Title: Pulling Money Out of a Hat
1Pulling Money Out of a Hat
- Strategies for stretching your interpretation
budget and making big ideas a reality
2Review
- What is meant by cognitive dissonance?
- What are the key variables discussed in the
theory of planned behaviour? - What is meant by formative evaluation?
3Objectives of Today
- To discuss strategies to achieve big results with
small budgets, including the use of volunteers,
partnerships, grant writing and the importance of
marketing - To explain the basics of marketing
4Readings
- Porter, A. L. and Howard, J. L. 2002. Warning
visitors about the potential dangers of dingoes
on Fraser Island, QLD, Australia. J. Interp.
Research. 7 (2) 51-64 - Department for Environment and Heritage 2005.
Success through Partnership. Government of South
Australia
5Before you use the excuse Cant do it, dont
have enough x, y or z Important Steps to
Consider
- Identify what you have
- Identify what you need
- Identify what benefits you can offer volunteers,
sponsors, funding organisations etc - How to ask for what you need
- Importance of removing peoples objections
6Great ideas galore but no resources?
- Management
- Motivation
- Marketing
- The Art of Asking
7Great ideas galore but no resources?
- Management
- Motivation
- Marketing
- The Art of Asking
Accepted
Resisted
8Four Steps to Magic Money
- What do you HAVE?
- What do you NEED?
- Who has what you NEED?
- How do you get what you NEED?
9Step 1 What are you about?
- Core business of your organisation, vision of
where you want to be
10An Exercise for Cleland
- Think about your interp product as it is now
- Identify the benefits of it
- List the target publics who could use each
product - E.g. programs, trails, visitor centre, exhibits
- Prioritise your products to the audience you
are targeting
11Some more thinking for Cleland
- What business does the public think you are in?
- What products or opportunities do they think
you have?
12Differentiation
13What makes you special???
- What sets you apart from other federal and state
conservation agencies, hundreds of non-profit
wildlife reserves, zoos, aquariums, nature
centres etc etc - Be specific
145 Factors that might make your different
- Variability of project opportunities
- Complexity
- Significance
- Stability / Durability
- Visibility
- Risk
- Familiarity
15Step 2
16What are the options?
- Dont do it
- Modify it so it fits within the budget
- Get the money/resources from somewhere else ie.
Fill the GAPS - Grants
- Alliances
- Partnerships
- Sponsorships
17Categories of Need
- People
- Goods
- Skills
- Structure
- Services
- Cooperation / support
- Money
18People
- How many people are needed?
- To do what?
- For how long? (hours/week days/month
months/year) - What types of skills are required?
- What energy level/ personality type required?
- Will they work individually or in teams?
- What level of responsibility is required?
- Can it be flexible, shared?
- What rewards might be available?
19Volunteers and Donors
- Let people know what you want
- Think about the context of your community
- Who is likely to volunteer, what incentives would
they be interested in - What incentives will cause disharmony amongst the
group - Make the work meaningful
- Be proactive about management
- Make sure they understand their role, your vision
and appropriate boundaries. - Acknowledge their help
20Goods
- What specifically is needed?
- To do what?
- For how long?
- In what quantity?
- Why is it needed?
- Could we get this some other way? eg. Needing a
service rather than a good)
21Skills
- Have you listed all specific skills needed?
- Mandatory or desired?
22Structure
- Have you got a structure that will work for this
project? - What are the demands of the current structure?
- Where is it strongest? Weakest?
- What restraints are likely to be problems?
- Who are the power sources and decision makers?
- Is it flexible
23Service, Support, Money
- What services would help?
- What support do you need?
- Sometimes you just need money but again be
specific - How much, over what period, for what, who will
benefit from the purchases?
24Step 3
25Two winners
Motivations
Management
Benefits
What we want
26Step 4
- How do you get what you need?
27The 4Ps of Marketing
- Develop the right PRODUCT
- Support it with the right PROMOTION
- Put it in the right PLACE
- At the right PRICE
28The Marketing Mix
29Types of new products
Source Wikipedia, 2008
30The process of product development
- Idea generation
- SWOT
- Idea screening
- E.g will the customer benefit, what is the
forecasted growth in target market, what is the
expected competitive pressure, will it be
profitable? - Concept Development and Testing
- Who is the target market? Who is the decision
maker? What features most important? How can it
be produced cost effectively? - Business Analysis
- Estimate profitability
- Market Testing
- Use proto-types, test the product in typical
situations, conduct focus groups, make
adjustments - Technical Implementation
- Commercialisation
- Launch the product, produce and place
advertisements
31Important Product Decisions
- Name
- Functionality
- Quality
- Packaging
- Other relevant
- Styling, branding, warranty, safety, accessories,
service
32Important Price Decisions
- Pricing strategy
- Fairness
- Value for money
- Choice
- Discounts, seasonal pricing, bundling
33Important Place Decisions
- Distribution is about getting the product to the
customer - Distribution channels
- Market coverage (inclusive, exclusive, selective)
34Important Promotion Decisions
- Promotion represents the various aspects of
marketing communication - Promotional strategy
- Advertising
- Personal selling
- Public relations and publicity
- Marketing communications budget
35The Art of Asking
- Most people who do volunteer do so because they
were ASKED - Most people who dont were unaware of
opportunities and/or hadnt been asked
36Use your networks
- Eg. Meetings, Volunteer newsletter, Department
Magazine, websites, phone calls etc
Wish List 1 microscope for student groups
studying micro-invertebrates 1 computer
projector 6 x backpacks for educational
toolkits 8 x sifters for kids interp project at
archeological site
37The 6Rs of Asking
- Research
- Reduce reasons to say no
- Rapport (opening)
- Relate (make your case)
- Request exactly what you want
- Remember to follow-up
38Research
- Know as much as you can about your audience
(potential funders, supporters, volunteers) - Know who the leader is / right people to talk to
- When the fiscal year ends
- When they do their budget planning
- Past giving patterns (frequency, amount, length
of partnership) - Interaction history between your agency and them
- What competition you have for their support
- Their purpose (key interests)
- Their structure
- Characteristics of members, supporters,
shareholders
39Reduce Reasons to Say No
Think about why we say no
40Build Rapport in your opening
- People give money to people
- Reflect their style (eg. Professional, casual,
friendly) - Be organised
- Use your interp skills -- EROT
41Relate
- Get your case across in a succinct manner but in
a manner that relates to the person - Make it relevant. Select information that is
Meaningful, Memorable, Moving.
42Request
- Dont forget to ask for what you came for
43Remember to Follow-Up
- If you promised to get back to them with some
piece of information do it promptly - Always thank people for their time even if they
say no.
44Once you have partners dont lose them!!!!
- Keep people in the loop
- Make people know they are appreciated
45Successful Partnerships
- Formulate a vision early and remind people of it
constantly - Develop a common understanding of the issues and
participants - Create ownership among participants
- Seek common ground and act
- Stop occassionally and evaluate the process
- Be patient and leave time for fun
46Writing Grants
- Get organised quickly and evaluate probability
- Do it properly or dont do it at all.
- Research the grant organisation and the relevant
regulations. - What are their key interests?
- Who has got the grant before?
- How much did they ask for? For what?
- Are you eligible?
- Could you build the strength of your application
by linking in with key issues
47Writing Grants
- Understand the grant requirements
- Eg. Do you need to match the funds, are you
eligible, what restrictions are there in terms of
how you spend the money, how does it need to be
submitted - When is the closing date
- Make sure you show your project is significant
- Get support letters organised early and make sure
they help rather than just fulfil a checklist
requirement - Give yourself plenty of time for chasing things
up.
48Important Components of Grant Applications
- Title
- Introduction
- Statement of Significance
- Approach/Methods
- Budget allocation
49Dont forget what you do have
- On-going professional development is important to
maintain motivation as well as skills - Provide training opportunities for full time
staff, seasonals and volunteers - Use a strategic training approach
- Remember the principles of learning
- We learn best when we see direct relevance
- Create a career structure for interpretation
- Provide feedback to staff