Grassroots Strategies for Connecting with your Community Instructor: Penny Hummel [email protected] An Infopeople Workshop Spring, 2009 This Workshop Is Brought to You By the Infopeople Project Infopeople is a.

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Transcript Grassroots Strategies for Connecting with your Community Instructor: Penny Hummel [email protected] An Infopeople Workshop Spring, 2009 This Workshop Is Brought to You By the Infopeople Project Infopeople is a.

Grassroots Strategies
for Connecting with
your Community
Instructor:
Penny Hummel
[email protected]
An Infopeople Workshop
Spring, 2009
This Workshop Is Brought to You
By the Infopeople Project
Infopeople is a federally-funded grant project
supported by the California State Library. It
provides a wide variety of training to California
libraries. Infopeople workshops are offered
around the state and are open registration on a
first-come, first-served basis.
For a complete list of workshops, and for other
information about the project, go to the Infopeople
website at infopeople.org.
Today’s Agenda
• What is grassroots promotion?
• Identifying and working with audiences
• Developing your message
• Strategies for promotional success
• Implementing your promotional plan
Who Am I?
• Since 2001, Marketing & Communications
Manager at Multnomah County Library
(Portland OR)
• Librarian (since August 2007)
• Past lives:
• Public relations consultant
• Foundation and humanities council staffer
• FOL president, library foundation trustee
Introductions
• Name
• Library
• Position
• One thing that’s happening at your
library that you feel really good about
Unleash your ferocity
upon an unsuspecting
world!
-Bette Midler
What is Grassroots Promotion?
• Economical
• using the resources you have
• Entrepreneurial
• creative and ingenious
• Engaging
• connecting with people and organizations
• Evangelical
• involving everyone you can think of!
Why is grassroots promotion
essential--especially now?
• Our budgets and staff are not growing
• There’s more competition for our
customers’ time and attention
• Our world is increasingly segmented
• In hard times, people need to know more
than ever what the library offers them
Components of Effective
Grassroots Promotion
• Connecting with audience needs
• Building relationships with
individuals, organizations and the
media
• Small steps (taken by many people)
that make a big difference
PR and Marketing -What’s the Difference?
• Marketing: connecting customers to
products or services
• PR: fostering a positive image
The Four P’s of Marketing
• Product (what you’re offering)
• Price (the cost to your customers)
• Place (the channels that make it
available)
• Promotion (how you communicate
about it)
Question for the Group
• What comes first: the
audience/customers you want to
reach, or the program you want to
promote?
Programs/Services/Events
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Story times
•
Community forums •
Reader’s Advisory •
Book discussions •
Citizenship classes •
Online resources •
•
Volunteering
Chat reference
Bilingual services
Celebrations
Test proctoring
Author visits
Quiet rooms
Free computers
Audiences/Customers/Patrons
• Babies
• Small business
owners
• Immigrants
• Knitters
• Men
• Zinesters
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Non-users
Baby boomers
The homebound
Opera fans
Parents
Job seekers
Elected officials
“…only connect.”
--E.M. Forster,
Howard’s End
Exercise 1: What’s Your
Project?
• Complete sheet, share with small
group
• Report the name of your project to
the full group
Your Audience
• Who are you trying to reach?
• Finding out about their needs and
priorities
• Creating a tailor-made strategy
Segmenting Your Audience
• Age
• Neighborhood
• Gender
• Language
• Race/Ethnicity
• Interests
• Socioeconomic
status
• Other
characteristics
Secondary Audiences
• Library users (in
general)
• Voters
• News media
• Elected officials
• Volunteers
• Friends
• Donors
• Trustees
• Staff
Researching Audience Needs
• Demographic
information
• Staff reports
• Comments (cards,
e-mail, letters)
• Focus groups
• Surveys
• One-on-one
interviews
Question for the group
• How does your library gather data from
your customers to accurately identify
their needs?
Staff: The Internal Audience
• Your eyes and ears in the
community
• Your mouth in the community
• Ensuring that their contributions are
for good (not evil)
Engaging Library Staff
• Include them in planning
• Keep them informed
• Provide training and tools
• Keep asking for their input
• Encourage your evangelizers
Exercise 2: Audiences
•
Identify audiences for your project
•
Detail how you’ll learn more about
their interests and needs
•
Think about engaging staff (your
internal audience)
•
Share with your small group
Community Partners
•
Multiply your ability to reach out throughout
your community
•
Contribute expertise and tools that help you
connect with specific audiences
•
Leverage support from other partners
•
Give credibility to library projects
How Your Partners Can Help
• Distribution of library info
• Web site links and articles
• E-mail lists
• Donated programming, supplies,
other resources
• Cross-marketing
Engaging Community
Partners
• Include them in planning
• Utilize their expertise
• Keep them informed
• Provide tools that work for their needs
• Keep asking for their input
• Encourage your evangelizers
What About Sponsors?
• Offer a major cash, media or (major) in-kind
contribution
• Participate to meet their own marketing
goals
• Need to be acknowledged appropriate to
their level of support
Identifying Partners &
Sponsors
• Brainstorm to identify connections
• Involve other staff, library supporters, existing
partners
• Clarify why their participation is a win/win
• Create a timeline and work plan
Exercise 3: Partnerships
• Brainstorm at least 10 community
partners for your project.
• Pick at least three as action items
• Discuss with small group
The Rules of Engagement
• Communicate frequently and emphasize
success
• Make course corrections if needed
• Do what you say you’ll do
• Move towards “the tipping point”
• Acknowledge contributions!
OK, what’s your message?
• A call to action
• Short, clear and to the point
• Focuses on what your audience
needs, not on what the library offers.
Examples of Library
Messages
• Turn to your library for help finding a
new job.
• Learn new computer skills by attending
free classes at your library.
• Have fun playing the Summer Reading
game!
Good message or bad?
• With 63 databases available to its
customers (some of these can be
accessed from a computer at home or
at work; for others, the library user
would need to visit a library location),
the Smith Library is ready to serve the
information needs of the Bedford
community…
Exercise 4: Messages
1. Write up to three key messages for your
external audiences. (Keep it simple!)
2. Discuss messages and audiences (from
Exercise 2) with your small group
3. Share one message with full group
Traditional Promotional Tools
•
•
•
•
•
Newsletter
Checkout receipts
Giveaways
Logos
Events
•
•
•
•
•
Signs
Billboards
Banners
Advertising
Print stuff
Electronic Promotional Tools
• Website
• E-mail lists
• E-newsletter
•
•
•
•
Library blogs
Podcasts
RSS feeds
Twitter
(microblogging)
What Makes a Tool
Successful?
•
Focused on the audience’s interests and
needs (not what we want to say)
•
Presented in a format they pay attention to
•
Clear, easy to figure out
•
Aesthetically pleasing
•
As un-wordy as possible
Looking at an Example
•
•
•
What works about this promotional
piece?
What doesn’t work?
How would you improve it?
Exercise 4: Promotional Tools
• Identify tools that you will use and
how you plan to use them -- be as
specific as possible
• Choose one new tool to try for your
project
• Discuss in your small group
Working With the Media
• It’s a reciprocal relationship
• Libraries have an important story to
tell
• We need to understand their needs
in order to get ours met
The rules of the media game
have changed…
• How people are receiving information
• Who’s creating it
• The rise of social media, the decline of
newspapers
• The implications for libraries
Examples of social media
•
•
•
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•
Blogs
Twitter
Facebook
MySpace
YouTube
•
•
•
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LinkedIn
Yelp
craigslist
Second Life
Communications media…
• Space designed by media owner
• Brand in control
• One way/delivering a message and
repeating it
• Focused on the brand
• Entertaining
• Company-created content
--”What’s Next in Media,” Neil Perkin
…and social media
• Space designed and controlled by
consumer
• Two way/being part of a conversation
• Adapting the message/beta
• Focusing on the customer/adding value
• Influencing, involving
• User created content/co-creation
--”What’s Next in Media,” Neil Perkin
Working with social media
• Include bloggers on your news release
distribution lists, or contact them directly
• Post on community blogs
• Monitor what they’re saying about your
library by signing up for Google News
Blog Postings: Best Practices
•
•
•
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Keep it brief: 1 - 3 lines
Link back to your library’s website
Where possible, use an image
Tag your posts with your library’s name
and other tags that relate to what you’re
promoting
Questions for the group:
What have been your experiences
working with social media?
What’s your comfort level with these new
forms of communication?
Working with traditional media
• Deadlines, deadlines, deadlines
• A glut of information about too many
things
• Constant shifts to new and unfamiliar
topics
Media Magnets: Examples
• Positive
• making a dent in big social problems
• bringing the community together
• an individual’s triumph over adversity
• Negative
• conflict
• good guy vs. bad guy
• disaster and destruction
How to Engage a Reporter
• Think about the particular interests of the
audience he/she is trying to reach
• Become familiar with his or her work--read
articles and blogs
• State your conclusion, then demonstrate it
• Avoid library jargon
Things to focus on:
• The 5 W’s (Who, What, When, Where and
Why)
• Up to three key messages you want to
convey
• Stories
Tools for Media Outreach
• Pitch e-mails
• Phone or personal contact
• News releases and media kits
Question for the Group
What’s been your most challenging
experience working with the traditional
news media?
What did you learn?
Exercise 6: Pitching Your
Story
• Draft an e-mail to a reporter promoting
your project, emphasizing:
• key messages
• aspects of the project that would be of
particular interest
• critical details (omit the extraneous)
Implementing Your Plan
• Keep listening to your audience, partners and
staff
• Use your tools effectively
• Reach out to social and traditional media
• Stay on message
• Evaluate
Evaluating Your Success
• Document
• usage or attendance
• exposure
• did you meet your initial goals?
• Analyze
• what worked
• what didn’t
Find out who you are and
do it on purpose.
- Dolly Parton