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You’ve got news: Good Turn for America. National Annual Meeting Elective May 25, 2006. Goals of the elective. To help you: Generate Good Turn for America (GTFA) media coverage for your Council’s efforts
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You’ve got news: Good Turn for America National Annual Meeting Elective May 25, 2006
Goals of the elective • To help you: • Generate Good Turn for America (GTFA) media coverage for your Council’s efforts • Raise awareness of your Council’s efforts to assist in recruitment efforts; share the positive impact of Scouting • Learn from real examples of PR campaigns
What we’ll cover • The purpose of PR • GTFA key messages and sample story angles • Preparing your PR campaign • GTFA examples
The purpose of PR • To increase awareness of BSA nationally and in local markets across the country in a positive manner
The purpose of PR • Generate media coverage • Provide credibility • Enhance your image
GTFA key messages • Celebrating its 100th anniversary in 2010, BSA is the oldest youth program of character development in the United States, providing young Americans the tools and skills they need to face the demands and challenges of a changing society • The BSA represents where tradition meets tomorrow….it has a nearly 100-year strong foundation and continues to evolve to be relevant to today’s youth and the communities it serves, and to prepare the leaders of the next millennium • BSA has honored its mission and tradition of preparing young people to make ethical and moral choices over their lifetimes by instilling the values of the Scout Oath and Law • Since its inception in 1910, the BSA has helped develop tens of millions of American youth into successful citizens and community leaders • BSA is a forward-thinking organization concerned with making wise and long-lasting contributions to society • Although society’s views on what is right and wrong change over time, moral standards do not
GTFA sample story angles • Habitat for Humanity projects • First aid, clothing and canned food drives • Volunteer work at local non-profits • Service projects created by members that impact the community • Helping the community following a natural disaster • Collaborative initiatives (Department of Homeland Security, New Jersey Police)
Preparing your PR campaign • Building relationships with reporters • Study your media by reading and watching your local news • Daily newspapers (including online editions) • Weekly and community papers • TV and radio • Be proactive • Contact reporters with story ideas • Leverage trends and tie in your initiatives • Note his/her recent articles • Be a resource by sharing ongoing local and national Council activities
Preparing your PR campaign • Know your five “Ws” and the “H” • Who? Your Council and any partners affiliated with the initiative • What? Components of the initiative and its importance • When? Disclose the timing of the initiative or event • Where? The community at large or a specific locale • Why? The purpose and rationale • How? The logistics of the initiative or event
Preparing your PR campaign • Keep media materials clear and concise • Convey the main point in the first few sentences of your news release and pitch • Give a call-to-action • Provide information in a timely manner and follow up
Preparing your PR campaign • Example of a newsworthy pitch: National Meeting/Rick Cronk • The BSA leadership will be in Washington, D.C. from May 22 – 25 for its National Annual Meeting. I want to suggest a feature story on the Scouts and how they are evolving to meet the challenges facing today’s youth. • Today, our youth are growing up in a very different world than 20 years ago. Children are facing problems of obesity, substance abuse, education, family and mixed messages from the media/entertainment. • One thing is certain – America’s youth are not receiving adequate support to foster character development. More than ever the BSA, and programs like it, are vital to create a safe environment for American youth. • While in Washington D.C., the BSA will announce the appointment of a new National President, Rick Cronk. Mr. Cronk is the (retired) president of Dreyer’s Grand Ice Cream and a lifelong Scout. • We envision the interview would provide the basis for a feature story on Scouting – with a focus on American youth and how this 96-year-old organization is evolving to meeting the critical needs of today’s youth.
GTFA PR campaign example Kim Hansen, Scout Executive Grand Teton Council
GTFA PR Campaign Example • Profile • 1997 child abuse incident in camp • New lawsuits filed; old lawsuits opened to the public • Local newspaper sensationalizes • Hidden agenda; BSA constitutional and local issues • 5 consecutive days; full front-page attack runs at start of FOS Campaign • Front-page coverage and editorials continue to current time; 15 months later
GTFA PR Campaign Example • Objectives • Internal publics – leaders, parents, donors, chartered organizations, board members and Scouts • Communicate with our leaders, parents and donors • Communicate our strong youth protection plans and efforts • Make an official “response statement” • External publics – the general public • Aggressively pursue efforts for positive Scouting news in all media • Make an official “response statement”
GTFA PR Campaign Example • Strategies • Internal publics • Tell youth protection program to parents, leaders, chartered organization leadership • Make official “response statement” • Communicate with FOS workers • External Publics • Tell youth protection program to general public • Aggressive placement of positive Scouting stories in all media
GTFA PR Campaign Example • Execution • Internal publics • April youth protection month DVD to all Chartered Organizations • Parents newsletter • Council newsletters • Report strong record for year • Communication with FOS workers • Public relations committee • External publics • Youth protection DVD to general public • Train all district committee members on placing positive media stories • GTFA -Scouting for Food & Scouting for Water-Ways • Lewis and Clark bicentennial activities
GTFA PR Campaign Example • Results • Base-internal publics remained committed • Friends remained our friends • Detractors remained the same • 2005 best year ever for FOS • Membership and camp attendance • Local business defends Scouting with full-page ads • Newspaper has not stopped pushing the story
GTFA PR Campaign Example • Key learnings • Existing strong public relations is critical to dealing with negative media • Shore up internal publics with your message • Strong public relations committee is vital • Use national resources – Edelman for consulting and advice • Don’t overreact to every charge or claim • You can’t buy enough ink to win – use the doors open to you, that are in your control
You’ve got news:Good Turn for America National Annual Meeting Elective May 25, 2006