Transcript Slide 1

You’re the Cure
CRASH COURSE
American Heart Association Mid-Atlantic Affiliate
What This is All About
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What is advocacy?
Activities you can do
How to be good at it
Building your own volunteer role
What is ADVOCACY?
Advocacy is the application of
pressure and influence
on the people and institutions
that have the power to give you
what you want.
You’re the Cure =
Results-Oriented Advocacy
The collective advocacy of You’re the Cure
network members has added up to:
– millions of dollars for research
– legislation for smoke-free laws
– legislation for heart attack and stroke
systems of care
– Policies supporting women’s heart health
– Policies that assure NATIONAL STANDARDS
for prevention, response and treatment
Where & How advocates can
influence the process…
• Where?
–Everywhere! Advocates can weigh
in and influence decision makers at
any and every point in the decision
making process
• How?
–Emails, letters, phone calls, visits
–Real stories
–Quantity and quality
Two Main Ways to Impact a
Decision Maker
DIRECTLY – conversations, consistent
interaction and relationship-building
INDIRECTLY – rallying others
Both matter, both are effective, and a
variety of strategies is optimal!
Roles for You’re the Cure Advocates
• Share your personal story
• Take action online: JUST CLICK IT!
• Take action ‘offline’ – attend a legislative
hearing or lobby day, make a phone call or
visit your lawmaker in person, or send a
letter to the editor of a local newspaper
• Help build the network – forward alerts,
host a house party for neighbors and
friends, recruit co-workers or other
contacts, get your family involved
Direct Influence with a Lawmaker
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Email
Telephone
Letter
Meeting (local in-district or at capital)
Connecting thru Facebook or Twitter
Talking to a lawmaker…demystified
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“Hi, my name is…”
“I’m here to talk to you about…”
“This is why it’s important…”
“Here’s my story…”
“Will you support…?”
The Power of Personal Stories
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Make it real
Make it local
Make it personal
Make it powerful
Make them feel!
Telling your personal story
• How has heart disease or stroke impacted
you?
– Keep it concise (usually 1-3 minutes)
– Should be specific and accurate
– Include the emotional side of your story,
not just the facts!
• How does your story relate to the policy ask
we are making?
Growing the YTC Network
• Find who cares
– Who do you know who might care about these
issues?
– Who might participate just because it’s
important to you?
– Who can you educate to help them care?
• Forward our emails!
• For tools for recruitment and ideas on where
to recruit, search online: YTCEmpowered.org
– Click on your state
Social Media
Media Advocacy
Influencing policy perspectives thru the press
• Letters-to-the-Editor: 200-300 words (see
newspaper rules)
• Op-Eds: usually 600-700 words, + more
detailed, more data, more personal, more
often published if by subject matter expert.
• Use AHA talking points and fact sheets, along
with your personal story.
You’re the Cure
Leadership Opportunities
• Lead or co-lead recruitment or training sessions
• Drive a component of outreach for your area
– Social Media, Recruitment, Training, etc
• Reach out to area YTC advocates by phone and
email to check in, offer support, and urge them to
take action
• Assist AHA staff as requested in communicating
with and supervising other advocates
• Coordinate advocacy activities such as legislative
visits, house parties, letter to the editor campaigns,
etc
• And more!
Contact Keltcie at [email protected]
Participate!
• Find your OWN niche
• Keep us informed:
–search on AHA Advocacy Contacts
• Learn more:
–search on YTCEmpowered.org
Your Next Move
Take one offline action and report back
[email protected]
804.965.6571
Live your life from your heart. Share from your
heart. And your story will
touch and heal
people's souls.
-Melody Beattie