Top Banner
Social Hope: Social Media in times of Disaster Relief #12NTCdisaster
36

Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

May 10, 2015

Download

Technology

presentation for the 2012 NTC with Red Cross, Feeding America, and HSUS.
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Social Hope:Social Media in timesof Disaster Relief#12NTCdisaster

Page 2: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Evaluate This Session!Each entry is a chance to win an NTEN engraved iPad!

or Online using #12NTCdisasterat www.nten.org/ntc/eval

Page 3: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

The Panel

Wendy Harman, American Red Cross@wharman

Carie Lewis, Humane Society of the United States

@cariegrls

Dan Michel, Feeding America

@dpmichel

Slide 2Social Hope

Page 4: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Agenda

• Case Studies from 2011 Disaster Season

• Examples

• Learnings

• Future of providing service in times of disaster

• How does social play into that?

Slide 3Social Hope: #12NTCDisaster

Page 5: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

2011 Disaster Season by the Numbers

99major declared disasters by FEMA

Slide 4Social Hope: #12NTCDisaster

73billion dollars worth of damages

>500deaths from just the Alabama &

Joplin tornadoes

Page 6: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Slide 5Social Hope: #12NTCDisaster

Page 7: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Feeding America

• Provide 3 billion pounds of food annually

• Serve 37 million people in U.S. each year

• Disaster is a part of what we do – not primary mission

Slide 6Social Hope: #12NTCDisaster

Disaster Services provides our memberswith updates on disaster activity, resourcesfor preparedness, response and recoveryplanning, and guidance for best practices.

Page 8: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Where We Are

Page 9: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Volunteers on the Ground

Page 10: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

FA 2011 Disaster Efforts

Deployed national teams (including social media) to:

• Alabama, May

• Joplin, June

Slide 9Social Hope: #12NTCDisaster

Page 11: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

What we did well

Communicated the story of hope

Communicated how people (outside the area) could do to help

Became a participant into existing conversations

Slide 10Social Hope: #12NTCDisaster

Page 12: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

What we did well

Recognize and mobilize corporate support

Slide 11Social Hope: #12NTCDisaster

Page 13: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

What we could do better

Used Social Media to help guide people to services

Connecting people to local food bank/agencies

Get more pictures/facts up faster

Continued the story/check back

Slide 12Social Hope: #12NTCDisaster

Page 14: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Local Efforts

Ozarks Food Harvest

Slide 13Social Hope: #12NTCDisaster

Page 15: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Slide 14Social Hope: #12NTCDisaster

Page 16: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Slide 15Social Hope: #12NTCDisaster

Connecting Victims/Providing Hope

http://youtu.be/ERMQgqEF0yk

Page 17: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

The Situation:

• There’s a hurricane coming.

• It’s big. And strong.

• It’s going to affect multiple states.

• We need to warn people.

• We need to save animals.

• There’s no central place for pet owners to get information aboutevacuation, resources, and shelters.

• Our disaster approach: Prepare > Respond > Recover

@cariegrls // #12NTCDisaster

Page 18: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

What do we do? And how do we do it?1 – Get the preparation and evacuation messages out

• identify the audience it affects

• Coordinate messaging with PR

2 – Tell our story and disseminate important information

• Put an internal comm infrastructure in place for info gathering

• Coordinate content with web, email, PR, program

3 – Tell people how they can help

• Develop a fundraising campaign

• Coordinate needs on a local level

4 – answer questions and needs from audience

• Step our monitoring game up

5 - Close the loop

• What happened to the animals you saved?

• What did my money go to?

@cariegrls // #12NTCDisaster

Page 19: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Getting The Message Out• First: prepare, then: evacuate WITH

your pets

• Who is the audience? Who do wehave as resources in those areas?

• State directors and Care Centerdirectors in affected areas

• Developed a list of Facebookpage links and admin contactinfo

@cariegrls // #12NTCDisaster

• We helped monitor, respond, and post to thosepages since admins were out in the field

• Targeted posts to our HSUS Facebook fans livingin the affected area

• Messages were taken from press releases and webpages (pre-approved content) and boiled down

• Made it engaging by asking people to send us a pic oftheir disaster kit that included their pets and we gavethem a window cling

Page 20: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Gathering and Disseminating Info

@cariegrls // #12NTCDisaster

• Internal information gathering

• Put an internal communications infrastructure in place for webcontent and up-to-the-minute updates from the field

• What kind of content do we want in order to tell our story ofwhat HSUS was doing? Bite sized info for Twitter, diaries for theweb, as many photos as possible

• National level = Rescue Team coordinator > Web editor

• Local level = State Director > Community Manager

• Daily meeting to coordinate all content with web, email, social,PR

• Field responders marked content as external or internal use

• External information gathering

• We followed emergency management orgs like FEMA, Red Crossin each affected state on Twitter

• Made a list of animal shelters in hurricane’s path and followedthem for updates

Page 21: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

The $64k question: what can I do?

@cariegrls // #12NTCDisaster

• People could help on a national and/or local level

• Developed a fundraising campaign for our Animal Rescue Team’sefforts

• Integrated across all communication channels

• Created Amazon wish lists for affected shelters

• Took advantage of our large followings and

targeted Facebook posts to help shelters in need

Page 22: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Answering Questions and Needs

• Monitored every @ reply on Facebook

• Monitored hashtags that were being used

• Created our own hashtag #Irenepets (4,500 uses, seen by 8.5 millionpeople in 3 days)

• Monitored keywords like “flood pet”

• Answer everyone.

• Aggregate info for pet owners from multiple sources on our Twitter feed(FEMA, shelters)

@cariegrls // #12NTCDisaster

Page 23: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Closing the Loop

• If you are committing to answer everyone, provide updates.

• If you’re going to individualize an animal in a fundraising or storytellingcampaign, be ready to monitor and report on the fate of that animal.

• Tell people what their money went to.

@cariegrls // #12NTCDisaster

Page 24: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

THIS is why it’s important to alwaysbe listening and answer everyone.

We saved this dog’s life.

@cariegrls // #12NTCDisaster

Page 25: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

THIS is why it’s important to monitorcomment strings and be responsive.

We garnered donations.

@cariegrls // #12NTCDisaster

Page 26: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Show compassion in times of crisis.

@cariegrls // #12NTCDisaster

Page 27: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Repost Good UGC to create community.

@cariegrls // #12NTCDisaster

Page 28: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Give them what they want!

@cariegrls // #12NTCDisaster

Page 29: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Next Time…

• Keep feeding tweets and adding to photo album

• Find a way not to miss any @ replies on twitter (keep up)

• Research hashtags already in use, start using own hashtagearlier

• Set up tracking ahead of time and take screenshots as theyhappen

• Thank those who donated and shared on Twitter

• Share the credit with other orgs involved – build relationships

• Map of affected shelters – or maybe an app?

• Proactively reach out to Weather Channel, Red Cross, FEMA,agencies

• Customize email shares to use our hashtag

• Develop communication guidelines for first responders

• We want a WAR ROOM!

@cariegrls // #12NTCDisaster

Page 30: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

@cariegrls // #12NTCDisaster

Page 31: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Public is a Resource

Page 32: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Making Data Actionable

Page 33: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Digital Operations Center

Page 34: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Digital Volunteers

Page 35: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Questions?

Slide 34Social Hope: #12NTCDisaster

Discussion?

Other examples?

Page 36: Social Hope: Social Media in Disasters

Evaluate This Session!Each entry is a chance to win an NTEN engraved iPad!

or Online using #12NTCdisasterat www.nten.org/ntc/eval