1 Telling the Right Story Adapting your message to multiple audiences AoA Grantees Meeting...

Post on 27-Mar-2015

214 views 0 download

Tags:

Transcript of 1 Telling the Right Story Adapting your message to multiple audiences AoA Grantees Meeting...

1

Telling the Right StoryAdapting your message to multiple audiences

AoA Grantees Meeting

Washington, DCJanuary 19, 2006

2

What’s Ahead

0

3

What’s Ahead

1. Strategic communications… once more briefly

2. Messaging 1013. Know your audience4. The Art of Persuasion5. Persuade your audience 6. Shaping your message

4

Strategic Communications

1

5

Five Steps to Strategic Communications

1. Setting Clear Objectives2. Identifying Audiences3. Creating and Adapting Messages4. Selecting Vehicles/Strategies5. Conducting Evaluation

6

Messaging 101

2

7

What are you trying to say?

8

Marshalling EvidenceSample MessageEnhanceFitness (formerly Lifetime Fitness) is a low-cost, highly adaptable exercise program challenging enough for active older adults and safe enough for the unfit or near frail.

What’s the evidence (not necessarily the evidence base)?

9

Exercise (1)

What’s your message (for an audience you are comfortable with)?

What’s your evidence?

10

Know your audience

3

11

What do they care about?

12

Primary Audiences

• Aging services providers State and local AAA leaders Executive directors Program directors

• Health care providers Doctors, nurses, social workers, care managers Hospitals Managed care providers and insurers

13

Secondary Audiences

• Alternative sites Y’s Senior housing Libraries CCRCs Senior colleges

• Funders Foundations Government – State AAAs, Departments of Health

14

Exercise (2)

What’s your message for an audience you are not as comfortable with?

What’s your evidence? What’s new?

15

The Art of Persuasion

4

16

Aristotle and the Modes of Persuasion

17

Ethos

Based on the perceived credibility of the speaker or the source.

Typical Sources: Testimony (self and others), references and citations.

18

Logos

Appeals based on rational evidence.Typical sources: Data, facts, figures

19

Pathos

Appeals to personal motives or emotional “truths”Typical sources: Stories, anecdotes, examples

20

Mythos

Appeals based on commonly held values, ideas or customsTypical evidence: Narrative to create identification and interest

21

Persuading your audiences

5

22

Persuading Aging Services Providers

• Heavier on the pathos, field-based “mythos”• Build ethos for you and program• Connect with their:

Concern for underserved populations Interest in ease of implementation Interest in new member recruitment Concern about cost Interest in better “lives,” not necessarily better

health

23

Persuading Health Care Providers

• Go heavier on ethos and logos• Evidence base is helpful.• Provide outcomes from your program, if

available• Connect with concerns about benefits for the

practice• Use short forms – 1 pager, 2 minute video

24

Persuading

• Clear concrete language• Concise stories• Compelling data• Shorter forms—one

pagers, information package

• Link to state/national issues

• Organizational benefits – cutting edge, recruitment/ marketing, access to new partners or resources

• Clear concrete language• Concise stories• Compelling data• Longer forms—including

materials, tools• Link to

local/organizational issues

• Practice benefits – ease of implementation, availability of TA, time savings, etc.

Decisionmakers Practitioners

25

Shaping Your Message

6

26

Five Steps to Effective Messages

1. Listen in for their frame, values, poetry.2. Marshall your evidence.

-What do you have? What don’t you have?-Remember ethos, logos, pathos, mythos

3. Test and, if necessary, revise.4. Find the right messenger.5. Once you’ve got it, stay with it.

27

Strategic Communications & Planning34 West Avenue, Suite E

Wayne, PA 19087

jbeilenson@aboutscp.com610.687.5495

www.aboutscp.com