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Nick currently develops and teaches graduate-level crisis management courses at the Johns Hopkins University. He is the founder and retired Chairman and CEO of Nichols • Dezenhall Communications Management Group, Ltd. With over three decades in the communications business, he specializes in crisis management and risk communications.
Nick began his career as an investigative news correspondent. He left the news business to become Chief of Staff for the Wisconsin Legislature’s Joint Committee on Finance, and was subsequently appointed State Deputy Secretary of Revenue.
Nick relocated to Washington, D.C. to become senior media spokesperson for the Cuban-Haitian Task Force under the Carter and Reagan administrations, where he managed crisis communications following the controversial 1980 Mariel boatlift.
Before forming Nichols • Dezenhall, Nick was senior vice president and account group manager at Needham Porter Novelli (Omnicom), then the fourth largest public relations agency in the world.
Nick has appeared as a spokesperson on television network news programs including ABC’s Nightline, NBC’s The Today Show and the CBS Evening News. He has also participated as a guest expert on numerous talk shows. His opinions and recommendations on how to combat eco-terrorism have been the topic of Congressional testimony and featured in national, regional and business publications.
Nick is a frequent lecturer on the topics of crisis management, high-stakes media relations, environmental policy, domestic terrorism, and the global challenges confronting free enterprise. He has addressed state and federal legislators, federal agency executives, numerous international and domestic trade associations, academic institutions, corporations, and policy groups including the National Governors Association, American Legislative Exchange Council and the State Legislative Leaders Foundation. He is a senior fellow at the Center for the Defense of Free Enterprise.
Nick is the author of a book, “Rules for Corporate Warriors,” which was published in October, 2001. He has also written a series of articles and corporate publications that define and examine crisis management strategies and media relations tactics.
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Nick Nichols (Dec 27, 2008)
‘Twas two days after Christmas and all through the land
Retailers were panicked—huge supply, no demand.
Consumers weren’t spending, like they did in the past,
For fear... more
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Nick Nichols (Nov 15, 2008)
J.R.R. Tolkein cautioned in The Hobbit that, “It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations if you happen to live near one.” For those who value private... more
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Nick Nichols (Oct 04, 2008)
Last January I wrote a column entitled: Are Polar Bears Edible? I pointed out that during good times, people worry about whether polar bears will have ice in one-hundred... more
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Nick Nichols (Oct 04, 2008)
Last January I wrote a column entitled: Are Polar Bears Edible? I pointed out that during good times, people worry about whether polar bears will have ice in one-hundred... more
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Nick Nichols (Aug 23, 2008)
Like millions of other Americans, I have contributed copious amounts patriotic energy and a good deal of couch-potato time to observing every minute of Olympic coverage... more
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Nick Nichols (Jul 12, 2008)
My wife and I spent Thursday afternoon at the doctor’s office. Our physician not only performs medical miracles, but he is also a dyed-in-the-wool conservative who... more
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Nick Nichols (May 24, 2008)
Whenever I become convinced that Americans have slurped too much left-wing Kool-Aid, sang too many choruses of “Kumbaya,” and are about to turn the White House over to the... more
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Nick Nichols (Apr 12, 2008)
The moment I read the front page of the Washington Post on Wednesday I knew that the folks who enjoy spending other people’s money (OPM), while calling it corporate... more
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Nick Nichols (Mar 01, 2008)
A few weeks back I noted in my column that when times get tough, Americans will stop worrying about whether polar bears have enough ice and start asking whether those... more
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Nick Nichols (Jan 19, 2008)
My 2008 New Year’s resolution was to stop haranguing about weak-kneed politicians and corporate executives who worship at the appeasement altar every time a group of... more