Mid-Level (2-5 years)

Corporate Communications Director

This role is all about getting our story out there, both inside and outside the company. You'll be the one making sure our messages are clear, consistent, and actually land with the right people. It's a hands-on job, where you'll own specific projects and campaigns from start to finish. Think of yourself as a key player in shaping how the world sees us, and how our own people understand what's going on. You're not just writing, you're translating complex business stuff into something everyone can get.

Job ID
JD-COPR-COPR-002
Department
Public Relations Communications
NOS Level
Level 5-6
OFQUAL Level
Level 5-6
Experience
Mid-Level (2-5 years)

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

The Corporate Communications Director (mid-level, mind) is here to make sure our company's voice is heard, and heard clearly. You'll independently run communications projects, whether that's a new product launch announcement, an internal campaign about our latest values, or getting our key messages into the right media. This role sits right at the heart of how we connect with our employees, customers, and the wider world. You're taking the big-picture strategy and turning it into actual, tangible communications that people read and understand. When you do this job well, our employees feel informed and engaged, our customers understand what we're doing, and the media tells our story accurately. If it's not done well, frankly, things get messy: employees feel out of the loop, customers get confused, and we might end up with a few awkward headlines. The challenge? Making complex stuff simple, and getting everyone on the same page. The reward? Seeing your words make a real difference, whether it's boosting morale or landing a big media hit.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: Your work directly influences how our brand is perceived, both internally and externally. Get it right, and we build trust, attract talent, and keep our customers happy. Get it wrong, and we risk reputational damage, employee disengagement, and even a hit to our bottom line. Essentially, you're a guardian of our company's voice and image. It's a big responsibility, honestly.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Media Placements & Message Pull-Through
  2. Desc: How many times our key messages appear in media coverage you've helped secure, and how accurately they're represented.
  3. Target: Secure 8-12 Tier 1/2 media placements per quarter with >75% key message pull-through.
  4. Freq: Quarterly review, tracked weekly.
  5. Example: You land a feature in The Times about our new product, and three of our four core messages are clearly visible in the article. That's a win.
  6. Metric: Internal Communications Engagement Rate
  7. Desc: The percentage of employees opening and clicking on your internal comms (e.g., intranet articles, newsletters).
  8. Target: Achieve an average open rate of >60% and click-through rate of >20% on internal comms campaigns you lead.
  9. Freq: Monthly, using platform analytics.
  10. Example: Your latest internal newsletter about our new hybrid working policy gets a 65% open rate and 25% click-through to the detailed FAQs. That shows people are paying attention.
  11. Metric: Social Media Content Performance
  12. Desc: The engagement (likes, shares, comments) and reach of social media content you draft or manage.
  13. Target: Maintain an average engagement rate of >3% and reach targets for company social channels (e.g., LinkedIn, X) for your assigned content.
  14. Freq: Weekly, using social media analytics tools.
  15. Example: A post you drafted about our latest charity initiative gets 500 likes, 50 shares, and 20 positive comments, significantly exceeding the typical engagement for similar posts.
  16. Metric: Project Delivery Timeliness
  17. Desc: How often your communications projects (e.g., press release cycles, internal campaign rollouts) are delivered on or before deadline.
  18. Target: Deliver 90% of assigned communications projects on time.
  19. Freq: Monthly, tracked via Asana/Monday.com.
  20. Example: You're responsible for the comms around a new feature launch. You get the press release, internal memo, and social assets out exactly on the agreed-upon date, allowing the product and sales teams to hit their targets.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Clarity and Tone of Voice
  2. Desc: How well your communications embody our brand's tone and are easily understood by the target audience, avoiding jargon and ambiguity.
  3. Evidence: Feedback from internal stakeholders (e.g., 'That's exactly what we wanted to say, but couldn't articulate'), positive sentiment in media coverage, minimal follow-up questions from employees after an announcement, consistent application of our message house principles in your work.
  4. Metric: Proactive Issue Spotting
  5. Desc: Your ability to flag potential communication risks or opportunities before they become major problems or missed chances.
  6. Evidence: You bring up a potential negative media angle on a new policy before it's announced, suggesting a pre-emptive FAQ. You identify a trending news story that we could credibly comment on, leading to an opportunistic media placement. Your manager trusts your judgment on what might 'go wrong' or 'go right'.
  7. Metric: Stakeholder Satisfaction (Project Level)
  8. Desc: How happy internal teams (like Product, HR, Legal) are with the communications support you provide for their projects.
  9. Evidence: Teams consistently seek your input early in their project planning. They give positive feedback directly to you or your manager. They see you as a reliable and helpful partner, not just a 'words person' they hand things over to. They'll say things like, 'You really helped us simplify that complex message for the sales team.'
  10. Metric: Crisis Preparedness Contribution
  11. Desc: Your contribution to updating and testing crisis communication plans, ensuring we're ready for the unexpected.
  12. Evidence: You've updated a section of our crisis comms playbook based on a recent industry event. You actively participate in a 'tabletop' crisis drill, offering practical suggestions for messaging. You're seen as someone who thinks ahead about potential risks and how we'd talk about them.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Seeing Your Words Make an Impact
  2. Daily: You get a real buzz when you see a positive news story that you helped craft, or when an internal announcement you wrote genuinely clarifies things for employees. You enjoy the process of taking a complex idea and turning it into something clear and compelling.
  3. Motivator: Solving Communication Puzzles
  4. Daily: You love the challenge of figuring out the best way to communicate a tricky message, or how to reach a sceptical audience. It's like a puzzle where the pieces are words, channels, and stakeholder opinions. You enjoy crafting the perfect 'message house' for a new initiative.
  5. Motivator: Being a Trusted Advisor (on comms)
  6. Daily: You enjoy being the go-to person for project teams when they need help with their messaging. You like being consulted early on, offering advice on how to phrase things, and helping them avoid communication pitfalls. You're seen as the 'comms expert' for your projects.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, this job isn't for everyone. You'll spend a fair bit of time chasing people for approvals, often getting conflicting feedback that means you have to rewrite things multiple times. Sometimes, your beautifully crafted message will get watered down by legal or other teams until it's barely recognisable. You might be pulled into 'urgent' requests at the last minute, only for the project to be deprioritised a day later. If you need every piece of your work to be perfect and go out exactly as you envisioned, you'll probably find this frustrating.

Common Frustrations

  1. Being brought into a project at the eleventh hour and expected to magic up a comms plan overnight.
  2. The constant back-and-forth with Legal, who often want to say nothing, while you need to build trust.
  3. Your carefully chosen words getting 'wordsmithed' into corporate jargon by a committee.
  4. Spending ages crafting a perfect message, only for it to be ignored or misunderstood.
  5. The feeling that you're always trying to prove the value of communications with 'soft' metrics.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. A strictly 9-5 schedule (crises don't respect office hours).
  2. Complete creative freedom without stakeholder input.
  3. A role where you only write and never have to deal with people.
  4. Guaranteed immediate, tangible ROI for every single piece of work.

ADHD Positives

  1. The varied nature of projects and fast pace can be engaging and prevent boredom.
  2. The need to quickly pivot and respond to new information can suit rapid thinking.
  3. High-stakes situations often bring intense focus and energy.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Keeping multiple project threads organised can be tough; we use Asana and encourage detailed notes and reminders.
  2. The need for meticulous attention to detail in messaging might require extra review steps or tools for proofreading.
  3. Managing interruptions and urgent requests requires strong prioritisation skills; we can help you set up 'focus time' blocks.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. Strong verbal communication and strategic thinking are highly valued, often strengths for dyslexic individuals.
  2. The ability to see the 'big picture' and connect disparate ideas is crucial in comms strategy.
  3. Empathy and understanding different perspectives are key, which are often strengths.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. The heavy writing component can be challenging; we use grammar and spell-checking tools (like Grammarly) and encourage peer review.
  2. Proofreading is critical; we can pair you with a colleague for final checks on important documents.
  3. Complex document formatting can be time-consuming; we use templates extensively and can provide support for layout.

Autism Positives

  1. A strong logical approach to message construction and strategy can be very effective.
  2. The ability to focus deeply on understanding complex topics to communicate them clearly.
  3. Direct and honest communication is valued, especially when providing clear, factual information during a crisis.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Navigating unspoken social cues and internal politics can be difficult; we encourage direct communication and can provide explicit guidance on stakeholder dynamics.
  2. The need for rapid, nuanced responses in dynamic situations might be stressful; we can provide clear frameworks for crisis response and pre-approved holding statements.
  3. Sensory overload in open-plan offices or busy meeting rooms; we offer noise-cancelling headphones and options for quieter workspaces or remote work when appropriate.

Sensory Considerations

Our main office is a fairly typical open-plan environment, so there can be background noise and general office chatter. We do offer quiet zones and meeting rooms for focused work, and encourage the use of noise-cancelling headphones. Social interaction is a big part of this role, but we balance in-person meetings with virtual ones, and you'll have control over your calendar to manage your energy levels.

Flexibility Notes

We offer hybrid working, usually expecting you in the office 2-3 days a week, but we can be flexible depending on individual needs and project demands. We're more interested in the quality of your work than where you do it. We also understand that life happens, so we aim to be as accommodating as possible with schedules.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: Mid-Level Professional (2-5 years)
  2. Responsibilities: Independently manage specific communications projects from planning to execution, like a new product feature announcement or an internal campaign for a company initiative.
  3. Draft clear and compelling content for various channels, including press releases, internal memos, social media posts, and website updates, ensuring it aligns with our message house.
  4. Take ownership of media monitoring for assigned topics, identifying relevant news, sentiment, and competitive coverage, then summarising it for senior team members.
  5. Coordinate with internal teams (e.g., Product, HR, Legal) to gather information, get approvals, and ensure messages are consistent across the organisation.
  6. Support crisis communications efforts by drafting holding statements, monitoring media, and helping to maintain our crisis comms playbook under guidance from senior colleagues.
  7. Maintain and update media lists, ensuring our journalist contacts are accurate and relevant for specific outreach campaigns.
  8. Analyse the performance of your communications activities, pulling data on open rates, media coverage, and social engagement, and sharing insights with your manager.
  9. Supervision: You'll have weekly check-ins with your Senior Director to discuss project progress, challenges, and priorities. For routine tasks, you'll operate independently, but for anything new or complex, you'll consult your manager. They're there to help you learn and grow, not to micromanage.
  10. Decision: You'll make routine decisions within your project scope, like choosing the best internal channel for a specific announcement or deciding on a social media post's headline. Any decisions with significant financial impact, reputational risk, or requiring cross-departmental buy-in will need your manager's approval. Think of it as: you propose, they approve for bigger stuff.
  11. Success: Success looks like reliably delivering your assigned comms projects on time and to a high standard. Your content will be clear, on-brand, and achieve its intended purpose (e.g., getting media coverage, informing employees). You'll be seen as a dependable and proactive member of the team, someone who can spot potential issues and propose solutions before they become problems.

Decision-Making Authority

Save 10-15 hours weekly with AI-powered comms tools

Let's be real, a lot of comms work can be a bit repetitive, or just takes ages to get off the ground. But what if you could cut down on the grunt work and focus on the really strategic, impactful stuff? That's where AI comes in. We're not talking about replacing you, but giving you a serious superpower.

ID: ✍️

Tool: First Draft Automation

Benefit: Use AI tools like Jasper or Copy.ai, trained on our brand guidelines and message house, to generate initial drafts of routine comms. Think earnings summaries, new hire announcements, or blog post outlines. It'll get you past the 'blank page' syndrome in minutes, not hours.

ID:

Tool: Real-Time Sentiment Analysis

Benefit: Our media intelligence platforms (like Brandwatch or Cision) use AI to instantly analyse sentiment and thematic trends across media and social during a launch or a tricky situation. This means you can spot issues or opportunities in minutes, allowing you to pivot your strategy much faster than manual analysis ever could.

ID:

Tool: Interview Prep Question Generator

Benefit: Feed an AI model an executive's past interviews, company announcements, and potential controversial topics. It'll then generate a list of tough, nuanced questions a journalist might ask. It's like having a 'murder board' assistant, helping you prepare your execs more thoroughly and efficiently.

ID:

Tool: Global Tone & Nuance Check

Benefit: Drafting a global announcement? Use AI tools to quickly scan the text for cultural phrases, idioms, or tones that might be misinterpreted or cause offence in key international markets. It's a quick sanity check that can save a lot of headaches and ensure your message lands correctly everywhere.

10-15 hours per week Weekly time savings potential
We invest approximately £50-£150/month per user in these tools. Typical tool investment
Explore AI Productivity for Corporate Communications Director →

12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

Beyond the technical stuff, you'll need a solid set of 'human' skills to really thrive here. These are the things that help you navigate tricky conversations, solve problems, and generally be a good colleague. They're just as important as knowing your way around a press release.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

These are the specific skills you'll need to actually do the job, the methodologies and ways of thinking that underpin effective corporate communications. It's not just about knowing the tools, but knowing *how* to use them strategically.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

We're looking for someone who isn't starting from scratch but is ready to step up and own projects. You should have a foundational understanding of how corporate communications works and be eager to deepen your expertise. This isn't an entry-level role, but it's also not about managing a team just yet. It's about becoming a really solid, independent comms professional.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

The comms landscape is always evolving, and we expect you to evolve with it. These aren't just buzzwords; they're practical skills that will make you a more valuable and effective comms professional. We'll support you in learning, but the drive has to come from you.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need roughly 2-5 years of hands-on experience in a corporate communications, public relations, or internal comms role. This isn't an entry-level position, so we're looking for someone who has already managed projects independently, drafted a variety of content, and has a good grasp of media relations. Experience working in a fast-paced environment, perhaps within a tech company or a large agency, would be a definite plus. We want to see that you've been in the trenches and know how to get things done.

Preferred Certifications

Recommended Activities

Career Progression Pathways

Entry Paths to This Role

Career Progression From This Role

Long Term Vision Potential Roles

Sector Mobility

The skills you'll build here are highly transferable. You could move into other industries (e.g., finance, healthcare, consumer goods) or even explore roles in marketing, public affairs, or investor relations, especially if you develop a strong understanding of financial comms. The core ability to craft messages and manage reputation is universally valued.

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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