play, coaching, case studies) to build competence. Practice difficult QBR presentations, negotiate tough renewals, and handle churn conversations in a safe AI environment before facing real clients.

Example: "For 'Stakeholder Mapping', Zavmo will guide you through analysing a complex enterprise account, identifying key decision-makers, and building an engagement strategy."

DEMONSTRATE Phase: Competency Assessment

Zavmo automatically builds your evidence portfolio as you learn. Every conversation, practice scenario, and application example is captured and mapped to NOS performance criteria. When ready, your portfolio supports OFQUAL qualification claims and demonstrates competence to employers.

Output: Competency matrix, evidence portfolio (downloadable), qualification readiness, career progression score.

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