“surviving or thriving” & using social media to campaign carrie brookes, vonne

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“Surviving or Thriving” & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

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“Surviving or Thriving” & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE. Overview of “Surviving or Thriving” How we planned our media campaign The impact How we used social media About social media campaigning Top tips. About VONNE Member-led charity set up 2000. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

“Surviving or Thriving” &

using Social Media to campaign

Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Page 2: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

• Overview of “Surviving or Thriving”• How we planned our media campaign• The impact • How we used social media • About social media campaigning• Top tips

Page 3: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

About VONNE•Member-led charity set up 2000.•Influence policy on behalf of VCS•Ebulletin, website•Run networks •Policy and Representation partnership, which encourages and supports the VCS to influence policy.

Page 4: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Our campaign – Surviving or Thriving

Aim: To create up-to-date, accurate information on impact of the economic downturn on the VCS.•Survey North East VCS orgs every 6 months•Findings used to lobby and influence policy.•Funded by Millfield House Foundation. •Partnered with Newcastle CVS.

Page 5: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Our campaign – Surviving or Thriving

•Wanted media campaign to highlight issues through local media, make general public and policymakers aware.•Sent report on findings to policymakers, MPs, funders, gov. departments, local peers.•But also wanted general public to be aware and to put pressure on policymakers.

So how did we do this?

Page 6: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Surviving or Thriving - TIMING

Planned surveys so that release of findings would have maximum media impact

TIP: Be aware of current media interest, read the Journal, watch local news, follow journalists on Twitter, keep eye on calendar for issue/awareness days to ‘hook’ your campaign.

Page 7: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Surviving or Thriving - PRESENTING

Report > Exec summary > Press Release > Tweet

TIP: If dealing in numbers, what are your headline figures? Can you aggregate figures?

Page 8: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Surviving or Thriving – PRESS RELEASE

Include headline figures, quotes, key messages, contact details, but kept it 1 side of A4.

TIP: Make sure you have a media contact person who is easily contactable. Mobile number on press releases and out-of-office. Media section on website.

Page 9: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Surviving or Thriving – CASE STUDIES

We asked in survey who would be prepared to talk to media. Hand-picked the most media friendly. Fluffy animals and children!

TIP: Interview your case studies that back up your campaign. Find the human story. Talk about service users, not organisations. Get contact details, pick reliable, contactable people.

Page 10: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Surviving or Thriving – PLACE YOUR STORY

Chose journalist, pitched the story to them via Twitter and email. Meeting with Adrian Pearson, agreed to 400 word editorial alongside case studies & exclusive story.

TIP: Try and find journalist interested in your cause. Pitch story to them first, gives chance to shape story rather than just sending a press release.

Page 11: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Surviving or Thriving – BE PREPARED

Briefed contact people for case studies on day story launched. Sent press release to all other news outlets. Launched on website, twitter, email.

TIP: Make sure CEO/spokesperson has time and energy to give interview. Could be 7am radio interview or live on 6.30pm news.

Page 12: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Surviving or Thriving – IMPACT

•Staggering response to media launch. •Front page coverage of Chronicle, feature article in Journal and Northern Echo. BBC radio Newcastle and Tees, live interview and hosted debate with Guy Opperman, Tory MP for Hexham and Jo Curry. Third Sector, BBC National News, Tyne Tees, The Guardian, Civil Society website.•Tweeted by MPs & social commentators.

Page 13: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Surviving or Thriving – REACH

•Pushed story to Patrick Butler of Guardian through Twitter. •Case study on Single Work Programme picked up by Guardian. VONNE was asked to provide additional evidence to Cabinet Office. •Lobbying is starting to penetrate. Nick Hurd acknowledged that the Work Programme is not meeting expectations.

Page 14: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Surviving or Thriving – CONTINUING REACH

•Met with Stuart Etherington of NCVO, Hilary Norman, Deputy Director at Cabinet Office, Stephen Bubb of ACEVO.•Community Foundation launched Survive to Thrive fund to support VCS orgs that have lost public funding.•We are contacted on a weekly basis to provide comment to media, speak at an event or address a meeting.•.

Page 15: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Using Social Media to campaign

•We used it to pitch to journalists & raise awareness of our campaign.•Never before have journalists, MPs, policymakers been so contactable or us aware of their interests. •Tools have had a democratising effect – anyone can disseminate ideas on a scale previously only for commercial media providers.

Page 16: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Why use social media for campaigning?

•Social media reaches greater numbers•Social media engages a younger audience•Social media saves money•Social media can work outside of your group’s ‘reach'•Social media can increase your speed of communication

Page 17: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Recent examples of social media campaigns:

•Pasties tax•#Giveitbackgeorge•National Forests sale•Spartacus report •Some not so successful, #SaveLennox

Page 18: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Three main types of online campaigning:

1. Awareness raising Educational slant, informing about your cause and changing behaviour.2. Fundraising Link your website, Facebook page, twitter feed and YouTube site up so supporters can easily donate online. Eg: Justgiving, Virgin Money Giving.

Page 19: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Three main types of online campaigning:

3. Lobbying – by the charity itself or asking supporters to lobby for change. i.e. epetitions

Charities need to think carefully:- How to make your message stand out?- Is the message targeted to the right people? - Have you researched who might be most likely to take up your cause?

Page 20: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Top tips on social media campaigning

•Build a strong database for your campaign•Use brief, focused communication•Strategise for different levels of campaign engagement – the ‘ladder’•Bear in mind the ‘overload factor’

Page 21: “Surviving or Thriving”  & using Social Media to campaign Carrie Brookes, VONNE

Useful resources

•www.vonne.org.uk/campaigns/

•www.vonne.org.uk/sectorissues/campaigning/

•www.socialmediasurgery.com •www.38degrees.org.uk

•The VINE – NE’s most ‘influential tweeters’