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Presentation 4.5: Program Planning. Outline. A Program The Steps Some Examples Exercise 4.11: Event Planning Case Studies 9 & 14 Summary. Introduction. Outreach activities benefit from a plan Planning makes your activities more effective
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Outline • A Program • The Steps • Some Examples • Exercise 4.11: Event Planning • Case Studies 9 & 14 • Summary
Introduction • Outreach activities benefit from a plan • Planning makes your activities more effective • Planning a program follows a logical sequence of steps
Programs • Could be individual presentations or meetings • Could be a regional campaign of presentations, brochures, billboards, exhibits, or demonstrations that all lead to a goal • Both take planning
A program is… • An effort to disseminate information to the public during a specific time • Provides people with informational and motivational messages about an issue • Can stimulate people to take action
Components of a program • Assessment • Audience • Goal and Objectives • Message and Tools • Plan • Implement • Monitor and Improve
1 Assessment • Assemble team • Discuss the need • Describe a vision • Think about each partner’s role & resources
2 Audience • Identify which groups you wish to reach • Learn about their concerns, expectations, barriers, understandings • Identify strategies that may reach these people effectively: conferences, meetings, brochures, posters… • Be specific!
3 Develop goals and objectives • Goal = The big target • Objective = What you want the audience to do as a result of receiving your message
4 Message and tools • Address what audience cares about • Give them new information in a way they can hear it • Consider the messenger • Keep it simple • Pilot test the draft materials before you produce them
Sample tools • Brochures, flyers, posters • TV/Radio PSA, Paid ads, news release • Newspaper, newsletter • Billboard, direct mail • Pencils, caps, shirts • Programs, classes • Festival, event, clean-up
5 Plan • Create a timeline • Create a budget • Identify resources needed -- people, materials, funds
6 Implement • Produce materials • Use partners to deliver messages • Conduct training for volunteers • Develop a monitoring process to collect the information that will describe success!
7 Monitor and evaluate • Pilot test tools before launch • Revise and implement • Record the reach • Explore the reaction • Measure the impact • Consider indicators
Festivals Riverlink uses a downtown fountain in Asheville NC to give raft rides for children while parents pick up information about river health and quality.
Media Event TNC invited local TV and newspaper journalists to a prescribed fire, gave them suits, and provided information.
Roadside Signs Drivers are reminded of land managed with prescribed fire, even after the area was burned.
Exercise 4.11 Directions • Events can be festivals, exhibits, fairs, sidewalk tables, demonstrations, awards ceremonies, etc. • What are the theme and location for your upcoming event? • What things must be accomplished to create a successful event?
Exercise 4.11 Directions • Identify what needs to be accomplished by each planning subcommittee. • Who should have this responsibility? What do they need to be successful? • When does this need to occur? • Develop a master timeline for all of the subcommittees.
Case Study 14: A Multi-Agency Initiative: Water Education in Kentucky
Summary • Start by thinking about your situation, the audience, and the purpose of the program • Build effective partnerships and identify ways for each to have a role in the program • Pilot test to make your program effective
Credits • Slide 4: Martha Monroe and Larry Korhnak • Slide 14: Riverlink, North Carolina • Slide 16, 17: Martha Monroe