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Designing and Implementing

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Title: Designing and Implementing


1
Designing and Implementing an Effective Tobacco
Counter-Marketing Campaign American Public
Health Association Annual Meeting San Francisco,
California November 17, 2003
Linda A. Block, MPH Office on Smoking and Health
2
The Counter-Marketing Manual
3
Purposes of Manual
  • To provide a comprehensive guide to developing,
    implementing and evaluating a tobacco
    counter-marketing campaign
  • To share the knowledge of those who have run
    successful campaigns (primarily about process,
    but some about content as well)

4
Primary Audiences for Manual
  • Tobacco control staff in State Health Departments
  • Program managers
  • Media coordinators and campaign managers
  • Program evaluators
  • Advertising and Public Relations agencies, and
    other Communications contractors
  • Other national and local partners and groups

5
Process for Developing Manual
  • CDC/OSH staff developed annotated outline
  • Received input from national, state local
    experts
  • Chapters drafted by topic area experts w/ input
    from CDC/OSH
  • Reviewed by a range of people in tobacco control
  • CDC staff (OSH and Office of Communication)
  • State and local tobacco control program staff
  • Advocacy and national partner organizations
  • Others
  • Final publication in October 2003

6
Content of Manual
  • Divided into two parts
  • Part I Planning a counter-marketing program
    (Chapters 1 6)
  • Part II Components of tobacco counter-marketing
    (Chapters 7 11)

7
Content of Manual (cont.)
  • Part I Planning a counter-marketing program
  • Ch 1 - Overview of Counter-Marketing Programs
  • Ch 2 - Planning Your CM Program
  • Ch 3 - Gaining Using Target Audience Insights
  • Ch 4 - Reaching Specific Populations
  • Ch 5 - Evaluating the Success of Your CM Pgm
  • Ch 6 - Managing Implementing Your CM Pgm

8
Content of Manual (cont.)
  • Part II Components of tobacco counter-marketing
  • Ch 7 - Advertising
  • Ch 8 - Public Relations
  • Ch 9 - Media Advocacy
  • Ch 10 - Grassroots Marketing
  • Ch 11 - Media Literacy

9
CHAPTER 1 Overview of Counter-Marketing
Programs
  • Overview of tobacco counter-marketing
  • What we are countering
  • Qualities of a good tobacco CM program
  • Power of counter-marketing

10
Definition of Tobacco Counter-Marketing
  • The use of commercial marketing tactics
    (including both paid and earned media) to reduce
    the prevalence of tobacco use
  • Counter-marketing attempts to counter
    pro-tobacco influences and increase pro-health
    messages and influences throughout a State,
    region, or community (US DHHS 1999)

11
Qualities of a Good CM Program
  • Long-term
  • Comprehensive
  • Integrated
  • Culturally competent
  • Strategic
  • Evaluated
  • Adequately funded

12
CHAPTER 2 Planning Your Counter-Marketing
Program
  • Get the most for your
  • Planning helps focus the program so that ...
  • the program isnt trying to do too much
  • limited funds are not fragmented
  • activities match goals and objectives
  • CM efforts complement broader tobacco control
    efforts

13
Value of Strategic Planning
  • Purpose is to consider options and make important
    decisions, setting priorities regarding the
    direction of the program
  • Important for gaining agreement among all those
    involved in the program
  • Thorough planning can help get people aligned
  • Documenting the plan in writing helps keep people
    focused
  • A strategic plan should be a living document,
    evolving with changes in environment / situation

14
Planning With Scarcity Mentality
  • No one has unlimited funds not even the tobacco
    industry!
  • Cant be everything to everyone!
  • Must prioritize goals, audiences, messages,
    vehicles
  • Focus on few things each year, set expectations
    appropriately, and plan evaluation accordingly

15
Same ConsiderationsRegardless of Size of Budget
  • Outcome(s) desired
  • Target audience(s)
  • Strategy
  • Interventions available paid earned
  • People resources
  • Budget
  • Timing
  • Evaluation


16
Key to Maximizing Moneyand Effort is
  • Strategy
  • Strategy
  • Strategy

17
Strategic Planning Steps
  1. Describe the problem
  2. Identify and learn about target audiences
  3. Draft CM objectives
  4. Determine CM approaches, channels, strategies
  5. Consider collaboration
  6. Plan for process and outcome evaluation
  7. Begin program development

18
CHAPTER 3 Gaining and Using Target Audience
Insights
  • Using market research to learn more about your
    audience
  • Three types of research methods
  • Qualitative
  • Quantitative
  • Quasi-quantitative

19
Qualitative Research
  • Used for
  • gaining in-depth knowledge about peoples
    perceptions, motivations, and behaviors
  • Answers questions such as
  • Why? When? How?
  • Methodologies
  • focus groups
  • 1-on-1 interviews
  • Results
  • cant be quantified or projected to whole
    audience

20
Quantitative Research
  • Used for
  • gaining estimates of knowledge, beliefs,
    attitudes, and behaviors of an audience
  • Answers questions such as
  • How many? How much? How often?
  • Methodologies
  • random sampling
  • convenience sampling surveys
  • Results
  • can be quantified and analyzed using statistical
    techniques
  • can be representative of the audience

21
Quasi-Quantitative Research
  • Used for
  • pretesting messages and materials
  • measuring attitudes, beliefs, behavior
  • Methodologies
  • central location intercepts
  • theater-style pretests
  • typically involves questionnaires with mostly
    forced-choice questions
  • Results
  • cant be projected to the whole audience because
    participants arent representative sample

22
Tips for Conducting Research
  • Pros, cons and costs of different research
    methods
  • Working with commercial marketing facilities
  • Working with community partners to conduct focus
    groups
  • The role of the moderator

23
CHAPTER 4 Reaching Specific Populations
  • Follow same basic process used to design any CM
    campaign, with additional approaches and
    considerations
  • Devote adequate resources to reaching the
    specific populations in your area
  • If current budget and/or information available
    wont permit reaching all audiences, decide which
    to address now and which later
  • Coordinate messages with mainstream campaign

24
Organizational Cultural Competence
  • Requires organizational commitment to developing
    cultural competence and building capacity
  • Reflected in organizations policies, procedures,
    physical environments, programs, activities,
    materials, resources
  • Supported by staff self-assessment, professional
    development, training

25
Defining Specific Populations
  • Groups of individuals who share unique
    characteristics and may be particularly affected
    by tobacco
  • Specific populations have traditionally been
    defined by cultural and/or demographic
    characteristics
  • racial / ethnic groups
  • groups with low
    socioeconomic status
  • Not all specific populations are cultural groups
  • persons with disabilities
  • college students
  • restaurant / bar workers
  • blue-collar workers
  • convenience store
  • workers / owners
  • rural residents
  • people with certain
    religious affiliations
  • LGBT populations
  • opinion leaders
  • legislators
  • policy makers
  • soccer moms

26
Involving Specific Populationsin the Development
Process
  • Increases community ownership of, comfort with,
    level of support for, and face validity of your
    efforts
  • Include in all phases of the program
  • Select people or groups that represent the
    specific populations diversity and perspectives,
    and that are credible with the audience
  • Include representatives who have access to the
    audience
  • media outlets (e.g., radio, TV, and magazines)
  • organizations (e.g., racial/ethnic, professional,
    religious, schools)

27
Complicating Factors inDescribing Specific
Populations
  • Diversity within populations
  • e.g., Asians or Hispanics / Latinos from
    different countries may have unique
    characteristics
  • Overlap among groups who share some
    characteristics
  • e.g., people with disabilities, GLBT community,
    restaurant workers exposed to SHS at work may
    also identify with racial / ethnic groups
  • Level of acculturation among immigrant groups
  • e.g., characteristics, attitudes, behaviors, and
    responses of recent immigrants may be very
    different from those of immigrants who have lived
    in the state / country / area for several years
  • Place of residence
  • e.g., people from same group living in urban and
    rural areas may be very different

28
Developing Appropriate Materials
  • Use language and images that are sensitive and
    appropriate
  • Use native speakers to create foreign-language
    materials when possible
  • Ask for and check references to ensure that your
    translators past work met client needs
  • Pretest all materials to ensure that
  • messages and images are clear
  • content is appropriate
  • language and images are not offensive to the
    target group or its community
  • Conduct reverse translations to ensure that
    messages and key concepts are communicated
    accurately

29
CHAPTER 5 Evaluating the Success of Your
Counter-Marketing Program
  • Evaluation and surveillance
  • Types of evaluation
  • What evaluation can do
  • When to conduct an evaluation
  • The scope of the evaluation
  • How to conduct an evaluation

30
Types Of Research Evaluation
  • Formative research
  • up front research (usually qualitative)
  • conducted to gain insights and understanding
    about target audiences
  • Formative Evaluation
  • pretesting of concepts, messages, materials
  • pilot testing of interventions, program
    activities
  • conducted to determine whether materials/activitie
    s in development have intended effect on target
    audiences

31
Types Of Research Evaluation (cont.)
  • Process evaluation
  • conducted during program implementation to
    determine whether campaign is being implemented
    as intended
  • records unforeseen obstacles and potentially
    confounding environmental events to help
    interpret findings
  • campaign implementation and quality measures

32
Types Of Research Evaluation (cont.)
  • Outcome evaluation
  • conducted to determine impact of the program
  • short-term, intermediate, long-term measures
  • identifies unexpected outcomes as well
  • Surveillance
  • ongoing data collection
  • continuous monitoring of measures

33
Steps for Conducting an Evaluation
  1. Identify Stakeholders and Establish an Evaluation
    Team
  2. Describe Your Counter-Marketing Program
  3. Focus the Evaluation Design
  4. Gather Credible Evidence
  5. Justify Conclusions
  6. Ensure Use of Results and Share Lessons Learned

34
CHAPTER 6 Managing and Implementing Your
Counter-Marketing Program
  • Setting up your counter-marketing team
  • Selecting contractors / RFP tips
  • Developing an annual marketing plan
  • Reviewing marketing materials
  • Monitoring the counter-marketing budget

35
CHAPTER 7 Advertising
  • Logistics Hiring and managing advertising
    contractors
  • Strategy Developing effective messages
  • Creative Breaking through the clutter
  • Exposure Reach, frequency, and channels
  • Evaluating your advertising efforts

36
CHAPTER 8 Public Relations
  • Setting goals and selecting tactics
  • Reaching target audiences
  • Finding media outlets that reach audiences
  • Gaining exposure
  • Capitalizing on events to increase message
    exposure
  • Reaching stakeholders
  • Identifying stakeholders
  • Finding media outlets that reach stakeholders
  • Identifying and capitalizing on media
    opportunities to reach stakeholders
  • Involving stakeholders in your campaign

37
Tips for Managing a PR Program
  • Managing a PR firm
  • Coordinating PR firm with an ad agency
  • Developing a PR plan
  • Evaluating PR efforts

38
Working with the News Media
  • Knowing what the media want determining
    newsworthiness
  • Pitching stories to reporters
  • Developing press materials
  • Training spokespeople
  • Responding to negative news stories

39
CHAPTER 9 Media Advocacy
  • Coordinating media advocacy efforts
  • The elements of media advocacy
  • Framing, developing messages, targeting your
    audience
  • Evaluating your media advocacy strategy

40
CHAPTER 10 Grassroots Marketing
  • Getting people involved
  • Helping those involved to become more engaged
  • Using community partners to reach your audience
  • Evaluating your grassroots marketing efforts

41
CHAPTER 11 Media Literacy
  • Media Literacy and Youth
  • Essential Ingredients of Media Literacy
  • How Media Literacy Complements CM
  • Implementing a Media Literacy Program
  • Evaluating your efforts
  • Media literacy resources

42
Appendices
  • Resources (government agencies, volunteer
    organizations, state programs, etc.)
  • Glossary
  • Examples and tools from state programs
  • Additional reading

43
Order Additional Copies of the Manual
  • Mail in reply card from brochure (or give to OSH
    staff member)
  • Call the MCRC at 770-488-5705, press 2
  • Download pdf online (not available yet)

44
Order OSH Publications / Materials
Download publications from web site www.cdc.gov/t
obacco Call to order publications 770-488-5705
(press 3) Office on Smoking and Health Voice Fax
System 1-800-CDC-1311
45
Linda BlockLBlock_at_cdc.gov770-488-5476
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