Seeds for Change - workshops and training for
grassroots campaigners

five people balancing on a unicycle holding a banner reading: be creative and welcoming



Good Publicity and Outreach

PDF Booklet symbolDownload the PDF of this briefing to print out - 590k

This PDF is in booklet format - print both sides of the paper and fold over to make a booklet.

Publicity and outreach are essential tools for communicating campaign messages and getting people involved in taking action.

Good publicity helps you:

  • to spread information
  • to get more people involved
  • to increase pressure
  • to be more effective

This briefing gives you some tips on how to best get your message across to the public. There are lots of options, but whatever you do, don't just rush into the first thing that springs to mind. Think about what's most effective for your campaign.

What are your key messages

Checklist

  1. What do you want to get across?
  2. Who do you need to talk to?
  3. What do you want people to do?
  4. What's the best way of telling them?
  5. Do we have the time, skills and resources to do this?

As campaigners we tend to overwhelm people with information - issues are complex and there is so much we care about. But: people are bombarded with lots of messages every day. To get our messages across we need to focus on a few simple and clear things that will stick in people's minds.

You need to be clear about the aims of your campaign. What are the three most important things to get across to people? These are your key messages. Write them down in two or three short, clear sentences and focus on them in the publicity. You may need to reword them depending on who you are talking to.

back to top hat stand with various hats to show the different roles people have in life

Who's your target audience?

People adopt different roles at different times throughout their week: employee at an oil company, parent, shopper, car driver, walker, tax payer. The same person will be receptive to different messages at different times.

Think about who you need to talk to at what time to achieve your aims. Put yourself in people's shoes. What is it they care about? What interests them? Look for a way into a conversation.

Targeting people with messages and information relevant to them is very effective. Publicity is about getting people on board and on your side. Rants may be satisfying but are unlikely to achieve your aim. Win people over. Be creative and welcoming. If you are confronting people with the consequences of their actions, criticise their behaviour rather than them as individual people. Acknowledge people's ability to change and give them options they can do to help.

Think about how you come across: is wearing that favourite "car drivers are scum" t-shirt really going to encourage car drivers to listen to your argument?

back to top

What do you want people to do?

All your communications should contain a clear call to action and give people concrete things to do, whether that's joining your group, cutting car use, coming to see a film, boycotting a product, writing a letter, or growing their own vegetables.

Always supply your contact details so that people can find out more or get involved in your group. Having sources of further information ready is a good idea too - for example you could include web addresses on leaflets, posters and newsletters.

back to top

What's the best way of reaching people?

OK, so you've worked out your basic message and who you are targeting. Now it's time to decide the best way of getting your message across to them. Remember you want to get people on your side, so make it easy for your audience to listen to you.

Don't expect people to come to you for information - go to them. Use venues, language and styles that your particular audience will be comfortable with.

Think about the best way to catch people's attention. When talking to teenagers think stickers, flypostering, gigs, skate festivals. Business people may prefer to attend a talk by an expert at the town hall. The press like photos of stunts with kids and pensioners in it. Jo Public and local councillors are usually more comfortable at a panel discussion on neutral ground rather than graffiti on a wall

Consider what time and resources you want to spend on publicity. What skills do you have in the group and what do you enjoy doing?

Good publicity doesn't have to cost the Earth

A bed balanced on a mountain of leaflets
  • How many leaflets and posters do you really need? People often end up with stacks and stacks of out-of-date stuff under their beds.
  • Use recycled paper, don't use glossy ink and get them printed with vegetable ink. Check out green printers such as Footprint Co-op in Leeds or Green Print in Oxford.
  • Are there more effective ways of going public than using paper? Can you use the web and email lists?
  • Get existing newsletters and publications to run stories about your campaign and advertise your events.
  • Make banners and costumes from old sheets, materials from charity shops, plastic rubbish, leftover paint.
  • Share materials and equipment with other groups. Make things that last and that can be reused.
back to top

Top ideas for effective publicity

  • Posters - put up in local shops, community centres, GP's surgeries, schools, pubs.
  • Leaflets - for handing out in town, sticking through letter boxes, on stalls, giving to your friends.
  • Street stalls and stalls at events - great for direct contact with people, getting new people involved and fundraising.
  • Publicity stunts eg street theatre to attract attention or creating photos to get into the newspapers.
a granny having fun on a skateboard
  • Banners at stalls and events - colourful well made banners catch attention and really get the message across.
  • Stickers/badges - with your message or contact details.
  • Word of mouth - very effective!
  • Get into the press - newspapers, radio and TV.
  • Local/national newsletter - keep your ever-growing network of supporters updated.
  • Subvertising billboards - altering wording/images to subvert advertising messages.
  • Events - talks, films, workshops are great for giving people the chance to check you out without committing to anything and for getting people to think about stuff.
  • Benefit gigs - raise cash. Don't forget to have a stall and get the bands to talk about the issue.
  • Displays - in the library, schools, community centres.
  • Websites - very important nowadays. A cheap way of giving people lots of information. Email lists - to stay in touch with supporters.
  • Blogs - here you can have your daily rant and people might just read it.
  • Rallies, demos, vigils - visible presence on the streets. Hand out leaflets, talk to passers-by, have lots of banners and get your story into the media.
  • Letters to the editor - especially effective in your local rag as that's the only bit most people read.
  • Endless other possibilities - postcards, t-shirts, window posters, mugs.
No Nuclear Plant t-shirt is patched to read: Plant Trees, then turned into a kite with letters showing: save our planet

back to top

PDF Boolet symbolDownload the PDF of this briefing to print out - 590k

This PDF is in booklet format - print both sides of the paper and fold over to make a booklet.


Seeds for Change: a non-profit activist co-op