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Digital Advocacy Center Training
Topic Two: Campaign Planning
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Training.DigitalAdvocacyCenter.com Lesson 1: Strategic Planning Lesson
- Topic 1: Setting up for Success - Topic 2: Campaign Planning Lesson 2: Facebook, Twitter Lesson - Topic 3: Facebook 101 - Topic 4: Twitter 101 - Topic 5: Content Best Practices Lesson 3: Campaign Tactics & Evaluation - Topic 5: Influencing the Policy Process - Topic 6: Measurement & Evaluation
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Lesson One Calendar: Strategic Planning
Month Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun May 2016 Lesson 1 Strategic Planning 2 Program Launch Topic 1 Material 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Topic 2 material posted 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Q&A Live Chat 17 18 19 20 Topic 1 & 2 Exercises Due 21 22 23 24 25 Webinar to Discuss Lesson 1 Themes 26 27 Final for Lesson 1 28 29 30 31 1 Week 1: Read/Watch Topic Week 2: Reach/Watch Topic Week 3: Exercises Week 4: Live Lab Webinar
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Goals of Topic 2 Training
After this training, you should have a strong understanding of: How to design a campaign What Grassroots and Grasstops supporters are, and how they help you achieve your campaign objective Four ways to leverage social media within your campaign
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Campaign Design: GO STRO NG
What was the impact on the objective, did the results help achieve policy success? Outcome What were the metric results of executing the tactics? Result What are the measurable activities planned to execute the strategy? Tactic How we will win our campaign Strategy What is the policy outcome? Objective: what is immediate step in policy process Goal/ Objective
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Connecting Tactics to Measurement and Evaluation
How do these conclusions impact our strategy and tactics moving forward Goal Revisit What conclusion can we make about the impact of our tactics New Insight What was the impact on the objective, did the results help achieve policy success? Outcome What were the metric results of executing the tactics? Result What are the measurable activities planned to execute the strategy? Tactic How we will win our campaign Strategy
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Success Story: Senegal LISTAB Campaign
Youth very active on social media Explosion of youth population, seen as an important political constituency Campaign focused on building a brand that appealed to youth as primary target audience to drive pressure to pass a strong TC Bill in Parliament
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Campaign Design: GO STRO NG
Outcome Result Tactic Mobilize youth to pressure MPs; Generate support from key opinion leaders Strategy Pass a strong tobacco control law Objective: secure majority of MPs to support MOH bill Goal/ Objective
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Dafa Jot! (It’s Time!)
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Engaging Artists and Youth-Appealing Content
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Musicians and Artist Videos
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Engaging Content
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Petition as a Primary Engagement Tool
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Action to Write Your MP Over 350 personalized messages to Members of Parliament Messages printed out and displayed at key Parliamentary meeting to show public support
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‘Thunderclap’ to Break Through on Twitter
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‘Thunderclap’ to Break Through
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Last-Minute Mobilization
343 SMSs and to 8,000 person database sent to supporters the day before Vote to show up at the Parliament and show support. Letter from CTFK and WLF hand-delivered to each MP. “Write Your MP” messages printed and hand-delivered by a group of motivated supporters; and by . Also shared on social networks. Targeted s to the Minister of Health and close advisors. Video testimony of two MPs on their personal stories of second-hand smoke (in Wolof and French) broadcast on national TV and also shared on social media platforms. Real-time coverage of Parliament proceedings on social media platforms.
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Parliament Gallery Packed Full with Grassroots Supporters
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Hundreds of Personal Messages Hand-Delivered
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Packages Read by MPs on the Floor
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Policy Champions and Members of Parliament
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Continued Momentum for Implementation
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Campaign Design: Senegal Case Study
Continued campaign push for law implementati on focused on grassroots activities Goal Revisit Grassroots awareness and pressure a key lever to pressure government stakeholders New Insight Bill Passed and President signed into law! Outcome 10,000 petitions; personal messages advocates at hearing 15 KOLs Result Generate public awareness, grassroots action, drive media stories and engage KOLs Tactic Pass a comprehensive tobacco control law Objective
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Ongoing Movement: School Tour
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Building a Campaign: Four Buckets
Decision Makers & Key Opinion Leaders Traditional Media GRASSTOPS Policy Outcome Public Awareness Public Action GRASSROOTS
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Building Grassroots Awareness
Decision Makers & Key Opinion Leaders Traditional Media GRASSTOPS Policy Outcome Public Awareness Public Action GRASSROOTS
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Building Grassroots Awareness: 3-Step Funnel
Step #1: Test broad themes and content to attract large following Step #2: Connect themes to urgent issue/goal/objective at hand Step #3: Commit activists to take actions that will solve the issue Awareness Commitment Ownership
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Senegal Example Awareness Commitment Ownership Harms of Tobacco
Threat of Industry Dafa Jot! (It’s Time) Advocacy campaigns take the traditional marketing funnel and conform it to engagement as opposed to purchasing a product. Testing and optimizing content that broadly relates to your issue is important. Then you can dive into the specifics of the policies or issue at hand and bridge awareness/interest into actual commitment to the issue and meaningful action
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Grassroots: Awareness Examples
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Mobilizing Grassroots Action
Decision Makers & Key Opinion Leaders Traditional Media GRASSTOPS Policy Outcome Public Awareness Public Action GRASSROOTS
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Mobilizing the Public: Ladder of Engagement
Offline Action Organize an activity Host an event Attend an event Online Actions Submit written/creative testimonial Forward to a friend decision makers Submit online comments for hearings Sign an online petition Like, share and follow on social media
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Mobilizing the Public: Senegal Example
Offline Action Attend an event Online Actions decision makers Sign an online petition Like, share and follow on social media Once activists are committed, campaigns will develop a ladder of engagement that asks people to to make increasingly higher level commitments of action to the campaign. Studies have shown that people are more likely to engage in the harder, more time consuming asks if they have been invested in the initial, easier steps along the way and seen success/momentum build
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Grassroots: Public Action Examples
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Grasstops Engaging Influencers and Decision-Makers
Key Opinion Leaders Traditional Media GRASSTOPS Policy Outcome Public Awareness Public Action GRASSROOTS
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Grasstops: Influencing Decision Makers
Direct Engagement Decision makers who are active on social media Both positive and negative feedback Images, quotes and videos Online advertising Promotion and ‘calling out’ on social media channels Display at meetings/ hearing Traditional media coverage
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Senegal Example: Grasstops Decision-Makers
Direct Engagement Members of Parliament take photos showing campaign symbol; posted online Images, quotes and videos to hold President accountable to sign law Comments printed out and displayed at meetings/public hearing
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Grasstops: Senegal Example Key Opinion Leaders
Secondary Targets Key opinion leaders/influencers of decision-maker Social Influencers: cultivate supporters with large followings
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Grasstops: Key Opinion Leaders
Secondary Targets Key opinion leaders/influencers of decision-maker Social Influencers: cultivate supporters with large followings
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Grasstops: Traditional Media
Decision Makers & Key Opinion Leaders Traditional Media GRASSTOPS Policy Outcome Public Awareness Public Action GRASSROOTS
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Grasstops: Traditional Media
Packaging a story supported by social media for earned media Personal narrative example Visual elements New developments Data/report release Journalists monitoring social media Take advantage of known media events (speeches, events etc.) by preparing social media responses in advance Engage directly with journalists Reposting favorable coverage and asking people to share
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Grasstops: Traditional Media
Packaging a story supported by social media for earned media Personal narrative example Visual elements New developments Data/report release Journalists monitoring social media Take advantage of known media events (speeches, events etc.) by preparing social media responses in advance Engage directly with journalists Reposting favorable coverage and asking people to share Bloggers Tent at Uganda Press Event
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Exercise: Campaign Planning
Differentiate clearly between strategy and tactics Use the campaign objective from your first exercise to identify the tactics for the four buckets comprising of Grassroots and Grasstops targets It is not mandatory to us all the four buckets. Only use what is necessary in your campaign. Check out the menu of tactics provided in the worksheet for ideas to get started
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Thank you!
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