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Adam Arthur Media Coordinator West Virginia Division of Tobacco Prevention

Counter Marketing: What Is Available. Adam Arthur Media Coordinator West Virginia Division of Tobacco Prevention. WV DTP Counter Marketing.

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Adam Arthur Media Coordinator West Virginia Division of Tobacco Prevention

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  1. Counter Marketing: What Is Available Adam Arthur Media Coordinator West Virginia Division of Tobacco Prevention

  2. WV DTP Counter Marketing Media and marketing are often the most effective tools in changing awareness, attitudes and behavior, and have proven to be an essential component of comprehensive anti-tobacco efforts in West Virginia and other states. As a part of its assertive approach to tobacco-use prevention, WV DTP has supported an aggressive statewide media anti-tobacco campaign (also called counter marketing).

  3. Effective Counter-Marketing Principles The experiences of other states have demonstrated that counter-marketing campaigns have the potential to dramatically bolster smoking prevention and cessation programs, build public support for tobacco control activities, and set a supportive climate for school and community efforts. The campaigns have in common several core components that can increase the likelihood of success.

  4. Campaigns Should: • Be comprehensive, based on market research, and developed by a professional media consultant or team • Ensure all media strategies are consistent with a common message, theme and recognizable brand • Develop a movement among youth, building momentum for remaining tobacco-free and mobilizing their efforts to reach out to their peers by empowering youth leaders to work for the cause of educating youth about tobacco. This campaign should be intertwined with the counter-marketing efforts (RAZE) • Use non-authoritarian appeals that avoid direct commands not to smoke

  5. Campaigns Should: • Involve focus groups, test groups, and target market studies in the development of any media campaign • Combine messages on prevention, cessation, and protection from secondhand smoke; target both young people and adults Relating PARTICULARLY To Clean Indoor Air Campaigns… • Include a combination of grassroots promotions, local media advocacy, event sponsorship and other community activities to create a recognizable presence at all levels • Partner with organizations that have an interest in reducing tobacco consumption and who will address youth populations • Work with statewide youth organizations to eliminate tobacco sponsorship of events

  6. The Media Campaign Must Be Comprehensive Multiple audiences, messages, vehicles, paid and earned media, etc.

  7. Effective Ads Use Appropriate Tone Speak to smokers and business owners respectfully, don’t judge or criticize them Show balance in the degree of difficulty - can everyone understand it? Show support and understanding Speak from a smoker’s experience

  8. Look At This Ad…

  9. Look At This Ad…

  10. Look At This Ad…

  11. Strong And Consistent Media Presence Is Required Need a high level of commitment to impact the audience’s awareness, knowledge, attitudes, intentions and behaviors • High reach (% of audience reached) • High frequency (% of times reached) • Long duration (period of time messages placed) • Appropriate placement for messages

  12. Additional Lessons About Ad Presence Some of the most effective ads may also be offensive to some viewers Remember… DE-NORMALIZATION IS THE OVERALL GOAL • Can sometimes be managed by careful placement of ads Some emotionally intense ads may warrant shorter media runs

  13. Themes and Formats With Low Potential • Choice Ads • Choice ads consistently rated lower than ads about health effects and industry deception • TELLING someone to make a choice without providing compelling rationale will cause SOME to smoke, and SOME not to smoke • Humor Ads • Choice ads consistently rated lower than ads about health effects and industry deception

  14. Themes and Formats With Low Potential • Humor Ads • Attention getting, but they don’t change attitudes or behaviors • Death/disease/personal loss are VERY serious topics…BE CAREFUL • The only exception may be sarcastic or cynical humor, (but you will STILL upset at least one person out there)

  15. Look At This Ad…

  16. Look At This Ad…

  17. Look At This Ad…

  18. Look At This Ad…

  19. Look At This Ad…

  20. Media Advocacy Defined as the strategic use of mass media and community advocacy to advance environmental change or a public policy initiative. Compared with public relations, media advocacy is more focused on a particular policy goal, resulting in social change. It’s also more decentralized, community based, and community owned

  21. Media Advocacy Using the Media, Not Depending On It • the media is a tool, not a goal, and that media coverage is a means to an end, not an end in itself. • through the media, advocates gain access and a voice in the social decision-making process

  22. Media Advocacy Using the Media, Not Depending On It • the media alone will not accomplish the goal of change • media advocacy efforts should be used in combination with other communications and policy initiatives

  23. Media Advocacy A Crucial Component of a Media Campaign • empowers the community and targets policy makers • it’s a way of getting your message heard and inspiring others to join in your cause

  24. Media Advocacy A Crucial Component of a Media Campaign It begins with the premise that those closest to a problem are the best positioned to fix it and takes advantage of the fact that most media are local. • it can change attitudes and create a flood of support

  25. The successful use of media advocacy requires flexibility and being in tune with community issues, needs, and resources so that opportunities are embraced when they arise. It is a learning process, and skills are developed through practice. It requires long-term thinking and not being discouraged by short-term setbacks.

  26. Media Advocacy Media advocacy can refer to a wide range of activities that all of you can initiate yourselves, which may include: It focuses on policy change or environmental change. However, it doesn’t have to be confrontational and it isn’t limited to earned media. • Initiating calls, faxes, and emails to reporters (“pitching” stories or angles) • Responding to calls and e-mails from your local reporters • Staging strategic media events • Developing long-term relationships with “media gatekeepers”

  27. Media Advocacy Media advocacy can refer to a wide range of activities that all of you can initiate yourselves, which may include: • Alerting the media about important political or other policy-related developments and framing these developments for the media • Writing opinion / editorial (op-ed) columns, letters/emails to the editors of local newspapers /radio hosts • Conducting creative research to educate your local media and to generate attention

  28. Media Advocacy WE ARE HERE TO HELP YOU! Unlike other counter-marketing components, the role of the DTP is to support the policy efforts of local coalitions

  29. How Can We Help? By providing you with information and tools that support the overall effort… THE DE-NORMALIZATION OF TOBACCO

  30. THE TOOLS: Help Coordinate Special Events Informing you of HOT information Providing Specialized Materials Customizing Ads For Special Needs Providing Approved, Editable Advertising Templates

  31. Concluding Thoughts • De-normalization of tobacco is the goal • The media campaign must be comprehensive • To be affective you must maintain the appropriate tone • A strong and consistent media presence is required • Use media advocacy to your advantage but don’t depend on it solely • Utilize the tools made available to you

  32. Thank You Very Much For Your Attention!!!

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