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Alumni Advocates: Top Assets for Advancing Causes and Securing Funds

Alumni Advocates: Top Assets for Advancing Causes and Securing Funds. b arney.ellis-perry@ubc .ca UBC Alumni Association Director of Alumni Services CCAE June 2009. "To have the results you've never had ………… you must do what you've never done.". Overview. Alumni Advocacy – Why?

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Alumni Advocates: Top Assets for Advancing Causes and Securing Funds

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  1. Alumni Advocates: Top Assets for Advancing Causes and Securing Funds barney.ellis-perry@ubc.ca UBC Alumni Association Director of Alumni Services CCAE June 2009

  2. "To have the results you've never had ………… you must do what you've never done."

  3. Overview • Alumni Advocacy – Why? • Advocacy an Overview • Who the Players Are • Political Capital • Creating a Plan • Resources

  4. Conference Topic Tie Ins • Leveraging Technology in Challenging Times • Be An Influencer • Coordinating Alumni Relations Efforts Across the Institution • Seeing the Big Picture: Linking Friendraising and Fundraising

  5. Alumni Advocacy – Why?

  6. Why • Leverage your organization’s greatest resource its alumni • Increase impact of your alumni program • High value return on investment for the University from your program • Linkages to Development Office • Low cost

  7. How • Thanking campaigns – letters and calls • Alumni Influencers • Communications • Face to Face meetings • Days on the “Hill” • Open Source Advocacy: • Web driven • Sign up for alerts

  8. Exercise Smile at the person to your right and then test each others advocacy “elevator message” and give feedback. 5 min.

  9. Advocacy an Overview

  10. What it is: Advocacy “ is demonstrated support for a cause or particular point of view. Advocacy is not necessarily a political activity, but it sometimes can be.” A A call to political action is “an appeal to the members of the charity or to the general public, or to segments of the general public, to contact an elected representative or public official to urge them to retain, oppose or change the law, policy or decision of any level of government.” • “well-reasoned position

  11. Government, What Government? • Federal • Since 1997, a growing role – particularly in research: • Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI) • Granting agencies (SSHRC, NSERC, and CIHR) • Canada Graduate Scholarships • Canada Research Chairs • Provincial • The Province is often funding half of your operating revenue • You institution is probably one of the larger line items in the provincial budget

  12. Local • Often several local governments are impacted by your institution • Multiple jurisdictions impacted – planning, transportation etc.. • Town & Gown rub First Nations • A form of government

  13. Example: Priority Messaging Priority messages and the articulation of UBC’s position on them is intended to assist the community in communicating with government representatives, both in formal and in social settings. Messages are structured around four themes: Return on Investment (i.e. human capital, civil society, community engagement) Differentiation (i.e. graduate student support, research funding) Resourcing (i.e. full costs of research, tuition/fees, funding flexibility) Access (i.e. indigenous education, financial aid, loan forgiveness)

  14. Example: Community Impact

  15. The Players

  16. The Players • Government Relations • Alumni Staff • Board of Directors • Volunteers • Development Office • Communications Department

  17. Role of Government Relations Function • to advise and assist the organization in its dealings with government • influence public-policy • laws, regulations, policies, programs, grants, contracts • to represent the organization to government at various levels - and to other parts of civil society • anticipate and interpret government (and public policy) for the organization • monitor “external environment” • seek opportunities • respond to challenges

  18. monitoring analysis strategic advice public-policy research & development contact maintenance direct representation grassroots mobilization “logistics” management survey research strategic communications, including media relations relationship management (networking and coalition building) developing and managing “political capital” advocacy training and internal capacity- development feedback, evaluation and assessment The Government Relations Function

  19. Role of Executive Management • usually it’s both “to do” and “to manage” • principal link to Board (or senior management) • in national NGOs, among ED’s, GR “effectiveness” is key hiring (and “firing”) variable • key responsibility is to ensure GR priorities are identified and pursued in most effective and economical manner – commensurate with their importance • ensure organization has appropriate capacities in-house or available externally • supervise and assess staff performance

  20. Role of Staff Practitioners • i.e. “hands-on” GR people • should, at least collectively, provide capacity in: • policy or process expertise in specific field • general policy and/or political analysis skills • networking (in Gov’t and among other actors) • oral and written communications • strategy development • execution and implementation • feedback, evaluation and assessment • being part of organization’s “political capital” • expectations management

  21. Role of the “Board” • set the overall direction of organization • establish – or endorse – organization’s public-policy priorities, goals and objectives • ensure management has financial and HR tools to do the job • source of insight, judgment and “access” • direct representation, as warranted • on occasion, provide strategic direction and authority on specific cases • assess and judge Executive’s and organization’s effectiveness and “political capital”

  22. Lobbyists Disclosure Laws The definition of lobbying in Canada is fairly consistent across the various jurisdictions, though broader at federal level and in Quebec • All of the Lobbyist Registration Acts consider as “registerable lobbying activity”: • “communicating with” legislators, ministers, bureaucrats and political staff about changing • legislation or regulations • policies or programs • obtaining government contracts or grants • and - in the case of consultant lobbyists -arranging meetings with public officials

  23. General Orientation of Lobbying Laws • Defines registerable “lobbying” as: • being paid (except in Quebec) to • communicate with a public office holder for the purpose of influencing a decision by government related to: • New or amended legislation • New or amended regulations • Policies, programs • Financial benefits • Procurement • Arranging for meetings with public officials (“consultant lobbyists” only, except Quebec)

  24. Political Capital

  25. What is your organizations political Capital? • individual and institutional/corporate reputation • internal (staff) and external resources • traditions, icons, myths and successes • accomplishments • support of membership • ability to assist others • data / expertise • contacts at political and official levels

  26. Building Political Capital • individual and institutional/corporate reputation • traditions, icons, myths and successes • accomplishments • support of membership • data / expertise • contacts at political and official levels • internal (staff) and external resources • ability to help / support others • earning and spending it

  27. Creating a Plan

  28. Defining and Managing Priorities, Goals and and Objectives • “.. we have priorities in order that we can say ‘no’ to “good ideas.” (C-P Boivin) • the fewer the better • should be written-out (as part of “strategy”) • based on political / public policy research • in most cases, endorsed by “board” • should be regularly reviewed, at least annually • the “SMART” approach • Communicate sucess

  29. Advocacy Strategy Template • Goal / Objective • preliminary view from Org’s perspective, tempered by relevant political and public-policy realities • specific “asks” • Strategic Considerations • political, public-policy and process factors • timeframes / players • Org’s previous experience / history / contacts • obstacles / challenges / adversaries / allies • Govt’s key themes, objectives, priorities • advocacy asset inventory / political capital

  30. Advocacy Strategy Template (cont’d) • (Preliminary) Strategy • Overall Strategic Approach & “Theory” (i.e. elevator message) • Positioning / Framing • key themes and messages • Implementing Tactics • targets (officials, ministers, legislators & political staff) • meetings; briefings; media; grassroots • consultations; proxies; third parties; • Timetable / Sequencing (key decision-points etc.) • Feedback / Evaluation / Re-Positioning (how and who?) • Management Plan (oversight; “war cabinet” / strategy committee; resources) • Budget

  31. “Do-It-Yourself Public Policy” • backgrounders, briefing notes • analysis relevant to Government’s concerns • communications strategies, “talking points,” draft Q & A and speech text • thank you letter templates • RIAS and other official documents • “cab doc / submission” material • consultations processes and materials • interdepartmental co-ordination • research material (re: other jurisdictions etc.)

  32. Exercises • your public-policy “elevator message” • specific “asks” • the key to your success, to date • the major obstacle, to date • three things to be done, ASAP

  33. Resources • Sean Moore – Advocacy Consultantwww.seanmoore.ca • Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada – www.aucc.ca • In America: • UCLA (Bruin Caucus), • Boise State (Bronco Advocacy Network) • U of Arizona (AdvoCATS) • U of Minnesota (“Support the U” Day)

  34. Want the Presentation? Email me with a request in the title to: barney.ellis-perry@ubc.ca

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