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Risk Communication Cadre Workshop: Great Plains Association of Threat Assessment Professionals

Risk Communication Cadre Workshop: Great Plains Association of Threat Assessment Professionals. Presented by: Ron Edmond rgedmond@comcast.net. 3 KEY MESSAGES…. TEAMWORK PROACTIVITY PREPARATION Preparation Preparation Preparation. Initial. Maintenance. Resolution. Evaluation.

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Risk Communication Cadre Workshop: Great Plains Association of Threat Assessment Professionals

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  1. Risk Communication Cadre Workshop:Great Plains Association of Threat Assessment Professionals Presented by: Ron Edmond rgedmond@comcast.net

  2. 3 KEY MESSAGES… • TEAMWORK • PROACTIVITY • PREPARATION • Preparation • Preparation • Preparation

  3. Initial Maintenance Resolution Evaluation Pre-crisis • Prepare • Foster alliances • Develop consensus recommendations • Test message • Evaluate plans • Express empathy • Provide simple risk explanations • Establish credibility • Recommend actions • Commit to stakeholders • Further explain risk by population groups • Provide more background • Gain support for response • Empower risk/benefit decisionmaking • Capture feedback for analysis • Educate a primed public for future crises • Examine problems • Gain support for policy and resources • Promote your organization’s role • Capture lessons learned • Improve plan • Return to pre-crisis planning Risk Communication Lifecycle

  4. Why Crisis Emergency Risk Communication is Different

  5. Communicating in a crisis is different In a serious crisis, all affected people . . . • Take in information differently • Process information differently • Act on information differently • In a catastrophic event: communication is different • Be first, be right, be credible

  6. Yes, leaders communicate, and In a catastrophic event, your . . . • every word, • every eye twitch • every passing emotion • . . . resonates with heightened importance to the public

  7. What the public seeks from your communication 5 public concerns. . . • Gain wanted facts • Empower decision making • Involved as a participant, not spectator • Provide watchguard over resource allocation • Recover or preserve well-being and normalcy

  8. Crisis/emergency risk communication impacts 5 organizational concerns -- you need to. . . • Execute response and recovery efforts • Decrease illness, injury, and deaths • Avoid misallocation of limited resources • Reduce rumors surrounding recovery • Avoid wasting resources

  9. 5 communication failures that kill operational success • Mixed messages from multiple experts • Information released late • Paternalistic attitudes • Not countering rumors and myths in real-time • Public power struggles and confusion

  10. 5 communication steps that boost operational success • Execute a solid communication plan • Be the first source for information • Express empathy early • Show competence and expertise • Remain honest and open

  11. Risk Communication Principles Risk Communication Summary TheoryEffect Solution Mental noise Blocks communication Use clear, concise messages and active listening Trust determination Enhances or detracts Show that you care from message Risk perception Frustration and outrage Recognize and respond to RP factors Negative dominance Distorts communication Develop positive messages

  12. Your public messages in a crisis must be: Simple Timely Accurate Relevant Credible Consistent The STARCC Principle

  13. Psychology of a Crisis

  14. What people feel during a disaster Psychological barriers: • Fear, anxiety, confusion, dread • Hopelessness or helplessness • Seldom panic • Fight or flight • Vicarious rehearsal

  15. Communicating in a crisis is different • Uncertainty is greatest concern for most • Reduce anxiety-give people things to do • Public seeks restored self-control • Public must feel empowered – reduce fear and victimization

  16. Decision making in a crisis is different • People simplify • Cling to current beliefs • We remember what we see or previously experience (first messages carry more weight) • People limit intake of new information (3-7 bits)

  17. Risk Communication Principles for Emergencies

  18. Risk communication principles for emergencies Guard against over assurance • Considered controversial by some • A high estimate of harm modified downward is much more acceptable to the public than a low estimate of harm modified upward

  19. Risk communication principles for emergencies When the news is good, state continued concern before stating reassuring updates “Although we’re not out of the woods yet, we have seen a declining number of cases each day this week.” “Although the fires could still be a threat, we have them 85% contained.”

  20. Risk communication principles for emergencies Under promise and over deliver . . . • Instead of making promises about outcomes express: • Uncertainty of the situation • Confidence in the “process” • Address public safety concerns

  21. Risk communication principles for emergencies Give people things to do - anxiety is reduced by action and a restored sense of control • Symbolic behaviors • Preparatory behaviors • Contingent “if, then” behaviors • 3-part action plan • Must do X - Should do Y - Can do Z

  22. Risk communication principles for emergencies Allow people the right to feel fear • Don’t pretend they’re not afraid, and don’t tell them they shouldn’t be • Acknowledge the fear, and give contextual information

  23. Successful Communication = Accuracy of Information __________ Speed of Release CREDIBILITY + Empathy + Openness TRUST

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