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Social Marketing: An Introduction . Sara Ackerman, MPH, PhD. What is Social Marketing?. The use of concepts and strategies from commercial marketing to influence individual and social practices, with a goal of improved human or environmental health.
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Social Marketing: An Introduction Sara Ackerman, MPH, PhD
What is Social Marketing? The use of concepts and strategies from commercial marketing to influence individual and social practices, with a goal of improved human or environmental health
How does social marketing differ from commercial marketing? similar strategies: both sell products, ideas, practices different goals: profit vs. health or well being
“Social marketing critically examines commercial marketing so as to learn from its successes and curb its excesses.”
Dominant behavior change communications campaigns aim to: PROTECT WARN
PROTECT WARN
…integrating interests of the audience with those of the sponsor… photo credit: www.adpunch.org
Social marketing can be used to influence: • individual behaviors • social processes and norms • policies • institutional practices image credit: http://culturegenderhealth.blogspot.com/
Social marketing draws on methods and theories from: • Anthropology • Behavioral economics • Design • Persuasive technology research • Public health • Social psychology
Social marketing strategies are used to: • Develop communication campaigns AND… • Design educational materials • Improve services • Re-design structural/environmental conditions
Some health topics that have been addressed by social marketing:
Why might social marketing be more difficult than commercial marketing?
You’re trying to influence people to do things they are uncomfortable with, don’t want to do, or can’t do
focus on audience • Do you really know what’s best for your audience? • Start by engaging and understanding your audience photo credit: Ian Webster
audience insight • formative research • process and outcome evaluation using “participant observation” and other qualitative methods
one size fits all solution rarely works for complex behaviors • “psychographics”: values interests activities opinions geographic location audience segmentation
your audience/ target may be: • people whom you want to do something different • enablers • barriers
persuadable? • size and potential impact • need • influence on primary audience • accessibility • resources needed to reach audience • equity/social justice considerations how are audience segments chosen?
exchange what I need for target audience vs. what they desire, care about, aspire to
exchange image credit: http://bit.ly/nvfY0Z
questioning the “rational man” theory of exchange Image credit: Fairfax County, Virginia: http://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/hd/flu/
“Marketing Mix”/4Ps • PRODUCT and its presumed benefit • PRICE, or what audience has to do to obtain product • PLACE, or how product reaches audience • PROMOTION, or strategy to create and sustain demand for product
4Ps + • PUBLICS • PARTNERSHIP • POLICY • PURSE STRINGS • POLITICS
Critique of 4Ps • Checklist? • The 4Ps are not behavior change tools • What about barriers/benefits?
Alternatives to 4Ps Community-Based Social Marketing: • behavior change via addressing barriers • less focus on attitudes & beliefs http://www.cbsm.com/public/world.lasso
Total Process PlanningModel image and content credit: UK Alcohol Learning Centre
SCOPE DEVELOP • Identify and consult with stakeholders • Conduct preliminary research • Learn about your audience using qualitative methods • Segment your audience • Decide on research methods • Develop evaluation procedures • Look at current services • Involve stakeholders • Look at similar or competing programs – how will they reinforce or undermine your project? • Use theory appropriate to problem and audience • Develop barrier and exchange model • Test your project
IMPLEMENT EVALUATE • Use a range of strategies and tailor campaign to audience segments • Conduct process evaluation to determine if program is being implemented as planned and how people are responding • Continue working with stakeholders • PROCESS and OUTCOME equally important. • Process evaluation: insight into deviations from plan; understand what produced observed outcomes • Outcome evaluation: did you reach target audience; did desired outcome occur?
FOLLOW-UP • Share/disseminate best practices • Continue to track outcomes and assess sustainability of target behavior
theories/explanatory models used in social marketingindividualsocial/relational • Social Cognitive Theory • Health Belief Model • Stages of Change • Diffusion of Innovations • social theory: citizenship, subjectivity, embodiment, social/symbolic capital, power, historical context • social network analysis • coalition/collaboration (PAR) • social justice, environmental justice
critiques of social marketing individual social, economic, environmental, institutional context
SM relies too heavily on psychological behavior change theories • “One principle that distinguishes the best social marketers is an unrelenting understanding, empathy and advocacy of the perspective of our priority population or community that is not slanted by what the theory or research evidence does or does not tell us.” • - Craig Lefebvre
Health behaviors are “wicked problems”! Effective change programs do not ONLY communicate persuasive messages. They also try to modify the context using multi-faceted strategies. photo credit: NY Times, Dec.13, 2009
Another example of redesigning the environment to promote behavior change
Unintended consequences of social marketing: Australia’s Slip Slop Slap campaign to prevent skin cancer
Case Study: Cleanyourhands campaign UK National Social Marketing Center (NSMC) • Social marketing strategies • Scale
NSMC hand hygiene project in a Scottish hospital • hand hygiene compliance high, but hospital acquired infections increasing • running out of new ways to “sell” hand hygiene • carrot not stick – need to persuade people that it’s in their interests to comply Project: • tailored interventions • “clean leaders”
NSMC hand hygiene project in a Scottish hospital WHO 5 moments depiction: great in principle but not in practice
gel: myths and dispensers • can patients remind staff to clean hands? • clean zones image and content credit: UK National Social Marketing Centre
Case Study #2: Copenhagen cycling campaign Goal: increase commuting by bicycle to: - reduce pollution and congestion - improve public health Strategy: - foster and spread “bicycle culture” - change infrastructure to reduce barriers to cycling photo and content credit: City of Copenhagen Technical and Environmental Administration
bicycle culture http://www.copenhagencyclechic.com/