Social Media for Emergency Responders Application Note: Difference between revisions
From LINKS Community Center
Dinu (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Guideline |Publishing Organisation=Homeland Security |Language=English |Year Published=2014 |Covers Thematic=Technologies |Audience Experience Level=Starter |Source Website=...") |
Dinu (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
(13 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown) | |||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
|Language=English | |Language=English | ||
|Year Published=2014 | |Year Published=2014 | ||
|Covers Thematic=Technologies | |Target Audience=Practitioners | ||
|Covers Thematic=Social Media Strategy, Technologies | |||
|Audience Experience Level=Starter | |Audience Experience Level=Starter | ||
|Source Website=https://www.dhs.gov/sites/default/files/publications/Social-Media-ER-AppN_0314-508.pdf | |Source Website=https://www.dhs.gov/sites/default/files/publications/Social-Media-ER-AppN_0314-508.pdf | ||
| | |Synopsis='''BENEFITS OF SOCIAL MEDIA''' | ||
*Many agencies conduct two-way communication with the public using social media in order to build trust and credibility within a community and empower people to take an active role in their own safety. | |||
*This dialog can also help to establish agencies as an authoritative and accurate information source. | |||
*Furthermore, social media provides an additional but highly effective method for disseminating emergency information to a wide audience. | |||
*Law enforcement agencies experience improved situational awareness in many aspects of their daily operations through social media use. | |||
*Fire departments use social media as a tool to educate the public about fire safety and prevention, provide information during emergencies, and keep residents informed. | |||
*EMS agencies benefit from the information sharing and professional education that social media can facilitate. | |||
*These agencies can also post training photos and videos on social media networks. | |||
**This helps to establish the community’s trust in the services they provide to keep people safe. | |||
*For emergency managers, ongoing communication through social media can help the public be better prepared and cooperative during disasters and other emergencies. | |||
**This allows emergency managers and humanitarian agencies to be more effective and timely in their response and recovery efforts. | |||
'''SOCIAL MEDIA CHALLENGES''' | |||
Although emergency responders benefit from social media in many ways, they can also face a number of challenges in implementing a social media strategy. Some of those challenges are listed below and should be considered when establishing a social media presence. | |||
* Privacy and legal issues | |||
**Agencies need to be concerned about displaying personally identifiable information, questionable images, and language on their social media accounts | |||
*Rumor control and misinformation: Ensuring that all content posted on social media accounts and websites is verified as accurate and timely is important in maintaining trust within the community | |||
**Additionally, agencies should be wary of fake accounts established in their name that are meant to create confusion or mislead the public | |||
*Lack of resources | |||
**Agencies must have the necessary staff to maintain social media accounts and websites, monitor and analyze traffic for extraction of actionable information, and keep up with trends and updates | |||
*Information oversaturation | |||
**A social media page that is inundated with unrelated information can lose credibility as an authoritative information source | |||
'''Overview of Social Media Tools and Networks''' | |||
* Social Networks | * Social Networks | ||
* Media-Sharing Networks | * Media-Sharing Networks | ||
Line 18: | Line 48: | ||
* Organizational Websites | * Organizational Websites | ||
|Is Archived=No | |Is Archived=No | ||
|Data Sources=Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Tumblr, Flickr, Instagram, Reddit, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Vimeo | |||
|Technologies=ArcGIS, Hootsuite, Tweetdeck | |||
|Disaster Management Phase=Before | |||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 11:12, 9 January 2023
Created: 19 September 2022
Last edited: 9 January 2023
Last edited: 9 January 2023
Quick Facts
Publishing Organisation:
Homeland SecurityYear:
2014Languages:
EnglishCovers Thematic
Target audience
Audience experience level
Disaster Management Phase
Synopsis
BENEFITS OF SOCIAL MEDIA
- Many agencies conduct two-way communication with the public using social media in order to build trust and credibility within a community and empower people to take an active role in their own safety.
- This dialog can also help to establish agencies as an authoritative and accurate information source.
- Furthermore, social media provides an additional but highly effective method for disseminating emergency information to a wide audience.
- Law enforcement agencies experience improved situational awareness in many aspects of their daily operations through social media use.
- Fire departments use social media as a tool to educate the public about fire safety and prevention, provide information during emergencies, and keep residents informed.
- EMS agencies benefit from the information sharing and professional education that social media can facilitate.
- These agencies can also post training photos and videos on social media networks.
- This helps to establish the community’s trust in the services they provide to keep people safe.
- For emergency managers, ongoing communication through social media can help the public be better prepared and cooperative during disasters and other emergencies.
- This allows emergency managers and humanitarian agencies to be more effective and timely in their response and recovery efforts.
SOCIAL MEDIA CHALLENGES
Although emergency responders benefit from social media in many ways, they can also face a number of challenges in implementing a social media strategy. Some of those challenges are listed below and should be considered when establishing a social media presence.
- Privacy and legal issues
- Agencies need to be concerned about displaying personally identifiable information, questionable images, and language on their social media accounts
- Rumor control and misinformation: Ensuring that all content posted on social media accounts and websites is verified as accurate and timely is important in maintaining trust within the community
- Additionally, agencies should be wary of fake accounts established in their name that are meant to create confusion or mislead the public
- Lack of resources
- Agencies must have the necessary staff to maintain social media accounts and websites, monitor and analyze traffic for extraction of actionable information, and keep up with trends and updates
- Information oversaturation
- A social media page that is inundated with unrelated information can lose credibility as an authoritative information source
Overview of Social Media Tools and Networks
- Social Networks
- Media-Sharing Networks
- Community Discussion Forums
- Blogs
- Wikis
- Feed Readers, Social News, and Social Bookmarking
- SMS
- Social Media Management Tools
- Mapping Tools
- Organizational Websites
Linked to
- Technologies
- Use Cases
- None. See all Use Cases.