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Four roles for social media in local government communications

Thursday, October 9th, 2008 at 6:32 am

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This is the third of a three part series of posts looking at use of social media in local government communications in 2008. First post is here and second here.

In this post I’m suggesting four different of role for social media within local government communications.

The roles are meant as mutually supportive steps for local government to take to develop the use of social media as part of an overall communications mix.


Role one: environment scanning

Regardless of whether a council is already using social media or not, there will be user generated content on the web already about the organisation or its area. Councils should use commercial or freely available tools to monitor social media to help aid their understanding of public perception within their area. Such monitoring could also help councils in identifying issues that may cross over into mainstream media - this is increasingly useful given the emerging relationship between coverage in social media and the mainstream media.

Role two: public information
In this role, councils can use of social media tools as one-way broadcast channels. The nature of such one-way communications will be familiar to councils given the ubiquity of the news release, but will become increasingly important given the decline in penetration of traditional local media and increasing reliance on online sources for news and information.

This is also an opportunity for councils to reduce the role of local media as a gatekeeper. It’ll be particularly relevant where a council has a local traditional media environment dominated by one or most inherently hostile media organisations.

However this role fundamentally under-uses the potential of social media to create dialogue between an organisation and its publics, as well as between members of its publics as well.

Some social media enthusiasts would also probably argue that use of social media as a public information tool is not genuinely social media as it doesn’t satisfy the shared or collaborative nature of some definitions of social media. However being pragmatic, I think this step is important even thought it’ll probably upset some purists.

Role three: public communications
Here social media is used in external communications to its greatest extend, enabling publics as well as the organisation to create a conversation that is mutually beneficial to everyone participating

This role is a significant opportunity for councils to engage with publics and benefit from increased participation and subsequent benefits to reputation from increased resident satisfaction.

However doing this means that councils must accept the potential for reputational risk from critical or difficult conversations.

The degree and speed of scrutiny that social media can demand will be a new challenge for council communicators to meet. It’s vital that communicators in councils prepare the council as a whole for engaging in a more open and transparent way than may have happened previously.

Role four: internal communications
I can also see a clear role for social media in improving organisational performance through more effective communications among employees. For example Kent County Council has done some interesting work creating Communities of Practice; effectively internal social networks focussed on knowledge sharing, innovation and communication. Think about how a microblogging platform could be used to share information and create short employee-to-employee interactions.

As I’ve said before though, effective deployment of social media within local authorities needs a supportive culture where use of social media tools isn’t seen as a potential risk of timewasting and more as a productive type of business communication.

This is the third of a three part series of posts looking at use of social media in local government communications in 2008. First post is here and second here.

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Comments on “Four roles for social media in local government communications”

  • Carl Haggerty

    Hi Simon,

    I have enjoyed reading your posts and it is reassuring to read that I have encouraged my council to enter and engage with roles 1 and 2 and this point in time. We are dabbling with roles 3 and 4 and i am hoping that we can make more efforts and moves into these areas in the near future.

    I am interested in reading further your thoughts on this subject.

    Carl

  • Steve Dale

    Hi Simon,

    only just discovered your blog - will follow in future. Some useful info here on Web 2.0 on local gov. I did an article on this myself quite recently - http://snurl.com/48vv7 - in case you haven’t seen.

    Look forward to the next installment!

    Steve

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Simon Wakeman

I've been on the web since 2001 and have been blogging about marketing and public relations since January 2006.

I'm currently Head of Marketing at Medway Council as well as a freelance marketing and PR consultant.

The content and opinions expressed on this website are not endorsed by nor reflect the views of any company or organisation I work with.

I have used Simon for the last three years on a number of projects. Not only is he knowledgeable and professional, but he has a full grasp of a customers needs and can deliver the right creative and business results for a customer. Ian Lockyer, BMEA

I have used Simon for the last three years on a number of projects. Not only is he knowledgeable and professional, but he has a full grasp of a customers needs and can deliver the right creative and business results for a customer. Ian Lockyer, BMEA

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