1 / 37

Communicating for Political Effectiveness

Pamela Seelman Senior Public Information Specialist pamela.seelman@ces.uwex.edu (608) 262-9311 http://www.uwex.edu/ces/employeeresources/political/. Communicating for Political Effectiveness. What are your questions about this topic?. Communications matter !.

dara
Download Presentation

Communicating for Political Effectiveness

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Pamela Seelman Senior Public Information Specialist pamela.seelman@ces.uwex.edu (608) 262-9311 http://www.uwex.edu/ces/employeeresources/political/ Communicating forPolitical Effectiveness

  2. What are your questions about this topic?

  3. Communications matter! • Communicating for political effectiveness translates into… • Buy-in from “power actors” • More funding • Continued programming • Better lives for those we serve

  4. Where the money comes from… • In Wisconsin… • County funds – 25% • Federal funds – 26% • State GPR – 42% • Program revenue – 7% • In your state… • ? • ?

  5. Communicating effectively quotient • Quality programming • Personal and professional relationships • Communicating our good work • Value of programs • Relevance of programs • Internal and external environments • We don’t always control these, but we can work to influence them!

  6. What is political effectiveness? What does political effectiveness mean to you? Personally? Professionally? Historically?

  7. What is political effectiveness? • http://www.uwex.edu/ces/employeeresources/political/ • “Political Effectiveness – What and Why?” • “Principles for Political Effectiveness”

  8. What is political effectiveness? • Responsive educational programs • Strong relationships with key decision makers • Effective communications • Fiscal awareness, political sensitivity

  9. Strong relationships • Who are the decision makers for your programs? • What audiences do you need to reach with your successes, value?

  10. Expanding our influence with elected officials Developing, building relationships with state legislators is important • Showcase valuable work • Establish credibility • Build a bridge to communicate needs assessment, evaluation of work • Serve as expert, resource • Identify their interests, link them to our work

  11. Welcome to the worldof state legislators Pressure to know everything and be an expert on all subjects • Pressure to be the best • Pressure to get press • Pressure to be important • Pressure to excel at three completely different skill sets

  12. Ongoing communicationswith state legislators • Introductory meeting followed by steps that build the relationship • One page fact sheet • Targeted message

  13. You are a powerful resourcefor state legislators • Legislators can only be an expert in three to five issue areas • You are a resource and a stakeholder in the legislator’s success • You have deep and solid connections in your communities • The stronger the relationship, the more legislators become Extension champions

  14. We provide valuable services –We need to communicate that to elected officials • When legislators understand our valuable work • Our expertise • Our powerful networks • Connection to the community • A working partnership is developed

  15. Political effectiveness ccommunications check-up • Assessing your communications • Internal changes? • External changes? • Who makes decisions re: $!!! • Internal? • External? • How do you communicate?

  16. Assessing your political effectiveness • http://www.uwex.edu/ces/employeeresources/political/ • “Political Effectiveness Assessment tool”

  17. Effective communications:How do you communicate? • Press releases • Web pages, blogs, twitter, YouTube • Newsletters • TV • Radio • In person visits • E-mails • Letters • Marquees • Community calendars • Neighborhood flyers • Speeches at organizations • Posters, brochures, flyers

  18. Local interests • Local needs, local interests • Program priorities • Who’s a friend, who’s a future friend?

  19. Programming • What programs do we offer that are of interest to decision makers, both internal and external… • Political agenda • Personal interests • Constituents’ interests

  20. Responsive educational programs • Family financial management • Active children programs in 4-H • Foreclosure data • Teen court • Education for jail populations • Divorced parenting education • Nutrition • Community development • Senior housing

  21. Public value • What’s in it for the county elected officials’ constituents? • Tie in public value…so what? • Use your success stories, outcomes • Build trust • Build networks

  22. Connect the dots… • Bridge the gap between decision makers’ interests and Extension programming

  23. Mapping exercise • Personal profile • Personal network • Make the connections • Links to Cooperative Extension • Links to personal and political interests

  24. Be strategic about communications • Specific Audience • Specific Message • Specific Outcome

  25. Manitowoc County green sheet • Improving Quality of Life for Manitowoc County Residents • Fact: Every year Cooperative Extension education programs touch the lives of over 16,000 county residents. That’s 1 in 5 county residents. • Educating and Empowering Citizen Volunteers • Fact: Cooperative Extension volunteers donated 30,602 hours to county residents in 2006. The dollar value of their service was a whopping $478,304! • Adding value to the local economy • Fact: For every $1 that Manitowoc County invests in Cooperative Extension, county residents receive an estimated $7.88 in educational services

  26. Ways to inform • Face to face visits – establish a relationship • Go to office hours, make visits • Bring a program participant, testimonials • Get business cards • Follow up with thank you’s, answer questions, concerns • Jot down your notes about their interests • Invite them to events, open houses • Make them part of recognition programs • They LOVE publicity

  27. Ways to inform • Written communication… • Letters • from you! • from program participants • to newspapers via Letters to the Editor • Fact sheets • with program impacts • list constituent involvement by district

  28. Ways to inform • Call them about successes, programs they might be interested in, tours, events • E-mail • Fax • Indirect communication • Media campaigns

  29. Tips • Continue to offer excellent programs • Excellent programs = support for programs • Keep decision makers informed • Show and tell • Ask partners and clientele to contact decision makers • Visit, write, contact • Simplify your message • Include financials, if possible • Thank supporters • Awards, photos, food!

  30. Tips online • http://www.uwex.uwc.edu/government/documents/WorkingWithElectedOfficials.pdf

  31. Questions? Comments?

More Related