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Social Media for Advocacy Tanzania – February 2010 http://media4advocacy.wikispaces.com/. Examples of Using Media for Advocacy Tanzania February 2010. What is Advocacy? Advocacy is the art of persuasion –
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Social Media for Advocacy Tanzania – February 2010 http://media4advocacy.wikispaces.com/ Examples of Using Media for AdvocacyTanzania February 2010
What is Advocacy?Advocacy is the art of persuasion – Advocacy is about trying to influence outcomes — (including public-policy and resource allocation) that directly affect people’s lives.
What is Social Media? “Social media are online communications in which individuals shift fluidly and flexibly between the role of audience and author. To do this, they use social software that enables anyone (no technical skills needed) to post, comment on, share content and to form communities around shared interests.” Source: http://propr.ca
Characteristics of Social Media Participation - encourages contributions/feedback; blurs lines between author/audience Openness - open to feedback/participation; encourages comments (no passwords) Conversation - traditional media=“broadcast” – social media = “conversation” Community - allows communities to form and communicate quickly Connectedness– connects to other sites, resources and peopleSource: www.icrossing.co.uk
Then what does it mean to use social media for advocacy? Using social media for advocacy is to use online communications to inform people, and form communities that try to influence policy and resource allocation outcomes.Effective advocacy requires an integrated advocacy and media strategy.Why an integrated strategy? Why not just use email? Social media uses a “content-centric” approach – more awareness in more people results in a stronger voice (more shared information, stronger links, more awareness, more donations)
Effective advocacy requires us to work with two groups of people: • Our partners(horizontal networking) • Policy makers – the people who can make the changes we want(vertical networking) • Ask yourself the following questions: • How do these groups currently communicate? • What do we want them to do as a result of our communication? • What communication strategy will be the most effective in to reaching them?
Different types of media used for Advocacy • Newspapers • Printed newsletters, books, pamphlets • Community Radio • website/blog • Email / online newsletter • Wiki / googledocs • Social networks • Microblogging e.g. twitter • Maps – googlemaps, ushahidi • Video – youtube and others • Pictures – flickr, picasa • Phone, sms
newspapers, print products (newsletters, pamphlets, books) Type of content: Text, Pictures Good for: reaching the readers – national newspapers have wide readership Challenges: can only reach literate readers; expensive to print; can be difficult to get opinion pieces into newspapers; distribution expensive and difficult to reach rural areas
Community radio – integrates with online strategy Type of content: Audio Good for: reaching wide listenership; especially those who won’t read about your issue elsewhere; combined in strategy with phones, can create good discussions Challenges: need equipment and broadcast capability; althocan use mobile and integrate into website
Website / blog Type of content: Text, Pictures, Audio, Video Good for: blog is a cheap, quick way to establish a web presence, encourage feedback and discussion Challenges: does not reach people who aren’t online, although mobile wordpress now making blogs available on mobile phones
online newsletters Type of content: Text, with links to Pictures, Audio, Video Good for: Quick and cheap to keep people informed, bring them back to your blog or website Challenges: people overloaded with information may not read your newsletter until they are convinced of value
Collaborating on Googledocs Type of content: Text, Good for: collaborating with different people Challenges: need to be online or mobile online
Social networking - facebook Type of content: Text, Pictures, Audio, Video Good for: building constituency, sharing information, light engagement Challenges: does not reach people who aren’t online, although also available on mobile; facebook can be heavy to download
Microblogging - twitter Type of content: Short text Good for: sharing bite-sized information; raising awareness about an issue quickly Challenges: only reaches people on twitter; not available via SMS anymore
Mapping – Haiti disaster relief Type of content: maps Good for: visual representation of an issue; uses embedded technology that lots of people have access to; allows citizens to contribute to tracking using phones Challenges: data needs to be verified
Idasa’sFlickr site Type of content: pictures Good for: “a picture is worth 1000 words” – pictures have big impact and can tell your story for you Challenges: need internet access and digital camera or cellphone
Human Rights videos on “The Hub” – Share yours too Type of content: videos Good for: big impact with short videos saying much more than text documents; people can tell their stories which provide a very powerful message Challenges: need bandwidth to share them; need to be comfortable with cellphone or video equipment to make and edit clips
Integrating Phones and video – the power of mobile to tell a story Type of content: text, pictures, audio, video Good for: easiest way to reach the most number of people – many people have access to a phone Challenges: sending anything more than text (SMS) can be expensive; managing databases of mobile numbers
Using “chat” on mobile phones to get young people talking - MXIT Type of content: text Good for: reaching young people where they are at Challenges: marketing can be expensive; doesn’t capture many over 35’s
These resources are also at http://media4advocacy.wikispaces.com/