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Ten “Lessons Learned” From the 2013 Oklahoma
Tornadoes That “Up-the-Ante for
Public Information
NATIONAL COMMUNITY RELATIONS & DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE
Resonate 2014
Lesson 1: Understand theMedia Lifecycle
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The Influence of the Media
Media influences public awareness and perceptionMedia promotes disaster relief effortsMedia dictates volume of donations
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From Traditional to Social
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The Age of Social Media
Social media has widened content distribution and changed the way traditional news agencies cover disastersThe majority of people now use social media outlets as the primary sources for receiving breaking newsThe use of social media for crisis mapping and crowdsourcing of funds has dramatically altered how organizations respond to disasters
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Impact of Social Media
Social media builds existing relationships, creates new onesSocial media gives ordinary people the ability to communicate their perceptions Social media enables organizations to track sentiment, respond to misconceptions, and give praise where needed
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The Moore Tornado
There were 533,576 social media mentions of the Moore Tornado between May 19 and June 19 Twitter dominates the conversation
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By PopularityBlogs, Forums, News, &
Moore Tornado
The Salvation Army
The Red Cross
Share of the Conversation
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By Comparison
The Salvation Army3,502 media mentions
Content driven by online news
The Red Cross33,609 media mentions
Content driven by Twitter
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The Red Cross Most Re-Tweeted
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The Salvation Army Most Re-Tweeted
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Online News
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Oklahoma Storms Donations
The Moore Tornado struck on May 20 – The first donation was made on May 21As news coverage began to decrease, donations began to decrease
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The Opportunity
Continue to tell our story during times of disaster from day one
The Salvation Army is the first on the scene, and the last to leave
Highlight story “gems” during periods of media inactivity
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Recommendations
Enhance the use of Twitter and social media Partner with Google to develop new mapping and communications system Engage with celebrities and key media influencersMobilize a media canteen to create a centralized public information centerDistribute compelling, original video content to be resourced by major media outletsFly in the drone
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Lesson One:
Lesson 1 The clock is ticking.
The Clock Is Ticking …2LESSO
N
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What you do in the first 24 hours effects all that follows.
ACTIVATE and GATHER information.
When appropriate, DEPLOY.
Verify “mechanisms for giving”
have been established.
Identify “spokespersons.”
Disseminate a media release.
Engage on social media.
If after ,
a media release has not been issued,
you are ‘ed
= COVERAGE
www.disaster.salvationarmyusa.org
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3
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Spokesperson
Content WriterPhotographer
Rumor ControlSocial Media PIO
Incident Command System (ICS)
Incident Command
Operations LogisticsFinance &
Administration Planning
Public Information
Liaison
SafetyEmotional & Spiritual Care
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The PR Team Extends Beyond The Disaster Zone
NATIONAL DIVISIONALTERRITORIAL
NON-AFFECTED UNITS
SALVATION ARMY
SOCIAL MEDIA ICS TEAM
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Lesson 4: Put your spokesperson on
camera. Reassure the public and tell the Army’s story.
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Lesson 5: It pays to have the right equipment and the right
partnerships on hand before disaster strikes.
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Lesson 6: Keep people in the
information loop – especially the locals.
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• Ensure All involved are sharing the SAME message
• Make sure the Divisional / Local level (officers / Employees) are aware of messaging.
• Does the Receptionist have a “Cheat Sheet?”
• Make sure to stay in touch with the Divisional PIO
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Lesson 7:National Headquarters:We are Here to Help!
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When Jim Cantore is on site, so are we. First 24-48 hours before disaster strikes these things
happen:Territorial Calls: Critical to fundraising and promotional success following disaster. Initial Press Outreach Confirm fundraising tacticsEngage The Richards Group for paid media and Richards Partners for earned media.
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From Traditional to Social
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Me and Moore
Three MastersLocal media
National media
Territorial communications / internal audience
National / local media spokesperson What IS the best way to contact media on site during disaster?
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Lesson 8:Let’s (Remember To) Keep it Real
Control rumors and zealously correct inconsistent messaging.
Divisional corps sharing different messages on accepting donated goods. Are we?
Local / national fundraising numbers
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Lesson 9: One year later – there’s still a
story.
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• Public / Media / Donors need updates
• Opportunity to share our story (Persons assisted, Community Partners, Volunteers & Other Agencies)
• Ask for Assistance
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Lesson 10: Utilize Richards Partners
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Workshop Presenters
Jennifer Byrd
Cindy Fuller
Jeff Jellets
Jay Pritchard