Download - Communicating eu-research
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Prepared by:European Commission, Research DG,Communication UnitOctober 2008
Communicating EU Research
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Why communicating research?Why communicating research?
“Researchers are reacting to recent public concerns about the direction and potential outcomes of their work by increasing their efforts to communicate to non-specialists.
While this is a necessary practice, such communication has often had limited success […]. Science communication has tended to involve researchers talking at the public about what science is doing with the expectation that this would increase acceptance.”
EURAB (European Research Advisory Board to the European Commission), Research and SocietalEngagement, June 2007: http://ec.europa.eu/research/eurab/pdf/eurab_07_013_june_%202007_en.pdf
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Communication in FP7Communication in FP7
Grant agreement, Annex II, General conditions II.12. Information and communication
The beneficiaries shall, throughout the duration of the project,take appropriate measures to engage with the public and the media about the project aims and results and to highlight the Community financial support.
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FP6 model contract:The beneficiaries shall, throughout the duration of the project, take appropriate measures to ensure suitable publicity for the project in order to highlight the Community financial support.
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Grant agreement, Annex II, General conditionsII.12. Information and communication
Unless the Commission requests otherwise, any publicity, including at a conference or seminar or any type of information or promotional material (brochure, leaflet, poster, presentation etc), must specify that the project has received Community research funding and display the European emblem. When displayed in association with a logo, the European emblem should be given appropriate prominence. This obligation to use the European emblem in respect of projects to which the European Community contributes implies no right of exclusive use.
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Communication in FP7Communication in FP7
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CommunicatingCommunicating withingwithing EUEU--fundedfunded projectsprojects
External communication helps …
Increasing the success rate of your proposal (provided you have a good communication/dissemination plan)Disseminating research resultsIncreasing visibility and science awarenessAchieving successful integration with stakeholdersPromoting internal communicationNetworking and marketing the consortiumBridging the gap between scientists and the publicMaking European research more attractive
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http://www.mar-eco.no/
Good practicesGood practices
MAR-ECO (international study of the animals inhabiting the northern mid-Atlantic)
Public communication built-inProduced beautiful photos, amazing videos and a travelling exhibition Descartes Prize 2006 for communication
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Good practicesGood practices
Noah’s Ark (impact of global warming on cultural heritage)
‘Diary note’ was sent out to journalists and published on 23 May 2007 by Research DG400+ articles published in the media incl. New York’s Metro: ‘Monuments threatened by global warming’
http://noahsark.isac.cnr.it/
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Good practicesGood practices
Census of Antarctic Marine Life (largest international biological research programme undertaken during the 2007-2008 International Polar Year)
During their last mission in the Antarctica, the researchers published a daily journal on the web, explaining their work, conditions, etcThey found that this increased media coverage by 30%
http://www.caml.aq/
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Good practicesGood practices
Nano2hybrids (project on the synthesis and properties of carbo nanotubes)
Video clipsScientists blogs and diariesForumetc
http://www.nano2hybrids.net/
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Good practicesGood practices
COMNET
Informal network of communication managers in 15 FP6 projectsAbout 3,000 are engaged in the COMNET projectsCOMNET members address the design and implementation of communication activities in the health and food sector
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Open Access PilotOpen Access Pilot
Special clause added to all grant agreements of 7 FP7 research areas (Health, Energy, Environment, E-Infrastructures, ICT, Science in Society and Social science and humanities)Grant recipients in these 7 areas are required to:
deposit peer reviewed research articles or final manuscripts resulting from their FP7 projects into an online repository; make their best efforts to ensure open access to these articles within either six months (twelve months for social sciences and humanities, science in society) after publication.
http://ec.europa.eu/research/science-society/index.cfm?fuseaction=public.topic&id=1680
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What is a good communication?What is a good communication?
Work and coordinate at European levelBe ambitious… and modestFocus on results and background, not just methodologyWork with communication and media professionalsUse existing relays and organisationsTry to make a difference: originality pays!Media is not the end: diversify and reach out!Remember Lasswell’s wwwww:
Who (says) What (to) Whom (in) What Channel (with) What Effect Define your messages, target and support!
No propaganda!
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Communication challengesCommunication challenges
Today’s challenges in communication include:
New technologies (digital TV, SMS alerts, e-zines, forums, podcasts, news feeds, clips, webcasts, weblogs): how best to use them and for which audience?Beyond “popularisation”: initiatives should aim at a 2-way communication, not just providing informationEuropean fragmentation… and Europe has to compete with the US big communication machineries!Scientists to become communication-minded? Yes, but European scientists lack professional recognition for engaging with the public
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Transnational initiativesTransnational initiatives
Despite European fragmentation several initiatives may help you communicating EU-wide:
European Commission (DG RTD)CordisAlphaGalileoEurekAlertECSITE (European Network of Science Centres and Museums)EUSCEA (European Science Events Association)etc
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UsefulUseful websiteswebsites
Press room of the European Commissionhttp://europe.eu.int/comm/press_room/index_en.htm
Press room of Research DGhttp://ec.europa.eu/research/index.cfm?pg=press&lg=en
Communicating European Research Conferenceshttp://ec.europa.eu/research/conferences/2004/cer2004/index_en.htmlhttp://ec.europa.eu/research/conferences/2005/cer2005/index_en.html
European Guide on successful communicationshttp://ec.europa.eu/research/conferences/2004/cer2004/pdf/rtd_2004_guide_success_communication.pdf
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UsefulUseful websiteswebsites
PCST networkwww.upf.edu/pcstacademy/PCST_Network/
Successful communication websitehttp://ec.europa.eu/research/science-society/science-communication/index_en.htm
European Forum on science journalismhttp://ec.europa.eu/research/conferences/2007/bcn2007/index_en.htm
CORDIS newshttp://cordis.europa.eu/news/home_en.html
research*eu magazinehttp://ec.europa.eu/research/research-eu/index_en.html
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Unusual venues/placesfor science communication
Demolition houses, garbage placesCafésSchools, universitiesPublic places, public parksMuseums, art galleriesShopping malls, department stores, banksFactories, companiesLighthousesIn nature: wood, mountain, beachesRailway stationAmusement/Theme parksJazzhouseTheatres, Opera houseExhibition ShipParliamentTents, containers
OriginalityOriginality pays!pays!
www.euscea.org/
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Scientists are dangerous! “Because of their knowledge, scientists have a power that makes
them dangerous”
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MT LV HUN CY EU15 SL PL CZ SK EU10 EE TR BU RO LT
Percentage of people who tend to agree
Attitudes towards researchAttitudes towards research
Scientists ought to communicate their scientific knowledge better: 85.9% agree
Source: Eurobarometer, 2002, http://ec.europa.eu/research/science-society/index.cfm?fuseaction=public.topic&id=1220
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People are optimistic about science and technology
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EL LU FR DK NL SE BE DEEU25 CY PT IT IE CZ ES FI HU UK SK MT LV LT PL EE
% of people agreeing that s&t will improve the quality of life of future generations
Attitudes towards researchAttitudes towards research
Source: Eurobarometer, 2005, http://ec.europa.eu/research/science-society/index.cfm?fuseaction=public.topic&id=1220
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Where do Europeans get their scientific information?
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Podcasts
Radio
Internet
Written press
Television
Attitudes towards researchAttitudes towards research
Source: Eurobarometer, 2007, http://ec.europa.eu/public_opinion/archives/ebs/ebs_282_en.pdf
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Communicating research:
Web (EUROPA + CORDIS)Media events Research*eu magazineFUTURIS on EuronewsPublications (400 per year inclvideos, DVDs, VNRs…)Public awareness (Science Week)VisitorsEvents
Communication @ ECCommunication @ EC
ResearchDG
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Monthly magazineFocus on ERA, successes, peopleAvailable in English, French, German and Spanish120,000+ copies, 1,000,000+ readers in 150+ countriesA real online version
European Commission:European Commission:researchresearch*eu*eu
http://ec.europa.eu/research/research-eu/l
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European CommissionEuropean Commission: : FuturisFuturis on on EuroNewsEuroNews15 M
viewers / episode
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Research on the web:Europa and CORDIS
CORDISinformation for (potential) FP participantsresults and news
Europa - the EU’s ‘portal site’ - is aimed at all kinds of audiences: policy makers, students, researchers, industry, press, information multipliers, etc.general information
1.5 million hits and …300k unique visitors per monthGrowing steadily
http://ec.europa.eu/research/index.cfm?lg=en
http://cordis.europa.eu/home_en.html
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European CommissionEuropean Commission: Guide to communication and media
relationsEstablishing target audiences and selecting the appropriate media;Defining key messages;Preparing and supplying information to the press; Building good relationships with journalists;Evaluating results;Maximising the exposure of news stories and press articles, andTapping useful Commission resources
http://ec.europa.eu/research/conferences/2004/cer2004/pdf/rtd_2004_guide_success_communication.pdf
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European CommissionEuropean Commission: AthenaWeb
www.athenaweb.org/
A video library on science and research in EuropeA resource platform for science journalists and producers
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European Commission: European Commission: PIDSPIDS
PIDS stands for Project Information Dissemination ServicePIDS enables FP6 Project Coordinators (COs) and Project Officers(POs) to
Find information on their projectsStore their projects’ deliverables (news, events, results, documents…) Disseminate these deliverables through CORDIS services (CORDIS Wire, results database, CORDIS Library…) and in a longer run, through projects’ mini sites.
PIDS should offer a complete service to assist the Participants – and the Officers - throughout the whole participation process:
Proposal preparation (foreseen)Project
Publication
http://cordis.europa.eu/pids/index.cfm?fuseaction=main.home
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Have something to say … that is real news… ... and make it soundinteresting
Get to the point. Why should anyone care about this?
Think like a journalist: how can they make a story out of this? What would you be interested in reading about over your cornflakes?
Give them all they need. Don’t wait until they call you looking for more
How to How to writewrite a good a good presspressrelease?release?
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WhatWhat isis a a presspress release?release?
A message opportunity. Every press release should have a clear message, and a clear target audience. Who are we talking to? Howbest can we reach them?
An information resource. A press release is the basis for articles on the day or later. All the facts a journalist needs should be there.
Influencing the news agenda. A good press release will encourage journalists to write about your subject. Bad press releases mean theylook elsewhere...
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Brussels, 3 April 2003
News alert
Science in the Candidate Countries:enthusiastic but with poor prospects, the
young abandon research careersImportant questions for the future of science in an enlarged Europe are raisedby the first major Commission survey in the Candidate Countries publishedtoday. More than half of all people questioned had little interest in science andtechnology, with young men in Cyprus and Hungary the most likely to valuescience, and older women in Bulgaria and Turkey the least. Young people areturning their backs on scientific careers, citing poor salary prospects as thechief reason. However, eight out of ten people believed that science couldimprove their quality of life and cure terminal illnesses and that generallyEuropean research delivered positive results.Presenting the results of the Eurobarometer on research in the Candidate Countries,European Research Commissioner Philippe Busquin said: "People are more optimisticabout science in the Candidate Countries than in current Member States. They aremore confident in the capacity of science and technology to build a better future. Butthey are abandoning research due to a lack of resources and career prospects inscience. The time is ripe for greater investment in research in these countries as part ofan enlarged EU. We must ensure that we invest now in our scientific legacy for futureEuropean generations.”
For this Eurobarometer survey sample questions were fielded in November 2002 to atotal of 12,247 nationals in the 13 candidate countries: Bulgaria, Cyprus, the CzechRepublic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Romania, Slovakia,Slovenia, and Turkey.
Lacking information…The Eurobarometer shows there is a clear science divide in society. 56% of CandidateCountries’ nationals are neither interested in nor informed about science andtechnology (EU15: 45%). Only 35% of people expressed an interest in science (EU15:45%). Two thirds of participants in the survey think they are badly informed aboutscience and technology.
High interest in science and technology is seen in Cyprus (58%), Hungary (53%),Malta (50%) and Slovenia (50%) while two countries present a below-average interest:Bulgaria (34%) and Turkey (22%). Romania is exactly on average: 35%.
….but confident science can improve our quality of lifeDemographic analyses show that women are less interested in scientific topics (29%)than are men (41%). The youngest age group has the highest level of interest inscience and technology (44%), compared to 26% in the oldest age group.
Science is seen as a very positive value in the Candidate Countries; citizens expect alot from scientific progress. About eight in 10 people in the candidate region believe
BAD: Commission launches European Round Table on GMO Safety Research, and publishes Review of Results of GMO research
GOOD:GMOs: are there any risks ?
http://ec.europa.eu/research/index.cfm?pg=press&lg=en
How to How to writewrite a good a good presspressrelease?release?
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How to How to writewrite a good a good presspressrelease?release?
We are competing for journalists’ time and interest. So you should have real news and make it interesting!Make your news relevant to people! Relate our message to things that matter to ordinary people!Try twice as hard to sell good newsFocus on results, tangible thingsFind the angle
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Too bureaucratic – in content and language. Nobody cares about procedures. Nobody cares about “agreed text”. News is about real people. What does your story mean?
Upside down. Put the interesting bits first. Save the details for the end.
Missing information. Are all the facts there? Have you got comparative figures? What will the journalists ask you for?
Jargon. Don’t say “Community Support Programme for employment”. Do say “EU plan to boost jobs”
Main Main problemsproblems withwith presspressreleasesreleases
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Content : give them what they need
Language : write like a journalist
Structure : a hierarchy of information. Most press releases follow the following structure:
TitleChapeauQuote (not always)Details Background
MakingMaking a a presspress release release workwork
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Title: think of it as a possible headlineShort : 2 lines maxClear : Tell them what it is…straight up Simple : The details come later Action : Make something happen…use a verb
Chapeau: a summary of the main story - which stands aloneIdeally 10 lines… maximum 15 Answer the main questions : Who? What? When? Why? How? ….and if possible Where?Only the main news… the details come later
WhatWhat makesmakes a good a good titletitle and and chapeau?chapeau?
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Keep following the pyramid of information - main messages still come first.
Provide a quote or two - and make them snappy and relevant
Try to guess the journalists’ questions : Who? What? When? Why? How? Where?….and what’s new?
Make it easy to read - use headings, bullet points, 3 key themes, a section of Background at the end…
Details, graphs, tables, analysis, information with a longer shelf-life, can be incorporated in an annex, rather than all having to be in the press release
The main The main texttext
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Directorate-General for Research Communication [email protected] +32-2-295 99 71Fax +32-2-295 82 20