Is Your Social Media Crisis Communications Plan Twitter-Friendly?

tweet-able-crisis-communicationsRecently, Brad Phillips, a.k.a. Mr. Media Training, wrote a post about giving a Tweet-worthy media interview. This excellent piece of literature got me thinking of the importance of having Tweet-able messages within your crisis communications plan.

Why are tweet-worthy messages important in a crisis?

Soundbites are a powerful thing. (For everything you need to know about soundbites, I recommend reading Brad Phillips’s new book, The Media Training Bible) In a crisis, you want your message to be powerful, to the point, memorable and seen by the right people. Being prepared with a strategic and to-the-point soundbite is a good way to accomplish this crisis communications mission. Now, what if your soundbite was so strategically thought-out that it was short enough to fit into a tweet – and better yet, short enough to be retweeted by others?

This would:

  • Up your chances of retweets, and thus providing you with the potential for maximum views
  • Make your message easy for others to write about, talk about and share
  • Leave your audience with choice-words that are memorable and to the point

So, while developing your crisis communications plan, remember to include some guidelines for creating tweet-able soundbites. To be even better prepared, include some generic tweet-ables within your crisis plan’s holding statements section.

Tips to creating and sharing tweet-able crisis communications messages

  • Keep it short (aim for 100 characters or less)
  • Make it catchy, memorable and to the point
  • Keep it in-line with your overall crisis communications messages
  • Include a Vine strategy where possible
  • Share it with your audience from your own channels
  • Make it a “Tweet-able” link from your blog, website and/or newsroom
  • Ask your loyal followers to help share your message

So, next time you’re working on your crisis communications plan – or worse, next time you find yourself in a crisis – remember to make your message memorable and tweet-able.

What are your thoughts and/or experiences on creating tweet-able messages in a crisis? Feel free to share them with me below!

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About Melissa Agnes

Melissa Agnes, president of Melissa Agnes Crisis Management, is a specialist in social media crises and online reputation management.

From evaluating the risk that social media and the Internet present to your organization, to developing a comprehensive social media and online crisis management and communications plan, Melissa offers an array of well-rounded services enabling organizations to empower themselves and their team when it comes to the prevention, detection and management of online crisis situations.

Melissa writes a daily blog on the subject of online crisis management and invites you to connect with her on Twitter and Linkedin.

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3 Responses to Is Your Social Media Crisis Communications Plan Twitter-Friendly?

  1. Gerard Braud January 31, 2013 at 11:47 am #

    Some good thoughts and worth discussing. I’d retweet this right now… but Twitter has crashed… which is why I’d suggest that Twitter can be part of a strategy, but I wouldn’t put too many eggs in the Twitter basket. It is, however, a great way to get a quote to a reporter.

    • Melissa Agnes February 1, 2013 at 11:29 am #

      It’s good for many reasons. Though you’re right, there are many strategies and dimensions to a solid crisis plan. Twitter is merely one of them – though an important one indeed.

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  1. Tweetable Soundbites | Crisis Management - February 16, 2013

    [...] Today you’re more likely to catch a breaking story on Twitter than the evening news. Both professional and amateur (read: everyone else) reporters are using Twitter to share and discuss current events every minute of every day, and that’s exactly why you need to craft what social media expert Melissa Agnes called “tweet-worthy messages” in a recent blog post: [...]

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