Title: Telling the Right Story
1Telling the Right Story Adapting your message to
multiple audiences AoA Grantees
Meeting Washington, DC January 19, 2006
20
Whats Ahead
3- Strategic communications once more briefly
- Messaging 101
- Know your audience
- The Art of Persuasion
- Persuade your audience
- Shaping your message
Whats Ahead
41
Strategic Communications
5Five Steps to Strategic Communications
- Setting Clear Objectives
- Identifying Audiences
- Creating and Adapting Messages
- Selecting Vehicles/Strategies
- Conducting Evaluation
62
Messaging 101
7What are you trying to say?
8Marshalling Evidence
- Sample Message
- EnhanceFitness (formerly Lifetime Fitness) is a
low-cost, highly adaptable exercise program
challenging enough for active older adults and
safe enough for the unfit or near frail. - Whats the evidence (not necessarily the evidence
base)?
9Exercise (1)
- Whats your message (for an audience you are
comfortable with)? - Whats your evidence?
103
Know your audience
11What do they care about?
12Primary Audiences
- Aging services providers
- State and local AAA leaders
- Executive directors
- Program directors
- Health care providers
- Doctors, nurses, social workers, care managers
- Hospitals
- Managed care providers and insurers
13Secondary Audiences
- Alternative sites
- Ys
- Senior housing
- Libraries
- CCRCs
- Senior colleges
- Funders
- Foundations
- Government State AAAs, Departments of Health
14Exercise (2)
- Whats your message for an audience you are not
as comfortable with? - Whats your evidence? Whats new?
154
The Art of Persuasion
16Aristotle and the Modes of Persuasion
17Ethos
Based on the perceived credibility of the speaker
or the source. Typical Sources Testimony (self
and others), references and citations.
18Logos
Appeals based on rational evidence. Typical
sources Data, facts, figures
19Pathos
Appeals to personal motives or emotional
truths Typical sources Stories, anecdotes,
examples
20Mythos
Appeals based on commonly held values, ideas or
customs Typical evidence Narrative to create
identification and interest
215
Persuading your audiences
22Persuading Aging Services Providers
- Heavier on the pathos, field-based mythos
- Build ethos for you and program
- Connect with their
- Concern for underserved populations
- Interest in ease of implementation
- Interest in new member recruitment
- Concern about cost
- Interest in better lives, not necessarily
better health
23Persuading Health Care Providers
- Go heavier on ethos and logos
- Evidence base is helpful.
- Provide outcomes from your program, if available
- Connect with concerns about benefits for the
practice - Use short forms 1 pager, 2 minute video
24Persuading
Decisionmakers Practitioners
- Clear concrete language
- Concise stories
- Compelling data
- Shorter formsone pagers, information package
- Link to state/national issues
- Organizational benefits cutting edge,
recruitment/ marketing, access to new partners or
resources
- Clear concrete language
- Concise stories
- Compelling data
- Longer formsincluding materials, tools
- Link to local/organizational issues
- Practice benefits ease of implementation,
availability of TA, time savings, etc.
256
Shaping Your Message
26Five Steps to Effective Messages
- Listen in for their frame, values, poetry.
- Marshall your evidence.
- -What do you have? What dont you have?
- -Remember ethos, logos, pathos, mythos
- Test and, if necessary, revise.
- Find the right messenger.
- Once youve got it, stay with it.
27Strategic Communications Planning 34 West
Avenue, Suite E Wayne, PA 19087 jbeilenson_at_about
scp.com 610.687.5495 www.aboutscp.com