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Inspired by Jono Hey’s excellent Sketchplanations, I thought I’d try explaining some Changeology concepts visually. It’s a bit of an experiment.


Looking back through old blog posts, I noticed a few that just seem so permanently relevant, I thought I’d share them:
A golden age of cruel and pea-brained social engineering
Why the Australian Government’s cruelty-based social programs will always fail (and bite back too).
Branded water bottles, pens, stickers, backpacks, mouse pads, key rings. A waste of money. So 20thcentury. Also, I hate them.
How to design a pitch even the grumpiest manager will say ‘yes’ to.
Register here for training

Here’s reminder to tell your colleagues about:
Two enjoyable mornings, 17-18 October.
FOR those designing engagement or change projects, small or large.
All details:www.enablingchange.com.au

Two interactive mornings, 24-25 October.
FOR those facilitating interactive workshops or forums, in any context.
All details:www.enablingchange.com.au
How easily we forget the power of delight. It makes people happy and optimistic. It creates salience, so people notice things. It attracts, so people want more. It sparks conversation, so news spreads. And conversation, of course, is the carrier wave of social change. Most social media is powered by the desire to share delight.
Yet, there can hardly be anything as glum and negative as most health, environment, or social justice campaigns. Just take a look at http://osocio.org for a current global selection. Health promotion has been described as “the business of making people live miserably so that they can die healthy”[i] and pretty much the same could be said for most other kinds of social change campaigns.
In a project for the City of Sydney this year we suggested that the city adopt ‘delight’ as a guiding principle for cycle communications. Here’s an example. Imagine if cycle path signs were designed by the ex-Sydney, now totally happening New York cartoonist Jeremy.
I was surprised at how popular the idea was, even with the serious infrastructure bods. Apparently, delight is a fresh idea. Maybe its time has come.
Browsing Osocio, the compendium of social marketing campaigns from around the world, illustrates how rarely delight is used. The preferred techniques are either ponderous attempts to inform or confronting attempts to upset. But here’s a couple of delightful ads I found:
http://osocio.org/message/conflict_fun/
http://osocio.org/message/cycling_for_a_better_libido/
And there’s three more at http://enablingchange.posterous.com/2009/08/grass-is-dumb-and-other-brilliant.html
My new year’s resolution: loosen up and look for ways to use happiness to change the world.
[i] Prof Michale Daube (1999) Pleasure in Health Promotion, in Peele, S. and Grant, M. (eds) Alcohol and Pleasure: A health perspective, International Centre for Alcohol Policies, p38
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A 2004 systematic review into the effectiveness of anti-drink-driving programs concluded that mass media campaigns that are carefully planned and well executed, that reach a sufficiently large audience, and that are implemented together with other prevention activities – such as highly-visible enforcement – are effective in reducing alcohol-impaired driving and alcohol-related crashes.[xii]
Summarising the evidence, Woolley (2001) [xiii] concluded that mass media advertising, when used alone, is unlikely to bring about significant road user behaviour change. However, advertising was found to play an important role in supporting other road safety activities, in particular enforcement.
Barry Elliott, a Australian researcher who carried out a systematic review of road safety campaigns, summed it up pithily: “you can’t sell road safety like soap.” [xiv]
What reduces obesity?
A recent US National Research Council report, Local Government Actions to Prevent Obesity provided a nice summary of the kinds of interventions that have the greatest potential to tackle childhood obesity. According to the press release: “Many of these steps focus on increasing access to healthy foods and opportunities for active play and exercise. They include providing incentives to lure grocery stores to underserved neighborhoods; eliminating outdoor ads for high-calorie, low-nutrient foods and drinks near schools; requiring calorie and other nutritional information on restaurant menus; implementing local “Safe Routes to School” programs; regulating minimum play space and time in child care programs; rerouting buses or developing other transportation strategies that ensure people can get to grocery stores; and using building codes to ensure facilities have working water fountains.”
In other words, if we wanted to run a comprehensive anti-obesity program then the skill mix would include an incentives manager, a regulator, a building code planner, a nutritionist, a transport planner, an educator (and a courageous politician or two to drive these changes) but not a marketer.
So what, exactly, is wrong with social marketing?
Social Marketing is a system of practice that does many things well. The problem is it what does not do well.
1) Just following orders
SM almost invariably assumes the prescribed behaviour or action is right, just, appropriate, and do-able. SM rarely goes behind the funding agency’s brief, so we have:
“Just think.” (the AFL’s anti-alcohol-violence campaign);
“Quit now before it’s too late” (Australian Gov
ernment’s tobacco campaign)
“Slow down stupid.” (Queensland’s anti-speeding campaign).
SM takes it as given that the particular behaviour should be adopted and can be adopted. It does not ask whether the prescribed behaviour make sense, whether it is capable of being adopted or whether it needs to be reinvented, matured, debugged, or replaced with an entirely different behaviour.
For instance, California’s anti-drug campaign has now abandoned the typical “Just don’t do it” or “Talk to your kids” approaches and opted for a far more subtle “Dinner makes the difference” approach, where the behaviour is simply to have dinner with your kids. This requires a fundamental re-think of the problem and the solution. We simply do not see this in typical SM programs where the funding agency’s assumptions are rarely challenged.
(The reason, of course, is the structural separation, in separate silos, of the policy-bods and boffins who devise strategies, the health workers who implement them, and the educators and marketers who communicate them.)
2) Context blindness
SM and CBSM are tokenistic in their treatment of context. Context, as we discussed, is central to the adoptability of behaviours and products. It’s more than the usual cursory consideration of the 4 Ps: “product, price, place, promotion”. Instead the entire contextual system needs to be the subject of strategizing and modification, including physical infrastructure, service design, place design, management and regulatory systems. Getting these right is usually what makes or breaks a change program, as we’ve seen in tobacco control, road safety, pollution control and littering.
This work can only be done by multi-disciplinary teams using a system-based approach. Again, it’s easy to see how silos enforce dysfunction here, and busting or bypassing silos is the prerequisite for effective systemic interventions.
(By the way, this is not nearly as hard as it sounds. For a rapid method for identifying doable interventions in a whole system, see How to make a theory of change.
3) Crop spraying
SM, as almost universally understood and practiced by governments, is all about big budget mass media advertising. This approach treats people as isolated individuals and sprays them from afar with messages the same way a crop duster sprays a crop of canola. But who still thinks that human societies change this way?
Fifty years of Diffusion of Innovations scholarship and more recent social network studies (notably the remarkable work Nicolas Christakis and James Fowler on the diffusion of obesity, happiness and smoking cessation through social networks) demonstrate that decisions to adopt new behaviours travel primarily along social networks of people who know and respect each other, on a wave of conversations, and mass media has very little to do with it.[xv]
The programs that are likely to influence voluntary behaviour change are therefore those based on fine-grained, conversational, local approaches (like facilitated workshops, forums, field days and the like). Unfortunately, the advertising agencies that win big budget SM campaigns have no incentive to share this insight with their funders.
4) Theory fetish
It’s a fine thing to have our thinking expanded by psychological and change theories, but it’s another thing to arbitrary impose a particular psychological theory on a real life behaviours of real people leading complicated lives in the real world. It’s quite common to see social marketing and health promotion programs introduced with a statement that “this program is based on the Transtheoretical Model” or the Health Belief Model or Social Learning Theory, or whatever. Excuse me, but this is crazy. The theory of change that informs a program should come from one place only – the reality of people’s lives, and it will be very different for each set and each setting and each moment in time. Generic theories and models can help us “see” better as change agents, but only by getting to know people face-to-face and listening intently to their stories can we begin to construct solutions to their needs.
Craig Lefebvre, a perceptive internal critic of Social Marketing, is clear on this when he writes that “One principle that distinguishes the best social marketers, I believe, is an unrelenting understanding, empathy and advocacy of the perspective of our priority population or community that is not slanted by what the theory or research evidence does or does not tell us.” [xvi]
5) Power blindness
SM and CBSM campaigns tend to be one-sided exercises in power by government-employed professionals who decide what behaviours are wrong, what behaviours are right, who needs to change, and what they need to know. Only problem is: people HATE being given advice by strangers about how they should behave. SM and CBSM don’t even begin to have answers for the waves of denial and resistance that are evoked by well meaning attempts to tell people how they should live their lives. See, for instance, the literature on psychological reactance [xvii] and the Boomerang Effect. [xviii]
Many SM programs have figured out a way to remain oblivious to denial and resistance: they evaluate their efforts at the level of awareness. Awareness, however, cuts both ways. Awareness may help drive change, but it is just as implicated in driving people to do the opposite to what they are told. There’s plenty of evidence, for instance, that marketing efforts may reinforce good behaviour amongst those who are already doing the right thing, but drive greater denial and/or resistance amongst the actual target audience.[xix] Even a seemingly benign effort like asking householders to calculate their ecological footprints has been shown to produce this effect. [xx]
6) Message Fetish
Lastly, SM and CBSM have “message fetish” embedded deep in their genomes. Marketing has always been an art of mass communication. It is concerned, above all else, with language and image. It will always be, for better or worse, about the magic of the message. It’s hopelessly infected with the assumption that the right form of words is the key to the human psyche. If it was that easy we’d all long ago have been living in paradise (or, more likely, hell). It just ain’t that way.
And my point is…
I don’t discount the utility of SM, CBSM and COMBI as communication practices, but as social change practices they fall short. The halo of omnipotence that currently surrounds them is unwarranted. They are a valuable support practices, not the messiah.
There is nothing wrong with marketers being involved in designing change programs. They bring a valuable set of skills and perspectives. In fact a change program that doesn’t involve marketers is probably only slightly less problematic than one that is run entirely by marketers.
However, the ability to change the world will never the shining glory of any one discipline. Successful change efforts happen when engineers, planners, politicians, regulators, facilitators and marketers step out of their cosy professional fugs, mix it up with each other, let their assumptions be challenged, be prepared to defend those assumptions with evidence, and invite the public to genuinely collaborate in this process. That’s when the shining glory begins.
If not SM, then what? I don’t think the alternative is rocket science, just a little uncomfortable:
1) Get the “who” right first
Bypass silos, work in multi-disciplinary teams, and invite the users to share the big decisions with you.
2) Get inspired by what works elsewhere. Don’t start till you’ve got lost in Google and Google Scholar a few times and been genuinely excited by the methods others have used, no matter how unfamiliar.
3) Listen to users and non-users and don’t stop listening till you’ve been startled or confronted by what you hear.
4) Notice your own power and actively share it around, especially with those whose behaviour you hope to change.
5) Think in terms of systems. Map the system and don’t limit your palette of interventions.
6) Get all those who can make a difference around the table before you start planning. Let them share the thinking, the planning and the credit.
7) Intervene in the context. Act to modify the environments in which people make their decisions, and then use communications to draw peoples’ attention to those changes and model appropriate behaviours.
8) Be ready to abandon your own assumptions, even the ones you don’t know you have.
What would an effective process for designing a social change program look like? I’m done my best to evolve one over the last few years. It’s available on my website, see The Enabling Change process.
v2.2 Les Robinson, December 2010
For more detailed critique of Social Marketing, see:
Tilbury, D., Coleman, V., Jones, A., MacMaster, K. (2005) A National Review of Environmental Education and its Contribution to Sustainability in Australia: Community Education. Canberra: Australian Government Department for the Environment and Heritage and Australian Research Institute in Education for Sustainability (ARIES), pp17
http://www.aries.mq.edu.au/pdf/Volume3_Revised05.pdf
[vii] p180. Oddly only six of the 54 programs relied entirely on typical marketing methods, the rest included methods that no one would define as “marketing”, including counselling, smoking cessation groups, community organization, peer education, classroom lessons, training, citizen taskforces, buddy support, summer camps, exercise classes, and construction of walking paths. Only two, however, used any structural or regulatory methods, which is the point.
[x] David T. Levy, Frank Chaloupka, and Joseph Gitchell (2004) The Effects of Tobacco Control Policies on Smoking Rates: A Tobacco Control Scorecard, Journal of Public Health Management Practice, 2004, 10(4), 338–353
[xii] Elder R.W. et al (2004) Effectiveness of mass media campaigns for reducing drinking and driving and alcohol-involved crashes: a systematic review. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 27(1) p57-65
[xiv] Elliott, B. (1993) Road Safety Mass Media Campaigns: A Meta Analysis, Department Of Transport And Communications, Federal Office Of Road Safety
[xv] Social marketer Craig Lefebvre has written a nice series of blogs on putting the “social” into social marketing.
[xvi] http://socialmarketing.blogs.com/r_craiig_lefebvres_social/2009/11/getting-social-marketing-wrong-in-health-behavior-and-health-education.html
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