marketing & social media strategist focused primarily on helping public sector organizations achieve their objectives more efficiently and effectively

international speaker and workshop facilitator on the topics of strategic marketing, modern communications, social media engagement and government 2.0

Public Sector Marketing 2.0 - Fresh insights on government, association, and non-profit marketing in a Web 2.0 world

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Posts Tagged ‘public safety canada’

May 05, 2009

Public Safety Canada making strides in social media

Ok I’ll admit it. I’m excited about this because Public Safety Canada has been one of my long-standing clients (social media training, social media strategy development and social marketing) for well over 3 years. Specifically, the Emergency Preparedness Branch, which is responsible for the Get Prepared initiative.

The intent of “Get Prepared” is simple: “To ensure Canadians (during an emergency) are prepared to be self-sufficient for at least 72 hours while emergency workers focus on people in urgent need”.

There are three easy steps for Canadians to do this as illustrated in the image below and on their website. In terms of measurement, Google Analytics conversion goals have been set up to measure the successful navigation through each step. This is a great example of tying your website goals directly into your branch/organizational goals).

emergency kit

Here are some of the social media engagement steps they have taken that I’m excited about:

There are still many internal roadblocks that need to be overcome, however this team is definitely making strides in the right direction. Let me know your thoughts!

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April 06, 2009

April info shower…dominated by Twitter as usual

With March Madness finally winding down (always trickles into April),  I figured I’d quickly blog about a few things that caught my eye over the last few weeks:

Ok, that’s my 5 minute midnight spontaneous brain dump. Upon re-reading it I realized that Twitter dominates the list. No surprise there. I’m finding myself using Twitter (via Tweetdeck) more than ever. Why? Like all social apps, the more people that use it, the more beneficial the tool. From a marketing/communications perspective (public or private sector), Twitter is an absolute dream come true. Remember, the key secret is the fact that you have the ability to FILTER conversations (e.g. Twitter Search).

For continuous live brain dumps like this be sure to follow my tweets: twitter.com/mikekujawski

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January 09, 2009

California earthquake LIVE tweeting!

Today I had a meeting with my Public Safety Canada client (Emergency Preparedness Branch) , whom I’m currently training on social media engagement. We’re in the midst of finalizing a social media strategy and choosing specific online tactics that will help Canadians (or rather, a specific target audience of Canadians) be more informed of how to properly prepare for an emergency (i.e how to put together or buy an emergency kit).

One social media channel we discussed as a best-practice example was the ever-popular Twitter. The shear amount of real-time conversations happening on this channel during disasters or conflicts is absolutely incredible. What’s more, all of these conversations can be filtered to your heart’s content using Twitter Advanced Search. You can search by location, by km radius, by language, by tone, you name it…

Roughly 20 minutes ago, I happened to be checking my Twitter contact updates and noticed someone “tweet” about a quake in California. This caught my attention and so I refreshed my list and a few more people started “re-tweeting” the same thing. When C.C. Chapman (a fellow social media guru who is usually well ahead of the news) tweeted about the quake a few seconds later, that triggered me to check Twitter Search for the term “earthquake“. Low and behold, the results started pouring in. Within seconds there were an additional 30, 90, 150, 570, 1669 live tweets (and still counting) about people in various Southern California cities experiencing the 4.5 magnitude quake.

California Earthquake

Have a look yourself and try tracking the conversation back to the original “tweet”. Note that this link will cease to be relevant contextually to this blog post within a few days. Eventually, simply searching for the term “earthquake” will be too generic. In which case you will have to go to Twitter Advanced Search and specify today’s date (January 8th, 2009) in your search criteria for “earthquake”.

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