Listening to Your Community Georgia Emergency Management Agency Georgia Department of Public Health.

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Listening to Your Community Georgia Emergency Management Agency Georgia Department of Public Health

Transcript of Listening to Your Community Georgia Emergency Management Agency Georgia Department of Public Health.

Listening to Your

CommunityGeorgia Emergency Management

AgencyGeorgia Department of Public Health

Hurricane Twitter Chat with GEMA Director Charley English

Inaugural chat

Objective: To give Georgians the opportunity to ask Director English questions about what GEMA is doing to prepare for hurricane season and how households can get ready

Used #AskGEMA

Promoted via traditional press release, “The Hurricane Watch” e-newsletter, notices sent to local, state and federal partners, and social media.

Started following influencers and sent direct messages to CERTs

@georgiaema, @GaDPH, #TeamGASocial

It Takes a Village!

Thanks to partners who helped promote the chat. Local emergency management

agencies Meteorologists State agencies such as georgia.gov,

Georgia Dept. of Public Health, etc. FEMA Claire Simms with GPB

@georgiaema, @GaDPH, #TeamGASocial

#AskGEMA Monitored Using GEMA’s Twitter Account

@georgiaema, @GaDPH, #TeamGASocial

Results/Best Practices

Received positive feedback from the public Example: @GeorgiaEMA Thank you for the

answers! Always gotta think ahead of the game! Have a great day! #AskGEMA

Direct responses from Charley inspired deep faith in our audience and in the reliability of content

@GeorgiaEMA acquired 104 followers between May 31 and June 4 Average is 150/month

Reach = 292,124 followers, 440,000 timeline deliveries (Hashtracking.com)

Created recap on “Get Ready” blog using Storify.com, a platform were users can aggregate tweets, photos. GPB also posted a recap.

@georgiaema, @GaDPH, #TeamGASocial

Lessons Learned

Use a tool such as tweetchat.com to facilitate the chat

Use only one hashtag and reply to questions with the hashtag included – some people just monitor the hashtag, not your feed The Twitterverse will let you know

when mistakes are made

Have a SME to verify or research information needed for responses

Keep a list of handles for partner organizations that can be referenced quickly for tagging

@georgiaema, @GaDPH, #TeamGASocial

DPH Emergency Preparedness Twitter Chat

One hour on June 11, 2013; #DPHchat

Featured tweeters from DPH, GEMA, health districts, Emory CEPAR, Home Depot

Purpose: to promote emergency preparedness, educate about the roles of government agencies and individual citizens before/during/after disasters

Format: panel discussion, including questions from followers

@georgiaema, @GaDPH, #TeamGASocial

Putting It All Together

Coordinated two weeks in advance with organizations/individuals planning to join

Promotion: DPH social media, partner organizations’ social media, news release, news stories

During the chat: used Tweetchat to keep track of the hashtag; fielded questions from people experiencing technical difficulties

After the chat: Storify, promotion via news stories and our website, hashtracking.com

@georgiaema, @GaDPH, #TeamGASocial

DPH Preparedness Twitter Chat: Results

Reach = 177,122 followers, 1.26 million timeline deliveries (Hashtracking.com)

Tweets, Facebook posts about the chat (before and after) were some of most popular/shared in the past 6 months

Positive response from followers

@georgiaema, @GaDPH, #TeamGASocial

What helped? What hurt?

Hooray! Collaboration with partner agencies

(thanks GEMA, georgia.gov!) Invitation to a national partner with a

large Twitter following (Home Depot) Wealth of SMEs, both at state and

local levels Twitter chat preparedness!

Stumbling block: Tweets soliciting business

@georgiaema, @GaDPH, #TeamGASocial

Thank you!

Questions? Comments?

Feel free to get in touch! Lisa Janak Newman, GEMA

[email protected]

Carrie Gann, DPH Communications, [email protected]

@georgiaema, @GaDPH, #TeamGASocial