Running a Mesh Communications Exercise

Running a Mesh Communications Exercise

Exercises are the primary mechanism by which emergency communications groups validate their capabilities before they are needed in an actual incident. A well-designed mesh communications exercise will surface coverage gaps, equipment failures, procedural ambiguities, and operator skill deficiencies in a controlled environment where mistakes have no real-world consequences.

HSEEP Framework Basics

The Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program (HSEEP) provides a standardised methodology for designing, conducting, and evaluating exercises. Key HSEEP concepts relevant to mesh communications exercises include:

Designing a Realistic Scenario

Effective mesh communications exercises are anchored in plausible local hazard scenarios. Three scenarios that work well for most communities:

Facilitator Guide Structure

A mesh communications exercise facilitator guide should include: exercise overview and objectives; scenario narrative with inject schedule (pre-scripted events delivered to players at designated times to drive exercise activity); expected player actions for each inject; evaluator guidance (what to observe, how to score); and facilitated hot wash guidance (structured discussion immediately after the exercise to capture initial observations before memory fades).

Common After-Action Findings

Across multiple mesh communications exercises conducted by community groups nationwide, common findings include:


Revision #2
Created 2026-05-03 06:47:42 UTC by Mesh America Admin
Updated 2026-05-03 13:02:28 UTC by Mesh America Admin