Inside Communications & Media at the Department of State Development
Having been a Project Manager at the Department of State Development for approximately five years now, my eyes were widened on Tuesday at my induction meeting with the officers responsible for communications and media at the Department!
The Communications and Media Unit is essentially made up of two staff members - who each directly report to the Director General. Having only two staff members does not mean that the responsibility of the Unit is in any way diminished however; it means those two team members must be very good at their job!
The Department of State Development is responsible for the facilitation of Western Australia's major resource projects, for the most part funded and developed by the private sector. Wondering what might fit into that bucket? Perhaps you have heard of the Wheatstone LNG Project, being developed by Chevron? Or the Roy Hill Project, being developed in Port Hedland by Gina Rinehart? These major resource projects may be funded, constructed, managed and operated by private companies, but the State plays its role in 'keeping them honest.' Each project has stringent approvals to obtain, including: environmental approvals (State and Federal), financial guarantees, local content obligations, impact management to name a few. The Department of State Development plays the primary role in guiding and facilitating these approvals for the private company. The Department's website (created and published by the Communications and Media Unit) provides further context on the agency's core business.
So, where does Communications and Media fit into this mix? At my induction meeting with my supervisor, Natalie and her co-worker, Rick, I learned the role of the Unit is vital to internal communications - with the Department's Intranet and Internet to manage, the jointly-produced "Prospect" magazine to design and publish, media enquiries to handle - from newspapers, radio, the Minister's office, and investment opportunties for Western Australia to promote, for example, the 18th International Conference and Exhibition on Liquefied Natural Gas, being held in Perth from the 11th to 15th April, 2016. The LNG 18 event promises to be a significant showcasing opportunity for Western Australia as a 'LNG hub' of the world.
I am embarking on this internship experience very excited about the new insights I will gain from an organisation I have been proudly a part of for so long. Meeting with Natalie and Rick has filled me with confidence that I will brush up on all of my public relations skills, use my natural creativity (that is not always readily usable in the Department), and receive useful feedback and supervision during the experience. I am also sure I will learn far more about other teams across the Department - especially the area responsible for investment attraction. In a time when the 'mining boom' has eased, iron prices are down, and there are much fewer major resource projects being actively developed in the State, the Government needs to work hard to ensure that the private sector recognises what is unique and optimal about doing business in Western Australia.
My impression so far of this small, but powerful engine room that is Communications and Media is that they play an integral role in that job!
No comments:
Post a Comment