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Communication in a Modern Media Environment: What for? To whom? How? Micky Denehy January 25th 2012 DIET, PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AND HEALTH A EUROPEAN PLATFORM FOR ACTION WORKSHOP ON COMMUNICATION AND INFORMATION You are a “Platform for Action” and action is urgently needed by many adults.... .....and more importantly by many children My three offers to help 1. Some thoughts on behavioural change 2. The role of communication in change 3. Creating a communications brief for “external” communication Some thoughts on Or more accurately some thoughts on Legislation, regulation (and enforcement) are highly effective at changing behaviour It’s difficult to change Change is complex Foresight’s Obesity System Map The impact of change interventions are unpredictable The most effective initiative for encouraging physical activity ? Building More Cycle Trails Better to enable people to take more exercise than tell people to do so Danish Gym Club subscription only pay if you do not come once a week Sometimes desired behaviour can be achieved by enlightened regulation Percentage of adults by country who are organ donors Percentage of adults by country who are organ donors When it comes to driving speed enforcement people are focused more on risk/loss aversion Change is best served up like salami – cut up into small manageable pieces My three offers to help 1. Some thoughts on behavioural change 2. The role of communication in change The role of communication in change “Times, they are a changing“ The explosion of new media opportunities has fragmented the target audience TV is dead? Long live TV. “Advertising is not less important, its just that other communication tools are becoming more important” – John Dooner Communications these days need to say less but do more SAY DO We are not machines, making logical decisions based on a rational analysis of facts. Research indicates that many decisions we take are unconsciously driven by our emotions Rational decision making is “hard wired” to our emotions. Emotions are processed instantaneously. Damasio 1994: ‘Left brain’ logic ‘Right brain’ emotions “ The wiring of the brain favours emotion the connections from the emotional systems to the rational cognitive systems are stronger than the connections that run the other way.” Joseph LeDour Professor of Neuroscience New York University Creating communication that encourages change 1. Help people to identify with the situation 2. Make communication ‘real’ to help people identify 3. Utilize the power of Storytelling to help them to identify with the situation 4. Sometimes necessary to create dramatic shock and surprise to help overcome inertia 5. Use powerful emotions that will lead to action "One single Anne Frank moves us more than the countless others who suffered just as she did, but whose faces have remained in the shadows." Primo Levi New Zealand Telecom My three offers to help 1. Some thoughts on behavioural change 2. How communication may help 3. Creating a communications brief for “external” communication The external communications brief 1. Who is the client, what is the brand? 2. What is the task we need to address and how do we know if we have achieved it? 3. What do we want to say – single minded proposition? 4. Who do we want to talk to – target audience? 5. How do we reach them – media channels (including social media & word of mouth)? 6. How do measure the effectiveness of the communication? 7. How much money is available – budget? 1. Who is the client, what is the brand? I don’t know who you are I don’t know your company I don’t know your company’s products I don’t know what your company stands for I don’t know your company’s customers I don’t know your company’s record I don’t know your company’s reputation Now, what was it you wanted to sell me? 1. Who is the client, what is the brand? 2. What is the task we need to address and how do we know if we have achieved it? The health problem is clear • • • • • • European Union citizens are moving too little and consuming too much: too much energy, too many calories, too much fat and sugar, and salt. The main consequence is a sustained, acute EU-wide increase in overweight and obesity. The increase is particularly severe for children and adolescents. This trend is increasing ill health and shortening lives. The human cost is unacceptable. The budgetary and economic cost is also severe. The solution and the communication task are less clear • The causes of this social disease are manifold. • There are no simple solutions. • The EU Platform for Action on Diet, Physical Activity and Health started in March 2005 with the purpose to create a forum for actors at European level who can commit their membership to engage in concrete actions designed to contain or reverse current trends. 2. What is the task we need to address and how do we know if we have achieved it? 3. What do we want to say – single minded proposition? What do we want to say? • • • The spirit of the Platform is to work under the leadership of the European Commission and to provide an example, which others will choose to follow across Europe, of coordinated but autonomous actions by different parts of society to deal with the many aspects of the problem. It is not designed to pre-empt, but rather to stimulate, other initiatives at national, regional or local level. The present Platform hopes to become an example that others will choose to follow, and to provide input into the ongoing European Union policy debate. 3. What do we want to say – single minded proposition? 4. Who do we want to talk to – target audience? 5. How do we reach them – media channels (including social media & word of mouth)? A thought on social media & storytelling “The Rise of the Story ” Richard Stacy • • • • Stories have always been a useful medium of communication – but the rise of social media has just made them essential. If you haven’t got a good one, you could be in trouble. The philosophy of marketing is restrictive – one-word ‘brand equities’, single key visuals etc. At its heart is the idea of the proposition – a tightly defined statement of what the brand stands for. This was the cornerstone of a marketing or communications strategy in the mass media age. A story can drive conversation in the way a proposition cannot. People can pick up a story and tell it in their own words, they can pluck bits out of it and pass it on. It has mobility – the key attribute in the world of liberated media. A single story can live and move in blog posts, tweets, Facebook pages or conversations – anywhere and everywhere. Social media & storytelling • • • Stories have a further advantage in that they have an application beyond how you project your organisation outwards, they can be a strategic management tool in their own right. Once you have an effective corporate story, this in itself is a strategy and when your strategy is a story it is easy for it to spread through the organisation. One of the biggest management and communications challenges any business faces is ‘aligning’ employees behind a corporate strategy – but once that strategy is encoded as a story, that process is much simpler. 5. How do we reach them – media channels (including social media & word of mouth)? 6. How do measure the effectiveness of the campaign? 7. How much money is available – budget? The external communications brief 1. Who is the client, what is the brand? 2. What is the task we need to address and how do we know if we have achieved it? 3. What do we want to say – single minded proposition? 4. Who do we want to talk to – target audience? 5. How do we reach them – media channels (including social media & word of mouth)? 6. How do measure the effectiveness of the communication? 7. How much money is available – budget? Thank you and good luck