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Message Development Basics

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Title: Message Development Basics


1
Message Development Basics
  • A Biodiversity Project Workshop
  • September 2004

2
Why do we need strong messages and communication
strategies?
  • We live in a culture saturated with appeals that
    compete for attention and concern
  • Americans are accustomed to the sophisticated
    messages of advertising and marketing and have
    lots of filters
  • Strategic communication is essential to the
    success of much of our work

3
1. Determine your Goals
  • Know what you want to accomplish
  • Know the time frame
  • Know your resources
  • Get specific with objectives can you measure
    your success?

4
2. Determine your time frame
  • Short term action
  • Long-term attitude shift
  • Decision-making process and key events?
  • The best messages and campaigns can advance both
    near-term and long-term goals, but it takes
    careful planning.

5
3. Determine Your Audience
  • Who are you trying to reach?
  • - The general public?
  • Particular segments of the public by
  • Demographics?
  • Attitude?
  • Some other framework?
  • How will reaching this audience achieve your
    goals?

6
4. Identify your audiences valuesand concerns
  • Values ideals and core beliefs, such as
    responsibility, respect for God, love of beauty,
    fairness, justice, etc.
  • Values are attitude filters we use to assess
    information and weigh decisions about
  • Concerns things that were worried about, such
    as our health, jobs, money, loss of habitat, etc.

7
Communicating with Values
  • Why, because values shift the debate to things we
    care about deeply, not isolated facts
  • Different values fit different issues for
    different people few one size fits all
  • Activate values dont try to change them
  • Values-based doesnt mean value-laden

8
Human values across cultures
  • Fairness
  • Truth
  • Compassion
  • Responsibility
  • Respect
  • (From the research of the Institute for Global
    Ethics, www.globalethics.org)

9
Primary American Values
  • Responsibility to care for ones family
  • Responsibility to care for oneself
  • Personal liberty
  • Work
  • Spirituality
  • Honesty/integrity
  • Fairness/equality
  • (From the research of Belden Russonello
    Stewart)

10
Secondary American Values
  • Responsibility to care for others
  • Personal fulfillment
  • Respect for authority
  • Love of country or culture
  • (From the research of Belden Russonello Stewart)

11
Values linked to Environmental Issues
  • Responsibility to care for the Earth and future
    generations
  • Responsibility to ones family
  • Responsibility to oneself
  • Spirituality and sacredness of nature
  • Personal fulfillment enjoyment and aesthetics
  • Love of country or culture
  • Personal liberty and fairness
  • (From the research of Belden Russonello
    Stewart, 1996 Biodiversity Poll)

12
5. Why should your audience care? Listen and
learn.
  • Start with values
  • Identify concerns
  • Consider who they trust
  • Identify where this audience gets its information
    about the environment
  • Focus groups, surveys and other public opinion
    research can provide valuable insights.

13
6. Develop a Message
  • The Message Paragraph
  • States why this audience should care about your
    issue it speaks to 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.
  • Give people something to do.

14
Anatomy of a message
  • A. Start with VALUES
  • The Great Lakes are one of the natural wonders
    of the world and it is our responsibility to
    protect them. They are a place we call home and a
    resource for us to use and protect they are
    the heart of the ecosystems that we rely on for
    life. They are a gift of nature, whose beauty and
    bounty enrich our lives and identify our region.

15
Anatomy of a Message
  • B. Identify and illustrate the THREAT
  • Yet there are those who would sell Great Lakes
    water for profit, like oil or lumber. And the
    region is using Great Lakes groundwater faster
    than nature can replenish it. There is currently
    no regional policy that will prevent exports or
    overuse within the ecosystem.

16
Anatomy of a message
  • C. What can be done why should we act?
  • We all have a responsibility to protect and
    conserve the lakes, not for a single interest,
    but for our families, for wildlife, and for the
    future. We cannot wait for a disaster to happen.
    We can all take steps now to help keep the lakes
    healthy forever.

17
Anatomy of a Message
  • D. Get SPECIFIC about the action
  • Conserve water and take pressure off groundwater
    sources that supply the Great Lakes.
  • Dont buy bottled water from groundwater sources
    because groundwater is vital to Great Lakes water
    supply.
  • Tell your Governors to sign the eight-state
    agreement to conserve Great Lakes water.

18
7. Be Careful with Language
  • Dont use the term biodiversity unless you
    define it.
  • Avoid jargon like riparian, vascular,
    extirpated.
  • Talk about real places, e.g. forests not
    public lands.
  • DO use terms like habitat, ecosystem and nature.

19
8. Choose the right Messengers
  • Must be credible to your audience.
  • Real people affected by the issue are usually
    more persuasive than environmental professionals,
    but dont overlook experts is expertise is
    important.
  • Children are often effective messengers for
    biodiversity and environmental health.

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9. Use Anecdotes Tell Stories
  • Put a human face on a human story
  • Real lives saved (drugs, flood protection)
  • Real jobs in real communities (salmon fishing)
  • Generation to generation sharing place,
    experience, memory, family
  • Heroes
  • Horror Stories
  • Charismatic and surprising critters

23
10. Choose compelling images
  • Images that reflect the messages a positive
    appeal to values
  • A shocking picture of the problem
  • Compare/contrast side by sides of that which is
    worth protecting and images of loss or
    destruction
  • Attention grabbers

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27
11. Use Straightforward Facts
  • 100,000 acres (not vast amounts of forest)
  • Nine of out ten frog species (not many)
  • Facts that relate to our daily lives
  • The water we drink
  • The food we eat
  • The air our children breath
  • The view from our windows

28
12. Repeat, Repeat, Repeat
  • Slogans, Sound bites and tag lines
  • Consistent graphics
  • Resonating consistent messages

29
13. Pathways How do you connect with your
audience?
  • Where does this audience get its information?
  • Who do they trust?
  • What access do you have (or do you need) to reach
    this audience?
  • Whats the right medium and venue TV?
    Magazines? Nature Centers? Church?
  • Which niche within these venues news, lifestyle
    feature, religion page?

30
14. Track, evaluate, modify
  • Stay on message, but have a back-up plan
  • Track and evaluate how your messages and methods
    are working are they reaching your audience and
    communicating what you want
  • Anticipate counter messages and be ready for them

31
Tips
  • Communicate to reach, not convert
  • One value rarely fits all some fit most
  • The world is cluttered with values-based messages
    from big corporations and politicians you need
    to be fresh to cut through
  • Tell stories that connect the dots to everyday
    experiences
  • Appeal to balance

32
More Tips
  • Inclusive language, e.g. we believe is
    powerful, but dont use it if you are not part of
    the authentic we
  • Some issues are right vs. right especially when
    values are involved avoid declaring someone
    elses values wrong if they are widely embraced
    public values
  • Lead with stories, follow with facts
  • Facts are still important dont forget to do
    your homework

33
Emerging Strategies
  • Community Based Social Marketing www.cbsm.com
  • Affect-based learning conservation psychology
  • Frameworks http//frameworksinstitute.org
  • Metaphors George Lakoff
  • Social network analysis www.edgeresearch.com
  • Keep your toolbox fresh!

34
Reach people where they are
  • Through what they value
  • What theyre concerned about
  • 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
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