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Coal Field Communications DAY 1 PART 1

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Coal Field Communications DAY 1 PART 1 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Coal Field Communications DAY 1 PART 1


1
Coal Field CommunicationsDAY 1 PART 1
  • EXTENDING the REACH
  • How Outreach Can Help You!

2
You have already learned about
  • Building Trust Through Effective Communication
  • Conducting Effective Public Meetings
  • Managing the Media

3
How Outreach Can Help Youthis section will cover
  • TODAY
  • How outreach can help you
  • Some tips and tools
  • Using the WEB
  • TOMORROW
  • How to be a good ambassador
  • Working with communities
  • Show and Tell
  • How do YOU get the word out?

4
WHY OUTREACH?
  • Its Monday morning. The phone rings its a
    producer for The Today Show they are doing a
    mining story that will air on Thursday. They
    want your help to find a high hazard AML site
    within 1 hour of a major airport. Film crew to
    arrive tomorrow (Tuesday) at 1000am.
  • WHAT DO YOU DO?

5
Reach for your agencysOUTREACH PLAN
  • It should tell you
  • Who gets the call within your org
  • Who is responsible for cold calls
  • Who can talk to the press
  • Refer to the Press Kit

6
PRESS KIT
  • Your vision, goal, mission, message
  • Your WEB page address
  • Facts and figures
  • List of who to call
  • Supportive landowners/citizens and can to talk to
    the media
  • Video clips web
  • Names numbers of local reporters you have
    relationship with

7
Press Kits
8
Colorado AML got a call referred the producer to
other AMLs
  • The Result

9
ABC Story on AML UTAH
10
What is Outreach?
  • SIMPLY Communication
  • Getting your message out
  • Informing citizens
  • SMCRA, mining, energy, reclamation, safety
  • Connecting with the public and communities
  • Educating
  • Selling your program

Couldnt we communicate better if we built a
bridge?
11
Outreach also
  • Helps in crisis situations
  • Promotes teamwork
  • Creates better understanding and support for your
    programs
  • SYNERGY! the result can be a better project!

12
Good plans
  • Include your organizations mission
  • Target relevant primary and secondary audiences
  • Identify the key message for each program

13
Developing your message
  • What news do you want to make?
  • What issues are important and need to be
    addressed?
  • What do you want people to remember?
  • Will your audience get it?
  • What are positives and negatives of the topic?

14
A Few Tips for Outreach Success
15
Know Your Audience
  • Age
  • Education
  • Stakeholder/landowner?
  • Rural or urban?
  • Aware of governmental processes or not?

16
Search out your Achilles heel
  • Find those who may oppose your project
  • Try to understand their objections
  • Involve them from the beginning
  • Anticipate opportunities for agreement

17
RECRUIT PARTNERS
  • Industry
  • Private citizens
  • Special interest groups
  • Trade associations
  • Other government agencies

18
Why are partnerships valuable?
  • Planning
  • Publicity
  • Funding
  • Materials
  • In-kind services.

19
Build Community Rapport Support
20
Give presentations to local groupsSchools,
scouts, clubs, church, civic, etc.
21
Always keep decision makers
informed!
  • No surprises
  • Special efforts to keep local, state and federal
    elected officials involved and updated!
  • Connections grow in value

22
DID IT WORK?
  • Build monitoring and
  • evaluation into your
  • outreach plan.
  • Use free news
  • search sites
  • http//news.yahoo.com/www.newsindex.com

23
MEASURE YOUR EFFECTIVENESS
that means counting!
  • Use clipping services
  • Web page hit counter
  • User surveys and questionnaires
  • Simple and easy
  • SASE- self addressed stamped envelope
  • Use internet and web based feedback

24
More on measuring
  • Telephone surveys
  • Interviews/focus groups
  • Participant evaluations for events
  • Business reply cards (bounce-back cards)
  • Learn from others
  • Gather and keep statistics to report
    accomplishments

25
Use An Evaluation Form for your personal records
  • INCLUDE
  • Project/event purpose, history, goals
  • Who was in charge, other staff
  • How much total time? preparation and event
  • Project/event costs
  • Publicity used
  • Problems encountered
  • Who attended? How many?
  • Note main successes and failures
  • Keep copies of all materials handed out

26

THIS LAND IS YOUR LAND
  • Some Tools of the Trade

27
IAP2 handoutInternational Association for
Public Participation
28
THE MAJORCOMMUNCIATION TECHNIQUES
  • Printed Materials
  • Media Video Productions
  • Promotional Items
  • Web

29
PRINTED MATERIALS
  • KISS - Keep it Short Simple
  • Make it visually interesting
  • Can easily be developed to reach targeted
    audiences

30
VIDEO/DIGITAL MEDIA
  • Identify a target audience
  • Planning a must! scripting visuals, timing,
    music

EXPENSIVE! 1000 a finished minute
31
Video expenses include
  • Videographer - time, travel, salary
  • Equipment rental
  • Studio time editing, re-editing,
  • re-editing
  • Sound - hiring narrator
  • music

32
Additional costs
  • Cover design
  • Cover reproduction
  • Jewel case
  • Video reproduction
  • Distribution
  • postage

33
Stay Out and Stay Alive AML - cooperative video
production
  • Successes
  • Partnered funding
  • In-kind saved
  • High quality product
  • Utilization by partners
  • Program awareness
  • Challenges
  • Distribution
  • Script writing
  • Timing
  • Administration

34
SOSA based news clip from Colorado
The clip is now a tool to use over and over
35
Another Tool PROMOTIONAL ITEMS
  • Budget items in PR plan
  • Friendly fun oriented
  • Creativity counts! How can you get more name
    recognition?
  • Share with other agencies - reduces cost
    compounds distribution

36
PROMOTIONAL ITEMS
  • Create interest! Draw people to you!
  • Get the Buzz going
  • Where can I get one of THOSE?
  • Have enough, but not too much!
  • Limit the amount children take

37
  • Whats your message?
  • MSHA Monthly Safety Slogans Home Page
  • Safety has no quitting time
  • Safety is a cheap and effective
  • insurance policy
  • Safety is a zero-injury goal
  • Safety is everyone's responsibility
  • Safety is no accident

38
What items do you give away?
  • Pens, bags, magnets, bookmarkers, pencils, mugs,
    t-shirts, hats, etc.
  • Pens, bags, magnets, bookmarkers, pencils, mugs,
    t-shirts, hats, etc.

39
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40
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41
Moving on - Using the WEB
42
And what may turn into your biggest tool
  • The WEB!!!!
  • Valuable information abounds
  • Interactive exercises
  • Online classes and tutorials

43
What does your WEB page look like?
  • It should
  • Provide information user wants
  • Allow for easy scanning
  • Provide visual navigation and accessibility aids

44
Web pages should
  • Look clean and concise
  • Provide credible links
  • Be a useful research tool for the public and
    media, AND
  • and MUST BE MAINTAINED and have managerial
    support

45
IMCCInterstate Mining Compact Commission
46
SUWASouthern Utah Wilderness Alliance
47
Office of Surface Mining
48
New MexicoNew Mexico Abandoned Mine Land Program
49
OhioTitle V
50
Google Search Results ExampleSearch Term
Abandoned Mines
  • 12. Wyoming
  • 13. EPA
  • 14. National Association for
  • Abandoned Mines (RAMP)
  • 15. Canada
  • 16. Michigan
  • 17. Nevada
  • 18. Kentucky
  • 19. New Mexico
  • 20. WGA - Western Governor's

    Association
  • 125. National Association of Abandoned Mine Land
    Programs
  • 1. USGS
  • 2. BLM
  • 3. Abandoned Mines of El Paso Co., Colorado
  • 4. MSHA
  • 5. Pennsylvania
  • 6. Canada
  • 7. OSM
  • 8. Colorado
  • 9. Idaho
  • 10. Montana
  • 11. Utah

51
Evaluate your web site the public is doing it
every time they access it!
READ ME
52
Some WEB Evaluation Sites
  • New Mexico State University
  • Evaluation Criteria from "The Good, The Bad
    The Ugly or, Why It's a Good Idea to Evaluate
    Web Sources
  • http//lib.nmsu.edu/instruction/evalcrit.html
  • University of Vermont
  • Web Evaluation Techniques
  • http//bailey.uvm.edu/ref/webeval.html
  • Duke University
  • Evaluating Web Sites
  • http//www.lib.duke.edu/libguide/evaluating_web.ht
    m

53
REMEMBER ON the WEB YOU CAN FIND
  • Lesson plans
  • Classroom exercises
  • Videos
  • Workbooks
  • Powerpoints
  • More

54
Web sites with mining related classroom activities

55
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56
Examples of Educational Materials
  • National Energy Foundation
  • http//www.nef1.org/
  • Posters
  • Workshops
  • CD and Songbook
  • Global Science
  • http//www.mii.org/global/

57
From the Mineral Information Institute
58
See you tomorrow!
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