- Design a social media strategy that supports the mission of your individual organization.
- Recycle information through retweeting, sharing, and cutting and pasting. Many EM organizations are sharing general, relevant emergency information for the public, so should you.
- Build a trusted online community that perceives your updates as valuable and that is willing to share your updates within its own networks.
- Identify non-governmental knowledge hubs in your network and encourage them to share your updates with their network.
- Be creative. Think about social media tactics beyond pushing out press releases. E.g., look for helpful infographics by other organizations—and share them!
- Photos and infographics are engaging content that draws people back to your social media feed and keeps them engaged.
- Understand your audience. What are its characteristics and expectations?
- Situational awareness—understand that there’s a 24/7 expectation by social media followers, but avoid automatic updates during a crisis.
- Share outside the crisis. Offer valuable information even when there is no need to inform the public of crimes, emergencies, and disasters.
- Set a daily routine—using social media “management suites” (such as HootSuite http://hootsuite.com), you can write several updates at once and push them out on multiple channels at set intervals.
- Respond to citizen requests—this will increase trust and transparency. People will start to pay attention.
- Design a social media policy to help your team and citizens understand what is appropriate online behavior when it comes to commenting and conduct on your channels.
- Assign organizational responsibilities and roles. Distribute light work across many shoulders (strategists, content curators, content providers, etc.)
- Test and adopt new tools and techniques. Provide more training and place an increased focus on formalizing internal procedures.
- Measure your impact: Who is listening? Which channels are most used? What content is perceived as valuable? Many social media products offer their own, easy-to-use analytical tools.