__________________________________________________________________________
Hello Readers of Roserambles.orgβ¦I love blogging and providing current news and events. A major stream of revenue just ended for me, so I rely even more heavily on this blog to pay my bills. Your gifts really do make a difference in this moment! Please donate to my blog using the PayPal button, or use the link for my campaign at GiveSendGo, Support Roseramblesdotorg. Thank YOU for sharing your love! BE safe, BE well, and BE inβ¦Quantum Joy!
__________________________________________________________________________

Editorβs Note: Many thanks to reader M. For sending in this share! πΉ
__________________________________________________________________________
The anchor Tweet was simple: βPrepared for a #zombie apocalypse? If so, ur prepared for any emergency. Learn how: CDC PH Matters blog.β It went viral within 10 minutes. On just the first day, the Tweet, blog, and the web page had 200 million impressions. After a week, that number reached 3.3 billion. More importantly, people engaged in preparedness discussions on social media, and traffic to CDCβs Emergency Preparedness page increased 1,143% compared to the same date the previous year.
It was unconventional for a science-based organization to do something tongue in cheek, so what inspired this approach? Catherine Jamal, who lead the project, calls it βsocial media listening.β For one week, she and her team posted basic emergency preparedness facts on CDCβs Emergency Preparedness Twitter feed. Then they asked, βWhat are you preparing for?β And to their surprise, Jamal and her team noticed a trend in people listing the usual suspects β natural disasters, disease outbreaks, terror eventsβand a zombie apocalypse.
Crisis and Emergency Risk Communication is not just about feeding the public what you want to tell them. Itβs also about listening to what they want to hear. Watching social media trends and engaging with your audience can help drive them to the important information youβre trying to communicate. CDCβs 2011 blog on Preparedness 101: Zombie Apocalypse, and the zombie preparedness campaign that followed, brought readers to CDCβs Emergency Preparedness page at a time when the page was not getting a lot of traffic despite the valuable guidance included on how to prepare for any emergency. Humor would not normally be appropriate during an emergency, butβper the CERC rhythmCdc-pdfβs preparedness phaseβeffective emergencies start with good planning. In this case, our communication team realized that people were more interested in preparing for real-life emergencies if it also meant theyβd be ready for a future (imaginary) zombie scare.
For more information on CERC visit our website and check out the CERC manual. You can also read previous CERC Corners.
Have you used CERC in your work? To share your CERC stories, e-mail cercrequest@cdc.gov. Your stories may appear in future CERC Corners.
Page last reviewed: May 9, 2018 (archived document)
Yeah, that’s hilarious about why they did that Zombie Apocolypse preparedness, but that doesn’t explain the National Guard doing military zombie drills…LOL or is it a drill? π CONplan 8888 Zombie Military preparedness plan.
LikeLike
Ummβ¦does it really matter? ππΉπ
LikeLiked by 1 person
THAT was funnier than the drill.
LikeLike
When do we get to see ‘open season’ declare on the darkies, and finally get to spill some darky blood?
LikeLiked by 1 person
Not quite the way it going to happenβ¦ππΉ
LikeLike
Maybe…it matters to those that are dealing with zombies, aka normies…LOL, but of course it’s been embeded in our consciousness, is it a matter or does it matter?
If I run into one, yeah, it matters. Brain dead biters….we’ve heard of them, just in this matter…awareness is important just as much as anything in the crazy world so….yeah, it matters.
LikeLike
ππΉ
LikeLike