1 / 17

Forming a Planning Team or Coalition

Forming a Planning Team or Coalition. Session 9 Slide Deck. Slide 9- 1. Session Objective. 9.1 Understand the purpose of planning teams and coalitions, and explain the benefits they provide to the communication process. Slide 9-. Basis of Stakeholder Value.

geraldcox
Download Presentation

Forming a Planning Team or Coalition

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. Forming a Planning Team or Coalition Session 9 Slide Deck Session 9 Slide 9-1

  2. Session Objective 9.1 Understand the purpose of planning teams and coalitions, and explain the benefits they provide to the communication process Slide 9- Session 9

  3. Basis of Stakeholder Value • Their stake in the success of the community and its citizens • Their personal or working relationship with the target audience(s) • Their knowledge of the hazard issues • Their ability to offer the type of assistance required, and • Many, many other factors Session 9 Slide 9-3

  4. The Planning Team/Coalition The quality of the campaign will always be reflective of the diversity, knowledge, perspective, and experience of the stakeholders assembled to plan it. Session 9 Slide 9-4

  5. Planning Team • Like a committee • Acts like a group of advisors that help the organization conducting the project to ensure the campaign is well informed and moving in the right direction • Used if oversight and decision-making authority is retained within the organizational structure of the agency or organization leading the effort. Session 9 Slide 9-5

  6. Planning Coalition • Project ownership becomes shared. • Used if project oversight and decision-making authority will be opened up to include outside organizations Session 9 Slide 9-6

  7. What Partners Offer • Expertise or knowledge on the preparedness topic • Time and effort (volunteer or otherwise) • Relevant skills • Access to contacts and other professional networks • Sponsorship • Financial support Session 9 Slide 9-7

  8. Partner Examples • Emergency responders (fire, police, EMS) and emergency managers • Local, state, and federal governmental agency officials Private sector/business/industry leaders • Volunteer organization representatives • Community and faith-based organization leaders Elected officials • News media representatives Session 9 Slide 9-8

  9. Advantage of Diverse Planning Team • Access to a wider range of ideas, perspectives, and expertise • Increased message coverage • Specialized knowledge of or greater access to the target audience • Endorsement or sponsorship Session 9 Slide 9-9

  10. Partner Skills and Resources • Graphic design software, skills, and equipment • Printing materials and equipment • Advertising space or time • Additional people to communicate messages • Space and equipment for events • Food, drinks, and other supplies to draw people • Storage, transport, or distribution of materials • Experience with the hazards addressed • Training resources Session 9 Slide 9-10

  11. Forming a Team • Success contingent on the commitment of planning partners to participate constructively / participate as agreed upon • Planning team members agree to more or less work, but must provide what is promised • The organization conducting the campaign maintains oversight and management Session 9 Slide 9-11

  12. Forming a Coalition • Coalitions require more defined structure • The coalition manages the project • Relationships are formalized, with memoranda of understanding, bylaws, mission statements, etc. • Responsibilities of members are clear • Officers are elected, standing committees formed • Accountability is formalized, and criteria for judging member commitments are formed • Members have a stake in the coalition Session 9 Slide 9-12

  13. Four Kinds of Coalitions • Coalition of representatives from different groups who have grown weary of costly confrontation • Coalition of representatives from different groups who, although of different missions or opinions, realize that they share a common perspective on a specific issue • Coalition of representatives from groups with varied goals and perspectives, who are more likely to be sensitive to the specific point of view • Coalition of representatives from varied groups that share a position that already has widespread acceptance Session 9 Slide 9-13

  14. Partnership Drawbacks • The process of forming teams and/or coalitions takes significant time and energy • The different wants, needs, perspectives, experiences, capabilities, and ideals of each partner can require that the nature of the campaign be altered to ensure that all partners are satisfied • Partner organizations may try to use the program for their own needs, or take credit for the program’s successes • Staffing problems, funding shortages, or mismanagement in partner organizations can all lead to delays, mismanagement, or complete failure of the campaign Session 9 Slide 9-14

  15. Benefits to Partners • The opportunity to share credit for success • Membership and participation in a forum whereby community problems are discussed, addressed, and resolved • Networking opportunities • The opportunity to foster good community relations • Increased awareness of the hazards faced by community residents and businesses Session 9 Slide 9-15

  16. Media as Partner • Can offer incredible value • Include: • Television • Print • Radio • Internet • Already play a significant role • Public already looks to the media for information • Media role not perfect or without risk Session 9 Slide 9-16

  17. Partnership Plans • Plans provide accurate impression and full understanding of what partners are expected to contribute • Partnership plans and agreements manage expectations • Ensure partners understand their role and help to prevent overstepping of bounds • Project managers can lose control without them Session 9 Slide 9-17

More Related