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The Communication Policy of the EU Commission The Communication Policy of the EU Commission ••• 1 0. Communication about EU/EU-integration: LEGAL SITUATION: - Communication is not exclusive task of EU - Not "subsidiarity", but "complementarity" REAL SITUATION: Multitude of communication policies! * Actors are f.i. MS, NGO, EU-institutions ••• 2 1. Communication policies of EU-institutions: REAL SITUATION: - Also here: several actors, need for coordination - Main actors: EC, EP, ECJ, EESC, CoR, Council, EU-Council, EU Agencies - But in each institution several actors, like * Parties in EP; Commissioners in EC; Members of EESC; MS representatives in Council... ••• 3 1. Communication policies of EUinstitutions – continuation: - Longterm cooperation agreements exist, f.i. between * EP-EC, EC-CoR, EC-EESC,... * Operational coordination between EP and EC in "Interinstitutional group for information" PROBLEM: Different interests of institutions, parties, persons, MS... ••• 4 1. Communication policies of EUinstitutions – continuation: Examples for differences in interests: * EP has 8 political groups PLUS administration * Council has different configurations * Council has 27 MS, mostly coalition governments * CoR represents more than 300 regions (344 members) * EESC represents employers, employees, liberal professions...(344 members) ••• 5 2. Communication policy of EU Commission : Actors : - 27 Commissioners, no one has prerogative - 27 spokespersons of Commissioners - 1 Commissioner responsible for DG COMM - DG COMM : Directorate General «Communication» - Communication units in +/- 40 Directorates General - 27 EC-representations in MS - More than 125 EC-delegations in third countries ••• 6 2. Communication policy of EU Commission : Conclusion : many actors, high need for coordination Coordination : - Level Chefs de Cabinet of Commissioners - Level spokespersons by DG COMM - Level 27 representations by DG COMM - Directorates General by « External Communication Network » - 125 delegations by DG RELEX ••• 7 2.1. Coordination issues : • Commissioner for communication has no «right of command» over other Commissioners, other DG than DG COMM! • DG COMM has no right of command over spokespersons and other DG! • Communication actors coordinate cooperatively, not hierarchically! • Difference to multinational company having ONE CEO, ONE spokesman! ••• 8 3. Tasks of actors: 3.1. Commissioners : MAY speak for whole Commission… 3.2. Spokespersons : - Communication for respective Commissioner - Political communication for respective DG 3.3. DG Communication : - Coordination of 27 Representatives - Coordination of spokespersons - Coordination of information networks…and ./.>> ••• 9 3.3. Tasks of DG COMM, continued : - Coordination «Team Europe» (speakers team) - Cooperation with other institutions, MS - Horizontal communication campaigns (several DG involved) - Horizontal communication policy (several/all DG concerned) - Services for all DG : °Internet (external, internal) °Publications °Audiovisual services °Europa Direct °Press services (internal, external) °Opinion poll, press reviews ••• 10 3.4. Tasks of EC-Representations in MS : - Realisation of horizontal campaigns (Lisbon Treaty, Debate Europe,…) - Realisation of special campaigns (enlargement, EURO, …) - Press-/media relations - Speaking events - Expositions, trade fair presentations - Publications tailormade to MS - Internet page tailormade to host country ••• 11 3.5. Tasks of EC-delegations in third countries : - Realisation of individual campaigns for respective country (e.g. preparation of accession... Croatia, Macedonia!) - Press-/Media relations - Tailormade Internet page - Political reporting ••• 12 3.6. Tasks of Communication Units in DG : - Realisation of special campaigns («Milk, vegetables in schools», DG AGRI) - Contributions to europa.eu - webpage - Contributions to Audiovisual services - Speaking events - Expositions, presentations - Special print publications - Press-/Media relations focussed on special interest media ••• 13 3.7.Division of tasks between DG Comm and Communication Units in DG : • DG COMM - Public at large Communication Units of DG x - General interest media x Stakeholder relations Special interest media - Political information x «Non political» information - Whole EU, EC x Success, activities of own DG ••• 14 3.8. Problems of this complex division of tasks : - Overlappings, empty spots - Congestion of information channels/overload - Planning of events, press releases - Accumulation of/competition between important events, press releases - Speaking rules - Need of coordination potentially decelerates communication activities.... ••• 15 4. Goals of the EU-communication policy : General goals : - To inform about institutions, their functionning, activities, intentions - Explanation of above mentioned informations - Dialogue with citizens and stakeholders - Transparancy - Participation (f.e. elections; interactive policy making; consultations; procurement;…) Special goals : - Annual communication priorities ••• 16 4.1. Communication priorities - Annually fixed - Interinstitutional priorities plus special ones for EU-communication Problems : - «Moving target» - Political limitations - Previously too many priorities - «Management buy in», What means a «negative priority »? ••• 17 4.1. Communication priorities 2010 1. Driving the economic recovery and mobilising new sources of growth (unemployment in EU :11.5 %) 2. Climate action and energy (climate change, energy security) 3. Making the Lisbon Treaty work for citizens (democratic innovations : popular right of initiative;bigger role for individual parliaments) ••• 18 5. Communication tools : - Press-/media relations - Print publications - Internet - Audiovisual media - Information networks - Publicity/promotion campaigns - Visitors service - Events (conferences, discussions, expositions, trade fair presentations…) ••• 19 5.1. Exernal press-/media relations of EC : - Daily press briefing, participation of (several) Commissioners - Reply to enquiries, organisation/preparation of interviews - Press releases, press conferences of DG - „Rebuttal service“ against „EU-myths“ - Fact sheets; press packs,… - Training seminars for journalists (in Brussels or in representations) ••• 20 5.2. External Press relations of EU Commission : continuation Still in discussion is (wider) use of : „You Tube“ but we have since short „EU-Tube“ Social networks (Facebook, Linkedln) Only internal use, or also externally? Problem : speaking rules !! Blogs But some Commissioners did it ••• 21 5.2. External Press relations of EU Commission : continuation - «Topnews» : Event calender for journalists - Audiovisual studio facilities in Brussels - Speeches, blogs (of Commissioners) - Data base of press releases - «Citizens summaries» added to legislation - «Success stories» (mainly R&D support policies, regional policy projects) ••• 22 5.3. Internal tools for press/media relations of EC : - « Press of the world » online - Last news online - Press agencies online - «Flash» and «trend» reports of Representations in MS - Europa Media Monitor - «Sources say» - Eurobarometer ••• 23 5.4. Problems of press-/media relations : - Press releases in several languages – loss of time - Special „link“ to concerned MS necessary, but frequently difficult to find - Over 1000 accredited Journalists for „Pressroom“ - Personal contacts with journalists? - EC „sells“ mainly „good news“, but only „bad news is good news“ - Complexity of problems, procedures, actions, plans, policies, institutions, decision process - „Explanations“ necessary, but frequently too lengthy ••• 24 5.4. Problems of press-/media relations – continuation : - Terminology, abbreviations, EU-Jargon - Capacity of media, capacity of readers/listeners is limited - Focus on „important“ media; deficits with regional, local media? - Focus on TV, but radio rather neglected - Direct „usefulness“ of EU-actions, policies, plans, … for individual citizen necessary, but difficult to explain in brief ./.. ••• 25 5.4. Problems of press-/media relations – continuation : - Embargo? Exclusive story? Or "equal treatment“? - Obstacles for “storytelling”, “personalising” - Reluctance with forecasts, scenarios, speculations - Focus on „output“, „action“, „results“, deficits with „impact“, „individual usefullness“ ••• 26 5.5. Print publications : - Centrally produced of specials by DG - Reduction because of progress of Internet, but … Problems: - 23 official languages; lenghty production process - How long up-to-date at all ?? - Link to MS, regions ? - "Digital divide„ exists, different reading/using habits - Common corporate design for all DG‘s still lacking ••• 27 5.6. Promotion/publicity campaigns: - Generally little use of classical publicity - If so, only for «large» topics like EURO, enlargement … - Frequently together with EP, MS, NGO … EC has coordination - Mostly adapted to conditions in MS by respective Representation - Rarely for special topics, like «passenger rights», «roaming tariffs» - Costs, budgetary limits – EC is « small » as publicity actor ! ••• 28 5.7. Visitors service : - «Give Europe a human face», dialogue instead of pure information - Target audience : Multipliers (e.g. journalists, teachers, diplomats, students, …) - Lecturers : mostly EC-officials, but also external experts - 45 000 visitors with 15000 visits p.a. - Separate visitors services in EP, Council, Comité des Regions… - Largest interest in D, F (each 22 %), DK (8 %).... ••• 29 5.8. Events (conferences, discussions, expositions,…) - Largely organised by DG and Representations - Focus on stakeholders, in MS also on general audiences - EC organises platforms for different interest groups - EC enters into dialogue, informs and explains - EC open for «participation» of citizens - Importance for consultation process, even if internet exists - Publicity element contained in events, e.g. IST-event («success stories») ••• 30 5.9. « Staff as Ambassadors » : - Launched in context of «Internal Communication Strategy 2007» - Main motives are motivation of staff, increasing number of usable communicators - Motive «Giving Europe a face», personalising, «EC is tangible» - Further motives : improvement of reputation of EC, increasing sympathy for EC - Internal obstacles because of “speaking rules”, “monopolies on information”, training ••• 31 5.9. « Staff as Ambassadors » continuation : - Staff members should act mainly in their home countries/regions, enter into dialogue with citizens there - Informing not only about personal remit, but also about more general EU-subjects - Problem «presence of media» - Special action «Officials back to their schools» ••• 32 6. Development of the EC Communication policy 2005-2010 : - No single document called «Communication policy of the EC» exists, but series of « building » elements : * «Action Plan to improve communicating Europe by the Commission» (2005) * «Plan D for Democracy, Dialogue and Debate» (2005) * «White Paper on a European Communication Policy» (2006) * «Internal Communication and Staff Engagement Strategy» (2007) ••• 33 6. Development of the EC Communication policy 2005-2010 – Continuation : * «Communicating Europe in Partnership» (2007) * «Communicating about Europe via the Internet» (2007) * «Debate Europe–Building on experience of Plan D» (2008) * «Communicating Europe through Audiovisual Media» (2008) * «Corporate Communication Statement of the EU Commission» (2009) * «Guidelines on Cooperation in the Area of External Communication» (2009) ••• 34 6.1. Action plan to improve communicating Europe by the Commission (2005) : Main issues which have occurred : - Fragmentation of activities, lack of coordination - Messages too much oriented at political priorities, not at interests of citizens - Too many campaigns, lack of dialogue New approach : *Listening, dialogue, explaining *Impact of EC-activities on average citizens *Local/regional aspects ••• 35 6.1.1 Action Plan – some « Highlights »: ° Stronger involvement of Commissioners – in MS, daily press briefings ° Communication activities should be integral part of legislative process right from beginning ° Merging of all information networks into one (Europe Direct; EDC; Euro Info Center; Eurojus; Citizens Signpost; EURES; Euroguichet; Business and Innovation Center;…..) ° PR for participation at public consultations – IPM ° Reader-/citizens friendly summaries of political initiatives (« layman's summary ») ° Communication training for staff ••• 36 6.1.1 Action Plan "Highlights" – continuation: ° «Rebuttal service» ° Less and better press releases ° Adaptation of messages to interests/conditions in MS ° Plans for «normal» and «crisis communication» ° «Staff as Ambassadors» ° Set up of «Focus groups» ° More discussion events with both citizens and experts/Commission staff ° Reinforced visitors service, specially for media representatives ••• 37 6.1.1 Action Plan "Highlights" – Continuation : ° Representations implement communication policy decentrally ° Representations are steering information networks in MS ° Cofinancing of TV-initiatives, cooperation with TV-channel associations ° Internet: Editor for «Europe», more audience oriented; thematic approach; local aspects; multilingualism; most advanced technology ° Marketing campaign for "Europe Direct« (also hotline:0080067891011) ° Training seminars for journalists ° Impact assessment of PR activities ••• 38 6.2. Plan D for Democracy, Dialogue and Debate (2005) - Highlights: Origin : negative results of referenda on EU-constitution in F, NL ° more and more detailed opinion polls ° Web debate about «Future of Europe» ° Cofinancing of transborder citizens discussion platforms/events ° Cooperation with Civil Society/NGO organising such discussion platforms ° Integration of local and regional media into discussion platforms ••• 39 6.3. White Paper on a European Communication Policy (2006) –Highlights: - Example for «Interactive Policy Making» - Not only stakeholders were invited to contribute, but also general public - Over 600 qualified contributions, largely received via Internet Goal of White Book : - Thought-provoking impulse; indication of directions we want to go; explanations of our view of problems/ priorities - To obtain valuable input ••• 40 6.3.White Book – continuation: Main problems identified by contributors : * Alienation from EU * Disenchantment with politics * Lack of a «European public sphere» Examples of impulses/ideas given : - Improvement of EU-information in school-education - Making use of receivers of EU-funds as communicators ••• 41 6.3. White Book – Impulses/Ideas – continuation: - Training of teachers for «EU-courses» at schools - Personalising of EU-information content/messages («What does it mean for me ?») - TV-discussions between Commissioners, MP in MS, politicians ••• 42 6.4. Corporate Communication Statement of the EU-Commission (2009) : Sums up purpose, goals, actors of communication policy; New aspects : ° For first time «Corporate Image» (narrative and visual identity) of EU mentioned as communication goal ° Enhancement of «Public Diplomacy» and communication activities in third countries in order to support EU policies there ° Delegations in third countries revalued as key communication actors ••• 43