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Strategic Communications and Biodiversity

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Title: Strategic Communications and Biodiversity


1
Strategic Communicationsand Biodiversity
  • Approaches, Opportunities
  • and Lessons Learned

2
Traditional approaches to environmental
communications
  • 1. Environmental Education
  • 2. Agenda Setting
  • 3. Public Will
  • 4. Mobilization
  • 5. Behavior Change
  • Knowledge leads to change? (K-A-B)
  • Raise media profile
  • Create public demand
  • Rally the troops
  • Change individual behavior

3
Strategic communications approaches for social
change
  • Framing (sets context, cognition and discourse)
  • Values-based communications (uses widely held
    cultural values to provide personal meaning)
  • Narrative communications (uses classic
    story-telling structure to establish symbolic
    meaning and channel of discourse)
  • Social marketing (applies marketing tools to
    change behavior on social issues.)

4
What makes communications strategic?
  • Outcome-based
  • Resources, activities and products are focused on
    achieving specific outcomes to achieve a specific
    impact
  • Audience-based
  • Messages, messengers, and placement strategies
    are all designed to speak to the needs and
    interests of the audience
  • Integration across organization or movement

5
Frames and meaning
  • Frames shape cognition and provide the structure
    of discourse
  • People rely on concepts and values to assign
    meaning.
  • Understanding is frame-based, not fact based a
    story must first make sense, then the facts are
    assimilated.
  • Information provides cues that connect to
    pictures in our minds.

6
Which frame drives communications about
biodiversity conservation?
7
Frames at three levels
  • The values level
  • Ah, this is about my familys well-being and
    responsibility to future generations.
  • The what kind of an issue is this? level
  • I think this is about the environment and
    health, maybe the economy too.
  • The specific issue level
  • The Endangered Species Act needs to be
    reauthorized by Congress.

8
Values-based communications
  • Uses widely held cultural values to provide
    personal meaning and salience for issues
  • Addresses concerns
  • Provides solutions
  • Suggests responsive actions
  • Uses messengers, stories, images that reinforce
    the message.

9
Values-based messages
  • A values-based message
  • States why this audience should care about an
    issueit speaks to their values and concerns.
  • Describes a threat or problem and who is
    responsible.
  • Provides a solution and describes an action that
    will address the need and the threat.
  • Gives people something to do.

10
The importance of values, language and metaphor
  • Values help ground an issue in personal and
    cultural meaning and import
  • Language has power and is laden with meaning and
    layers of context that can work for or against an
    issue
  • Metaphors help people file a new concept within
    a familiar set of concepts they provide context
    and relationship

11
Both framing and values-based strategies
emphasize
  • Lead with frame or value
  • Support with facts (dont lead)
  • Messenger must resonate with message
  • Language must reinforce message
  • Images must reinforce message
  • Human stories must reinforce message

12
Story-based Communication
  • Uses classic story telling to provide context and
    meaning for an issue
  • Draws on familiar cultural myths/stories to draw
    parallels to issues of the day
  • Attempts to develop and grow a meme
  • For more information contact smartMeme.com

13
Some archetypal stories that shape our
relationship with nature
14
Elements of a story-based strategy
  • A point of view
  • A sympathetic character/protagonist
  • Showing not telling (using images and imagery)
  • Foreshadowing (show the future)
  • Frame the conflict draws attention to details
  • Amplifies the voices of sympathetic, relevant
    spokespeople
  • Engages peoples values stresses stories/values
    over data
  • Offers vision illustrates what the future will
    be

15
Social MarketingUses the classic approaches of
marketing applied to social issues to change
behavior
  • Product What is the behavior we want to change?
  • Price What is the cost to the individual in
    terms of barriers and off-setting benefits?
  • Place Where and how will our target audience
    make this behavior change the store? home?
  • Promotion What do we say about our product? it?
    How often? When? Where? By whom?
  • Policy Where else will this change have impact?
    Social Norms? Legislation? Marketplace?

16
Audience-based tools used in social marketing
  • Identify barriers and how to overcome them
  • Obtain commitments (pledges, signatures, etc.)
  • Model behavior
  • Provide prompts
  • Point of experience
  • Establishing norms
  • Financial incentives disincentives
  • Personalized communications

17
Conservation Psychology
  • Affect (feeling) is as important (if not more so)
    than cognition.
  • Caring is the root of intent, action, involvement
    and meaning.
  • To care about (it matters)
  • To care for (nurture and protect)
  • Take care (to be cautious and thoughtful)

18
Pathways to the Public
  • Community and grassroots organizing
  • News media campaigns
  • Entertainment and popular culture
  • Education
  • The marketplace
  • The arts
  • Social networks, including
  • The Web, faith communities, etc.

19
What do effective strategies have in common?
  • Not single issue broader strategic goals
  • Audience-based
  • Address both cognitive and affective (thinking
    and feeling) to create meaning
  • Personal context/saliency
  • Anticipate barriers and address them
  • Evaluation and adaptive strategies

20
Lessons Learned
  • From the last 14 years

21
EE Effectiveness(NEETF study)
  • Information and Science only
  • Info and science
  • how to knowledge
  • Info and science how to knowledge plus
    hands on experience
  • Little impact on behavior and attitudes
  • Significant impact on some behavior, not much
    impact on attitude
  • Deeper learning, more lasting behavior change
    more involved behaviors, reinforced by positive
    attitude

22
Lessons Learned Frames
  • Avoid the Science box frame where this problem
    is seen as scientific and technical and thus
    experts will solve it (Phew!)
  • Avoid the Catastrophe frame where all is loss
    and tragedy, thus hopeless and disempowering.
    (Im outta here.)
  • Avoid reliance on primarily utilitarian frames,
    nature makes medicine because the research
    shows that values for family, future generations
    and Gods creation are more potent for most
    Americans.

23
Frames continued
  • Biodiversity suffers from episodic communications
    (an invasive species here, an extinction there)
    and needs thematic approaches to tell the big
    story and big solutions
  • Tone tends to be despairing
  • Messengers and message not top of mind, not
    deeply resonant

24
News framings havent served biodiversity very
well
  • Crisis du jour
  • Episodic, disconnected events
  • Reinforce bad news and hopelessness
  • Run with wacky stories (the kangaroo rat example)
  • Reinforces extremes (e.g. spotted owl)
  • Rarely provide or explain solutions
  • Disempower victims privilege the voices of power

25
Lessons Learned Values linked to biodiversity
and nature
  • Responsibility to care for the Earth and future
    generations
  • Responsibility to ones family
  • Responsibility to oneself
  • Respect for Gods creation (spiritual/sacred
    values of nature)
  • Personal fulfillment enjoyment and aesthetics
  • Love of country or culture
  • Personal liberty and fairness
  • Quality of Life
  • Sense of Place identity
  • Sources Belden Russonello Stewart, 1996 and
    2002 Biodiversity Polls and recent research
    projects.

26
What the research tells us
  • Use the well-researched, deep cultural values
    that we already know communicate about the
    environment
  • Family and responsibility to family
  • Leaving a healthy planet for Future Generations
  • And consider using strong emerging intangibles
    such as
  • Sense of Place/Regional Identify
  • Quality of Life
  • Pragmatism

27
Lessons Learned Messages and Core Concepts
  • Complexity (multiple concepts, issues)
  • Everything nothing
  • Precision (gene pools, populations, etc.)
  • vs. Life itself
  • Incremental disparate actions get lost and the
    whole doesnt get communicated
  • Mushy asks what do we want people to do?

28
What is the ask?
  • Solutions are hard to define what do we WANT
    the public, policymakers, etc. to DO about the
    biodiversity crisis?
  • No one-stop shopping for biodiversity (cant cap
    and trade life itself)
  • Defining some meta-scale solutions would help
    address communications problems behavior change
    is good, but not enough, and is audience-specific

29
Five ways to healthier homesand habitats
  • Make smart seafood choices
  • Just say no to lawn and garden pesticides
  • Buy organic and locally produced foods
  • Buy coffee thats made in the shade
  • Create healthy habitat in your own backyard

30
Lessons Learned Messengers
  • Must be credible to your audience. Messengers may
    be more important than the message itself.
  • Real people affected by the issue are usually
    more persuasive than environmental professionals,
    but dont overlook experts. Expertise is
    important.
  • Children are often effective messengers for
    biodiversity and environmental health.

31
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32
Lessons Learned Languageavoid eco-speak
  • Dont use the term biodiversity unless you
    define it. Consider Life itself, nature, the
    natural world, habitat.
  • Beware of the cachet of endangered
  • Avoid jargon like riparian, vascular,
    invertebrate extirpated.
  • Talk about real places, e.g. forests, parks,
    marshes not public lands apple orchards that
    depend on bees not crops that depend on
    pollinators (reduce abstraction connect dots)

33
Lessons Learned Tell Stories
  • Tell stories that connect the dots to everyday
    experiences
  • Put a human face on a human story
  • Real lives saved (drugs, flood protection)
  • Real action in real communities (rain gardens,
    habitat restoration, etc.)
  • Generation to generation sharing place,
    experience, memory, family
  • Heroes, Horror Stories
  • Put charismatic and surprising people, critters
    and images into the story when appropriate

34
Images
  • Images that reflect the messages a positive
    appeal to values
  • A shocking picture of the problem (but beware of
    stereotyped images).
  • Compare/contrast side by sides of that which is
    worth protecting and images of loss or
    destruction lost or saved, etc.
  • Attention grabbers

35
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36
Compare and Contrast
37
Use straightforward facts in simple, specific
language
  • Social math e.g. Nine of out ten frog species
    (not 90 or many)
  • Facts that provide context and relate to our
    daily lives
  • The water we drink
  • The food we eat
  • The air our children breath
  • The view from our windows

38
Lessons Learned Pathways to the Public
  • Mediums and channels have gone global (the net)
    and micro-targeted (niche markets/data mapping).
  • News media is still important for agenda setting,
    but fewer people read newspapers every day.
  • Most people still getting primary news about the
    environment from local television news.
  • Social networks have exploded but biodiversity
    outreach/action has just scratched the surface.

39
Reach people where they are
  • Through what they value
  • What theyre concerned about
  • In a context that provides personal meaning and a
    logical map for thinking about the topic
  • In the mediums and the circles of contacts that
    they use and trust
  • Give people something positive that they can do
    to make a difference
  • Make the action easy, authentic, painless and
    rewarding provide feedback when possible

40
Cautions
  • Dont rest on aging research in times of rapid
    change
  • Consider whether raising urgency is a primary
    strategy during a time of multiple uber-urgencies
  • Address Barriers
  • 1. Structures
  • 2. Mindsets
  • 3. Lack of Information and feedback
  • 4. Mistrust of government, companies and science
  • 5. Isolation
  • 6. Terminology
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