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Best practices from the Netherlands Planning and implementing government communication. Saturday, November 29. Today. 09.00 Formulate it: public communication strategy 10.30 Coffee break 11.00 Ministry of Transport, Public Works and Water Management, Koos Tamis 12.30 Lunch
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Best practices from the Netherlands Planning and implementing government communication Saturday, November 29
Today 09.00 Formulate it: public communication strategy 10.30 Coffee break 11.00 Ministry of Transport, Public Works and Water Management, Koos Tamis 12.30 Lunch 13.30 Group work: What’s the communication strategy? 14.30 Plenary reports and discussions 15.15 Tea break 15.30 Implementing it: do it, check and adapt 17.00 Closing remarks and questions 17.30 End of day 2
Formulate it Public communication strategy
Formulating strategy starts with setting the right goals • What effect do we want to achieve? • Knowledge • Attitude • Behaviour • With whom? Who are the target groups? Who has access to the target groups?
Communication goals depend on target groups • How are target groups involved in the subject? • Rational (thinking) or emotional (feeling) • How do target groups perceive the risks regarding the subject? • Financial risk (fine or subsidy) • Social risk (status) • Personal risk (health, comfort)
Participation goals • Joint knowledge • Joint thinking • Joint action • Joint decision making
SMART goals • Specific. What to achieve with whom. • Measurable. Is it measurable? • Acceptable. Can communication do this? • Realistic. Considering the gaps. • Time bound. Time to be effective.
Strategic choices • Positioning the subject (naming) • Key message (promise, proof, tone) • Who is sender of communication? • Target group segmentation • Resources strategy (media, activities) • Designing a communication process according to a time schedule
Positioning the subject • How would you name a project? • What is the most important thing you want your public to know, or remember about the subject? • Dutch example: • Shop Closing Hour Act
Key message • What is the promise? • What is proof you can tell or show? • What tone of voice is most effective?
Tone of voice • Alarming / warning • Emotional • Rational/functional • Instructive • Persuasive • Encouraging • Offering a solution
Who is the sender? • Acceptable? • Reliable? • Likeable? • Known?
Campaigns, execution of plans in a ‘communicative’ way Tell about the plans, emphasis on press Plan Do Interactive sessions with target groups to ‘co-create’ new plans Measure results and listen to the target groups Adapt Check Policy process and communication
Identify target groups • Who are causing the issue? • Who is key to solving the issue? • Who is (co-)responsible? • Is there any form of organization? • Who is possibly influencing the knowledge, attitude or behaviour of these groups?
Insight into target groups • Could there be lack of knowledge? • Is attitude causing the issue? • Demographic characteristics? • Which media do the target groups use?
Research on target groups Quantitative sources • Policy research • Central Statistical Office • Media Surveys • Internal sources: own monitoring, tracking survey, databases
Research on target groups Qualitative sources • Opinion polls • Interviews with opinion leaders • Media analysis • Stakeholder analysis • ‘Persona’ description
Strategy around 3 pillars • Factual message: new rules • Communication in four phases • Multiple tracks aimed at different target groups
1. Factual message • New rules for disability benefits • Long lasting benefits only for those who are incapable of work • In other cases: new rules • Employer and employee should work together • For more information….
2. Four phases ▶ Duration ▶ Reach PRE-PHASE ATTENTION CONFRONTATION INFORMATION
3. Three tracks ▶ Duration Specific groups Intermediaries Public/employers ▶ Reach INFORMATION PRE-PHASE ATTENTION CONFRONTATION
Resources strategy • Pressmedia (TV/Radio, print, online) • Advertising (TV/Radio, print, online) • Through third-parties • Outdoor/indoor media (billboards) • Live events (on- and offline) • Co-creation (on- and offline)
Reach Costs Media – selection criteria • In target group and other groups (waste) • High versus low • Actual reach versus longer term reach Impact • Costs per 1000 • Media costs (e.g. broadcasting costs) • Production costs Frequency • Needed number of contacts with the message • Contact with medium is contact with message?
Be aware.. • Impact is hard to buy • Strengths and weaknesses • Media consumption: insights in target groups (day in the life of)
Good reach/high capacity/high flexibility/low costs Low reach/low capacity/low flexibility/high costs Mediumtype matrixCharacteristics of different types of media © 2003 RVD / Publiek en Communicatie Medium reach/medium capacity/medium flexibility/medium costs
Chosen resources • Publicity through press office • TV and radio commercials, print ads in newspapers and magazines, and an online banners referring to the campaign website • Relevant third parties communicating to their members • Online benefits calculating tools
Case Koos Tamis Ministry of Transport, Public Works and Water Management
Group assignment What’s the communication strategy?
Assignment • Form groups • Read the handout and discuss it with your group • Prepare a short presentation (10 minutes), answering the questions on the handout • Include the reasoning behind your answers
Implementing it Do it, check and adapt!
Make it happen • Working structure (‘management’) • Report actions and results • Translate the strategy into • Creative concept (if applicable) • Means and activities • Action plan
Working structure • Sponsor/owner of the campaign • Steering committee • Sounding board • Project team • Private parties, such as creative agency and/or communication agency, media buying agency, event organizers
Creative concept • Points out the essence of the WIA • It’s not about what you can’t do anymore (red light) • It’s about what you still can do (green light) • Work according to capacity (pay off)
Check it • Quantitative research to measure effectiveness of communication • Qualitative pre-test of (concept-) versions of commercials, websites • Evaluate with stakeholders • If needed, adapt the actions, or even the strategy
Closing remarks Planning and implementing government communication
Planning communication requires • Knowing what you’re talking about • Knowing where you want to go • Knowing who you’re talking to • Being interested in getting a response • Getting to the heart of the matter
And it requires • Thinking from the perspective of your target groups or audiences • Guts to try and experiment!
Dutch examples of exploring new ways • Cell broadcast in case of emergency • Videos online from the Public Prosecution Service • Sponsored TV shows and magazines • Web logs of ministers, mayors • Take a look at government.nl and the websites of individual Dutch ministries
‘PO Box 51’ the national public information service • Website, telephone and e-mail enquiries • Free phone-line (weekdays 8am to 8pm) • Available in case of crisis • Distribution of brochures and leaflets • PO Box 51 pages on Teletext • Radio magazine (15’ a week)