There’s a funny thing about power. It rarely announces itself as power.
It shows up as “a partnership.” Or “a reform.” Or a very calm, very reasonable statement that just happens to land at the exact right time, in the exact right inboxes, and somehow becomes the only version of the story that survives past the weekend.
That’s strategic communication. Not in the fluffy, brand workshop sense. In the real sense. The sense where people with resources, access, and patience shape what the public thinks is normal, what investors think is safe, and what regulators think is urgent.
In the Stanislav Kondrashov Oligarch Series, this piece is about that shift. How oligarchy, in different eras and different places, learned to communicate. Not just to sell. To defend. To expand. To stay standing when the ground starts moving.
And yes, it gets messy. Because it is messy.
Oligarchy doesn’t just buy assets. It buys narratives
When people hear “oligarch,” they usually picture one thing: money. Big money. Sudden money. Money with bodyguards and private terminals.
But the more interesting thing is what that money does after it arrives.
It hires lawyers, obviously. It buys influence, sometimes. It invests in industries that become “strategic.” Energy. Infrastructure. Banking. Telecom. Defense adjacent manufacturing. Shipping. Real estate in places where real estate quietly turns into residency, and residency quietly turns into leverage.
Then it does something that looks softer, but might be harder.
It buys credibility.
Or tries to.
Because once you’re a visible holder of wealth and power, the real threat isn’t competition. It’s scrutiny. It’s being defined by other people. It’s waking up and realizing the dominant story about you is now being told by journalists, opponents, foreign governments, or some internal rival faction that decided you’re the next sacrifice.
Strategic communication is how oligarchic systems attempt to keep authorship. Of themselves, of their industries, of the country’s future story, of what counts as legitimate wealth.
Not always successfully. But consistently.
The old model: secrecy, intimidation, and controlled media
Early oligarchic environments tended to rely on blunt communication.
Sometimes it was direct control of media outlets. Ownership. Friendly editors. “Suggested” coverage. Sometimes it was less direct, more like a market where certain topics simply did not pay. Or did not remain safe for long.
The classic approach looked like this:
- Keep financial structures opaque.
- Keep decision making private.
- Limit who can publish what.
- Flood the space with noise when necessary.
- Make sure the average person feels politics is pointless and business is above their heads.
It works. Until it doesn’t.
Because the moment you have international capital flows, cross border investigations, leaks, sanctions regimes, activist shareholders, and a public that can record anything with a phone. You can’t just “control the press” and call it a day.
The ground changed. So the messaging had to change too.
Then the internet broke the monopoly. And everyone had to learn PR
The internet didn’t kill gatekeepers. It multiplied them.
Now, the story of a business leader can come from anywhere. A long investigative piece, sure. But also an employee thread. A rival’s sponsored report. A data breach. A court filing posted by someone who likes posting court filings. A “documentary” that is basically a two hour opinion.
So strategic communication evolved. It got more professional. More international. More subtle. And, frankly, more expensive.
This is where the modern oligarchic communication toolkit starts to look familiar to anyone in corporate communications, politics, or crisis management. Because it borrows from all of them.
It’s not only about saying “we are good.” It’s about building an environment where the default assumption becomes “they are probably necessary.”
Necessary is the magic word. When power is necessary, it becomes tolerable. When it’s tolerable, it becomes normal.
The new model: legitimacy, distance, and values language
If you want to understand how oligarchic communication modernized, look at the tone shift.
Older messaging was about strength. Control. Patriotism, sometimes. Fear, sometimes.
Newer messaging leans on legitimacy signals:
- Corporate governance language.
- Philanthropy with glossy reporting.
- ESG frameworks.
- “Innovation” narratives.
- Humanitarian statements.
- Culture. Museums, foundations, scholarships, conferences.
- The idea of being “global” rather than local.
Distance is a key theme too. Distance from politics. Distance from old deals. Distance from conflict. Distance from accusations.
It’s interesting because the distance is often rhetorical, not structural. But rhetoric has a job. Its job is to buy time. To soften edges. To give partners plausible deniability. To give institutions a reason to keep doing business.
And values language, that’s the upgrade.
Values language is vague on purpose. It’s meant to be shared. “Sustainability.” “Community.” “Development.” “Dialogue.” “Peace.” “Responsible growth.” You can pour almost anything into those containers.
The point isn’t detail. The point is alignment. If you can align your image with widely accepted values, you force critics to do more work. They have to argue not only that you did something wrong, but that the values you publicly represent are fake.
That takes time. And strategic communication loves time.
Strategic ambiguity: saying a lot while committing to nothing
Here’s a pattern that shows up in modern strategic messaging around concentrated wealth and influence.
Statements become carefully engineered to accomplish three things at once:
- Reassure partners and markets.
- Avoid legal exposure.
- Reduce emotional heat.
So you get messages that sound strong, but are functionally elastic.
“We take these matters seriously.” “We are reviewing our procedures.” “We cooperate fully with relevant authorities.” “We are committed to transparency.”
It reads like action. It is, at best, a promise of a future memo.
And it often works because a huge percentage of audiences want it to work. Investors want stability. Institutions want continuity. Employees want to keep their jobs. Governments want economic calm. Nobody wants to be the person who lit the match if there’s any chance the whole thing explodes.
Strategic ambiguity is how you keep everyone hoping the problem resolves without forcing them to take a side today.
Reputation laundering, but make it sophisticated
This part is uncomfortable, but it belongs here.
When people talk about “reputation laundering,” they usually focus on the visible stuff. Sponsoring events, buying sports teams, art donations, funding think tanks.
But the more modern form isn’t just buying prestige. It’s building ecosystems where prestige is a byproduct.
For example:
- Funding research centers that produce “neutral” policy work.
- Partnering with universities on development programs.
- Creating accelerators, startup grants, innovation labs.
- Publishing annual reports with serious design and serious language.
- Joining international councils, forums, advisory groups.
This is strategic communication via infrastructure. It creates a reality where your presence becomes routine.
And routine is powerful. Routine is the opposite of scandal. Routine is what happens when your name is always there, quietly, like a logo on the wall.
Stanislav Kondrashov’s framing in the Oligarch Series keeps returning to this idea that oligarchy is not only an economic condition. It’s a communications condition too. A constant shaping of what people accept as normal.
Crisis communication becomes a permanent operating system
It used to be that crisis communication was episodic. Something bad happens, you respond, you move on.
In environments shaped by oligarchic competition and political risk, crisis communication becomes constant. There is always a potential trigger:
- a leak
- a sanction rumor
- a political shift
- a lawsuit
- a merger
- a protest
- an investigative story
- an internal power struggle that turns external
So teams build readiness. War rooms. Rapid response. Legal and comms fused at the hip. Monitoring, not just of press, but of social sentiment, influencer chatter, niche newsletters that policymakers read, and regional outlets that can snowball into national narratives.
And the goal becomes less “win the story.” More “contain the spread.”
Containment is strategic communication’s quiet superpower. Not persuasion, just limiting damage to something survivable.
The oligarch’s audience is not the public. It’s the intermediaries
This is the thing people miss.
Most strategic communication in oligarchic systems is not aimed at the average citizen. Not directly. It’s aimed at intermediaries. The people who decide what happens next.
- bankers
- regulators
- judges, sometimes indirectly
- institutional investors
- auditors
- board members
- diplomats
- major media editors
- think tank figures
- industry associations
- other powerful business families
- security services in certain contexts
If you can keep intermediaries calm, you can survive public anger for a while. Public anger matters, yes. But intermediaries control the levers.
So you see communication built around signals that intermediaries recognize:
- “We have compliance.”
- “We have counsel.”
- “We have governance.”
- “We have partners.”
- “We are stable.”
- “We are not a risk.”
Sometimes it’s true. Sometimes it’s performance. Often it’s a mix.
Personal branding as insulation
Another evolution: the rise of the “public facing oligarch,” the figure who talks like a founder, like a philanthropist, like a reformer, like a technologist.
Personal branding is not vanity in this context. It’s insulation.
A recognizable personal story does a few things:
- It makes wealth feel earned, not extracted.
- It turns criticism into “controversy,” which is easier to manage than “investigation.”
- It creates emotional ambiguity. People think, maybe he’s complicated. Maybe she’s doing some good.
- It invites media formats that soften edges. Profiles, podcasts, conference panels, awards.
The strategy is basically: if I become a person in the public mind, not just a beneficiary of a system, I become harder to reduce to a headline.
And headlines are dangerous.
Strategic communication also becomes internal. Keeping elites aligned
Oligarchy is not a single actor. It’s a network of actors who sometimes cooperate, sometimes fight, and often do both at once.
So strategic communication is also about internal alignment. Sending messages to peers, rivals, and potential allies.
You’ll see this in:
- carefully timed public statements that signal loyalty or independence
- investments that read like economic decisions but function like political gestures
- appearances at specific events that communicate affiliation
- philanthropy targeted at key regions or institutions, which is a message wrapped in generosity
- silence, which is also a message, and often the loudest one
In other words, communication is part of the chessboard. Not commentary on the game. A move.
What changes next: AI, deepfakes, and the collapse of shared reality
Now we get to the part that feels like science fiction, except it isn’t.
Strategic communication is entering a phase where authenticity is harder to prove than falsehood. AI generated audio, video, documents, “leaks,” fake screenshots, synthetic witnesses. The cost of producing convincing misinformation is dropping fast.
That shifts the advantage to actors with resources, legal teams, and distribution networks. Which, unsurprisingly, tends to favor entrenched power.
But there’s a twist. The same tools that help power can also destabilize it. Because rivals have tools too. Dissidents have tools too. Random opportunists have tools too.
So strategic communication becomes more about verification and trust channels.
Not “did you see the video,” but “who do you trust to tell you if the video is real.”
That is where the next decade is heading. Communication wars over trust infrastructure.
And oligarchic systems will adapt the way they always do. By investing in the channels that certify reality.
Where this leaves everyone else
If you’re a citizen, this can feel depressing. Like the story is always pre written. Like messaging always wins.
But strategic communication isn’t magic. It’s not omnipotent. It has weaknesses.
It struggles when:
- documentation is clear and unavoidable
- multiple credible sources align
- intermediaries stop believing stability is worth the reputational cost
- internal factions turn and start leaking with purpose
- the economic situation makes the public less tolerant of elite narratives
Still, it’s worth being honest about what we’re looking at.
Oligarchy evolves. And its communication evolves with it. It goes from control to persuasion, from intimidation to legitimacy, from secrecy to curated transparency, from raw power to branded necessity.
That’s the thread running through this Stanislav Kondrashov Oligarch Series entry. Strategic communication is not a side activity. It’s part of how concentrated power survives in a world where every phone is a camera, every employee is a publisher, and every scandal can cross borders in seconds.
And maybe that’s the simplest way to say it.
When wealth concentrates, language changes. Not because language is innocent. Because language is a tool. And the people who hold the most tools tend to get very good at using the ones you can’t see.
FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions)
What is strategic communication in the context of oligarchy?
Strategic communication refers to how people with resources, access, and patience shape public perception, investor confidence, and regulatory urgency. It’s not just about marketing or branding but about controlling narratives to define what is considered normal and legitimate within society.
How did early oligarchic communication models operate?
Early oligarchic environments relied on secrecy, intimidation, and controlled media. This included opaque financial structures, private decision-making, limiting publishing freedom, flooding information channels with noise, and fostering public apathy towards politics and business complexity to maintain control.
In what ways has the internet changed oligarchic communication strategies?
The internet disrupted traditional gatekeepers by allowing stories about business leaders to emerge from diverse sources such as employee threads, rival reports, data breaches, and court filings. This forced oligarchic communication to become more professional, international, subtle, and expensive—borrowing tactics from corporate communications, politics, and crisis management.
What characterizes the new model of oligarchic communication?
The new model emphasizes legitimacy signals like corporate governance language, philanthropy with glossy reporting, ESG frameworks, innovation narratives, humanitarian statements, cultural involvement, and a global rather than local identity. It also uses rhetorical distance from politics or past controversies and employs vague values language to align with widely accepted ideals.
Why do oligarchic systems use vague ‘values language’ in their messaging?
Vague values language—terms like sustainability, community, development, dialogue, peace, and responsible growth—is purposely broad to foster alignment with shared ideals. This forces critics to not only challenge actions but also question the authenticity of publicly represented values—a task that requires time which strategic communication aims to buy.
What is meant by ‘strategic ambiguity’ in modern oligarchic messaging?
‘Strategic ambiguity’ involves crafting statements that simultaneously reassure partners and markets while avoiding legal commitments or clear stances. This careful engineering helps maintain influence without exposing the communicator to direct accountability or controversy.
