Organizing/Mobilizing Communication

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Organizing/Mobilizing Communication. Role of the Building Representative. Leader Communicator Organizer Problem Solver Friend. Objectives. Examine the behaviors of “ effective organizing/mobilizing communicators ” Apply the 30/70 principle - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Organizing/Mobilizing Communication

Organizing/Mobilizing Communication

Role of the Building Representative

•Leader•Communicator•Organizer•Problem Solver•Friend

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Objectives

• Examine the behaviors of “effective organizing/mobilizing communicators”

• Apply the 30/70 principle• Communicate about the union using

issues, values & personal experience• Deal with objections using “feel, felt, found”• Determine the appropriate “ask” • End appropriately

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Organizing Conversations

• We want to learn about our members/potential activists’ job related issues & concerns.

• We want to know about their personal and professional goals and their desire to see change happen.

• We want to answer their questions about the union, deal with their fears and anxieties.

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Organizing Conversations

• We want to educate them about what a union really is and what we stand for.

• We want to correct any anti-union innuendo and misinformation.

• And we want to challenge them to act upon their concerns/desires for change by taking action in support of their union.

Organizing Conversation• Introduction-Who you are and why

conversation is important• Getting Person’s story-what do they do,

problems on job, satisfactions…• Who decides-why are things the way they

are, how can members influence what happens

• What could be-if member voice were amplified how different could things be

• The Ask-move member to action, big or little

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LISTENING is important

• Listening is fundamental to building relationships

• In fact we should be listening 70-80%

• And talking 20-30%

• Make eye contact as you listen

• Use “Active Listening”

• Uncover feelings, not just facts

• Look for visual as well as verbal clues

• Try to understand before responding

• Try to build trust and make a connection with them

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LISTENING

• Look like a listener

• Listen for content

• Listen for feelings

• Respond first to the feelings

• Listen for verbal and non-verbal clues

• Use reflective responses

• Use probing, deflecting & advising responses

• Resist responding when unnecessary

• Make closure positive

• Avoid “autobiographical responses

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Let’s Practice!

In groups of two One participant will be:

– A Speaker

– A Active Listener

– The Speaker will describe why they became a BR and/or

– Why they have stayed a BR

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Debrief

• Listeners: What was heard? Did you detect feelings? Based on this practice, did you do well using active listening?

• Speakers: Did the listener accurately describe what you said? How you felt? Do you have any constructive feedback for the listener?

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Remember, the best organizing conversations are ones in which the organizer does 70% percent of the LISTENING and only 30% of the talking!

Dealing with Objections

What Kinds of Objections Do You Anticipate When Asking for Personal Contact Information?

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Using “FEEL, FELT, FOUND”

• Feel: You make an expression that shows understanding or empathy with the objection

• Felt: You connect it to your own experience

• Found: You relate your personal knowledge or experience to counter the objection

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Objection: “ I don’t usually give out my personal info.”

• Feel: I understand how you feel. I never give out my personal info casually”

• Felt: I have always felt suspicious when someone asks for it, I wonder how they are going to use it.

• Found: But what I have found is that ourUnion only contacts me when it is really important and that when they have reached out to me, I was glad they did.

What is the appropriate “ask?”

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Are there things you can ask the potential member to do…

• That would get to a “small yes?”

• That would get them involved at a low level to begin?

• That would bring them closer to the union?

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Are there things you can ask the non-involved member to do…

• That would get to a “small yes?”

• That would get them more involved?

• That would bring them closer to the union?

• That would build their understanding of their value to the cause?

Conducting 10 Minute Worksite Meetings• Agenda• Current Issues Update-2 Minutes• -review topics from last union mtg.• One Hot Issue-4 Minutes• -ask for ideas to take back to next union mtg• What’s on Your Mind-3 Minutes• A Success or Problem Story-1Minute

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How Do You Get 10 Minutes of Members’ Time?

• Attach union meeting to another existing meeting

• Experiment with alternative times, consistency is helpful

• Ruthless sensitivity to time is critical• Don’t meet for trivia• Meetings must be meaningful

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Useful Bulletin Boards• Statement of Program/Priorities of Union• Name/Contact Info of BR’s• Next 10 minute meeting date info• Website Info for local/state/national• Info on Current Issues• Info on Member Benefits• Political info• Contract info• Union Events-Professional Dev Opps• All info current, relevant, neatly displayed

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And in conclusion…

• To be successful, we need each other more than ever before

• You are the union organizer on the front lines

• You are the one who is in the best position to make the union stronger

• Your primary tool as an organizer is the organizing conversation