Agricultural Crisis Communication Using Social Media
Abstract
How an agricultural organization handles the way the media reports a crisis can have an impact on the
public’s perceptions of the organization, and sometimes the industry as a whole. The popularity of social
media outlets as a venue for disseminating and gathering information and news makes the use of social
media surrounding agricultural crises an important topic to investigate. A qualitative case study was conducted to investigate the use of social media tools
during an agricultural crisis. The participants – communications directors, social media managers, and
individuals with a close connection to the crisis under study – reported that social media was a major
component of their communication efforts surrounding each crisis. Participants felt social media was
very effective in these situations and had a major impact on their communication efforts. Although no
participants reported using a structured social media strategy or crisis communication plan, they stated a
need for such guidelines in the agricultural industry. From the data analyzed in this study, a model for
using social media during a crisis situation, aimed specifically for use by those in the agricultural industry,
was developed. This project was funded through the USDA's Beginning Farmers & Ranchers Project.
Keywords:
crisis communications, social media, agricultural communications, grounded theory
Source: Courtney Gibson, Erica Irlbeck, and Courtney Meyers, https://newprairiepress.org/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2279&context=jac This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 License.