Technology is ever-evolving and it’s no surprise that methods we use today to notify the masses are different from years past. To understand the history of mass notification, it’s important to look at the evolution of communication as a whole.
Here’s a closer look at the evolution of mass notification:
One of the most famous stories of mass alerting is Paul Revere’s midnight ride, in which Paul was part of “an elaborate warning system set up by the Sons of Liberty to spread an alarm quickly and efficiently.” A team of messengers, including Paul, rode by horseback to military stores in several Massachusetts towns, to warn of the impending ambush by the British. This form of personal and manual mass notification was successful for its time and several others, including a 16-year-old girl, dubbed the ‘female Paul Revere’, delivered important warnings on horseback.
Jumping up a couple of hundred years during World War II in London, the Prime Minister “interrupted the regular radio broadcasts to announce that Britain and Germany were at war”. Soon after, they tested their alerting system, air raid sirens, preparing thousands of civilians for a possible air strike.
Nearly 60 years later, the abduction and murder of a little girl named Amber Hagerman in 1996, inspired the development of a revolutionary early warning system that has helped recover hundreds of missing children. The AMBER alert is part of the Wireless Emergency Alert program, which sends out warnings for weather, presidential and imminent threats.
Mass notification in 2018 takes an integrated approach to alerting the public. It’s no longer enough to use a singular approach for mass notification such as sending out an email, especially with the overwhelming amount of emails we receive today. Multi-modal mass notification tools allow messengers to deliver urgent communications to the public. Advanced tools give messengers the power for better data management, audience targeting and even selective communication channel options, where you turn on or off specific platforms such as social media or voice mail, if you don’t want messages being delivered through them.
Here are a few examples of future-proof mass notification tools being used by organizations today: