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Social Media and the Safety Professional

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Social Media and the Safety Professional. Dean Larson. Social media. Social media is content created by people using highly accessible and scalable publishing technologies. Social media. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Dean Larson
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Page 1: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Dean Larson

Page 2: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Social media is content created by people using highly accessible and scalable publishing technologies.

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Page 3: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Social media is content created by people using highly accessible and scalable publishing technologies.

At its most basic sense, social media is a shift in how people discover, read and share news, information and content.

Page 4: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Social media is content created by people using highly accessible and scalable publishing technologies.

At its most basic sense, social media is a shift in how people discover, read and share news, information and content.

Social media has become extremely popular because it allows people to connect in the online world to form relationships for personal and business . . .and for prevention, mitigation, preparation, response and recovery from disasters.

Page 5: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Communication◦ Blogs: Blogger, LiveJournal, Open Diary, TypePad

, WordPress, Vox, ExpressionEngine ◦ Micro-blogging / Presence applications:

Twitter, Plurk, Pownce, Foursquare, Jaiku◦ Social Networking: Bebo, Facebook, LinkedIn,

MySpace, Orkut, Skyrock, Hi5 ◦ Social network aggregation: FriendFeed ◦ Events: Upcoming, Eventful, Meetup.com

Page 6: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Collaboration◦Wikis: Wikipedia, PBwiki, wetpaint ◦Social bookmarking (or Social

tagging): Delicious, StumbleUpon, Stumpedia, Google Reader, CiteULike

◦Social news: Digg, Mixx, Reddit

Page 7: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Opinion sites: epinions, Yelp, mouthshut.com, City-data.com

Photo sharing: Flickr, Zooomr, Photobucket, SmugMug

Video sharing: YouTube, Vimeo, Livecasting: Ustream.tv, Justin.tv,

Stickam, bizbuzztour.com

Page 8: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Nothing is secret in facebook but there is no need to get personal◦ If you choose to use facebook to support your

safety program, you should. . . . - Get the permission from management FIRST---Company should have a policy- Stick to business- Use a “page” but no need to include personal

profile- No need to include Any personal information

Page 9: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Use a password that is not easily hacked◦ Eight characters: UPPER and lower case, at least

one special character (~, *, + and others)◦ Change on a regular, i.e. scheduled basis and

keep your schedule private Don’t use Twitter and facebook in isolation

◦ Link to an official website◦ On official (company) website should link back to

your Twitter or facebook Start a safety network

Page 10: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Nothing is secret in facebook◦ “headed to New Orleans...”

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Nothing is secret in facebook◦ “headed to New Orleans...”

http://pleaserobme.com/

Page 12: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Please Rob Me consists exclusively of an aggregation of public Twitter messages that have been pushed through fast-growing location-based networking site Foursquare, one of a handful of services that encourages people to share their whereabouts with their friends. You can filter by geographic location, too.

Page 13: Social Media and the Safety Professional

“On one end we’re leaving lights on when we’re going on a holiday, and on the other we’re telling everybody on the internet we’re not home,” the Please Rob Me site says to explain its rationale. “The goal of this website is to raise some awareness on this issue and have people think about how they use services like Foursquare, Brightkite, Google Buzz, etc.”

Page 14: Social Media and the Safety Professional

HealthMap – Global Diseases Alert Map Evacuteer.org http://search.twitter.com Twitter and H1N1. . . Twitter helped to

spread the word

Page 15: Social Media and the Safety Professional

“MDOT (Mississippi DOT) to use Twitter for hurricane evacuation

Utilizing this system will give MDOT the ability to not get information directly into the hands of Mississippians evacuating, but also to evacuees from Alabama and Louisiana” Butch Brown, MDOT Executive Director

HattiesburgAmerican.com4/9/2009

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“Everyday people on the street have become journalists”

“This came from a Facebook page”“That’s what I got from this Tweet!”*

CNN covering the use of social media to report the violence on the streets

* Is “Tweet” part of your vocabulary?

Page 17: Social Media and the Safety Professional

“President Obama wants government to be more transparent, but departments will have to overcome base web culture issues to be successful.”

“Agencies have to recognize that the Web is no longer a fun afterthought, but a critical component for public interaction.”

National Journal OnlineFeb 2, 2009

Page 18: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Craig Fugate, former Florida Emergency Director is the FEMA Director

Page 19: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Craig Fugate, former Florida Emergency Director is the FEMA Director

Fugate touted the agency’s YouTube and Twitter efforts and DisasterHelp.gov as examples of the agency’s efforts to

spread the word in new ways.”

[emphasis added]

Page 20: Social Media and the Safety Professional

US Department of Homeland Security Secretary Fields Aviation Security Questions Posed on Facebook and Twitter◦ Link to article in Government Security News:◦ http://www.gsnmagazine.com/article/20294/

napolitano_fields_aviation_security_questions_pose

Page 21: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Slim: Just over 1/3 of an inch, as thin as most magazines

Carry Your Library: Holds up to 3,500 books, periodicals, and documents

Beautiful Large Display: 9.7" diagonal e-ink screen reads like real paper; boasts 16 shades of gray for clear text and sharp images

Built-In PDF Reader: Native PDF support allows you to carry and read all of your personal and professional documents on the go

Page 22: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Built-In PDF Reader: Native PDF support allows you to carry and read all of your personal and professional documents on the go

A tool for safety professionals?

Page 23: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Skype is software that enables the world’s conversations. ◦ Free video and voice calls, send instant messages and

share files with other Skype users. ◦ Low-cost calls to landlines and mobiles. ◦ Access to a broadband internet connection is required.

Skype is not a replacement for your traditional telephone service and cannot be used for emergency calling.

Page 24: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Personal Data Assistants (PDA's) can be used to: ◦ store and retrieve emergency action plans,◦ store code words for use in authorizing an

evacuation,◦ telephone numbers to use in conjunction with cell

phones to coordinate an evacuation, and◦ to provide instant messaging, such as evacuation

status reports to EOC.

Page 25: Social Media and the Safety Professional

That social media stuff is not for me.

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How many can remember the details of your high school graduation speech?

Page 27: Social Media and the Safety Professional

1.Work Hard

Page 28: Social Media and the Safety Professional

1.Work Hard2.Be Happy

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1.Work Hard2.Be Happy. . . which means if you don’t

like the work you are doing, have the courage to change.

Page 30: Social Media and the Safety Professional

1.Work Hard2.Be Happy3.Be willing to change your mind

every day, or the World will pass you by!

Page 31: Social Media and the Safety Professional

These profound words were delivered on the stage of the Greek Theatre, University of California Berkeley, June 15, 1988 to the graduating class of Berkeley High School

Page 32: Social Media and the Safety Professional
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“These days, the problem isn’t how to innovate; it’s how to get society to adopt the good ideas that already exist?”

Douglas Englebart

Page 34: Social Media and the Safety Professional

IF you are thinking of new, out-of-the-box, outside-the-silo ways of achieving that elusive genie a safer workplace,

I have achieved my purpose

Page 35: Social Media and the Safety Professional

Questions?For further informationDean R. Larson PhDCEM CSP CPT CBCLALarson Performance Consulting, LLC

[email protected]


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