Category Archives: Events

Change agents and social marketing presentation at the World Social Marketing Conference in Toronto

logo-WSMNick presented at the World Social Marketing Conference held in Toronto, Canada. His paper showed how to support social and behaviour change through the use of change agents. It will be useful for those designing and implementing social marketing programs and research. How we select change agents – e.g. peer educators, opinion leaders, community health workers and counsellors – helps determine the effectiveness of a program. While there is evidence to support the use of change agents, there are limitations to current methods to select effective ones. This paper  examined new evidence from the field for a method to help find effective change agents. It will draw on several case studies, including alcohol use in Australia and an Indonesian community based sanitation program.

One Billion Rising Movement comes to Indonesia

One billion rising-IndonesiaThe One Billion Rising movement is coming to Indonesia and planning events around Valentine’s Day to support women’s rights. One Billion Rising was founded to address the reality that as many as one in three women (one billion people) will be raped, beaten or face violence during their lifetime. In Indonesia, according to the National Commission on Violence against Women, the number of reported cases of rape, domestic violence and other forms of brutality against women reached 119,107 in 2012, although the actual number of cases is thought to be much higher.

The original Valentine’s Day was co-opted by activists and shortened to V-Day, in reference to the word ‘vagina’, frowned upon by many as taboo. Now as Feb. 14 approaches, the V in Valentine is taking on renewed significance as people around the world join together to voice their concerns about violence against women. Indonesia will join with 189 other countries to take part in One Billion Rising, an event to increase awareness of these problems.

The One Billion Rising movement is inviting women and the people who love them to walk out of their homes, schools, and jobs to dance in support of bringing an end to violence against women. People from all over Jakarta are practicing for a flash mob dance at the Monas (National Monument) Park. This campaign shows that participation in socially sensitive issues can be encouraged by making it a fun and social, reducing the barriers and promoting the benefits of taking action.

DFID commends SHARE’s Great Himalaya Trail Development Project in Nepal

Water tap in Kaski, Nepal. Picture: Simone D. McCourtie / World Bank

DFID announced an award for SNV Nepal‘s Great Himalaya Trail Development Program (GHTDP) as the best tourism project in the country. By facilitating access to less developed areas, GHDTP increases benefits for poor communities who live beyond established trekking hotspots. Nepal’s tourism contributes 4% of GDP.

The project is working with the Nepal Tourism Board and the Trekking Agencies’ Association of Nepal to create a new trek route, spanning the length of the country. By encouraging trekkers to pass through less developed areas, GHTDP aims to stimulate business and income growth in some of Nepal’s poorer communities. Tourists are offered information on clean and safe accommodation along the trail.

Many communities in Nepal still suffer from sub standard sanitary services. Of a population of 29 million, only 43% have access to good sanitation. This lack of access to information and services, especially in some of the more remote regions, is directly linked to diarrhoeal outbreaks. Sanitation and Hygiene Applied Research Equity (SHARE) is currently working in the country to improve systems of research use and uptake to establish safer methods of sanitation.

Clinton Global Initiative members make over 150 new Commitments to Action at 2012 Meeting

At the 2012 Annual Meeting of the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI), heads of state, CEOs, non-profit leaders, and other global luminaries made over 150 new commitments, valued at more than $2 billion and expected to impact nearly 22 million lives.

“I am convinced that cooperation, not conflict, will define this century,” said President Clinton. “I celebrate our members who have committed to working together to meet these challenges head on. Their creative and focused actions will help to bring about a stable, sustainable world in which all people have a chance to thrive.”

One example of a commitment made is “A Budding Interest: Organic Farming Commitment” by The PRASAD Project. The PRASAD Project committed to addressing issues of environmental degradation, economic disempowerment, illiteracy and food insecurity in the Tansa Valley of India by supporting local farmers and their families address these issues through the several programs, including organic farming, literacy, vocational, environmental education, social health, sanitation and solid waste management programs.

Established in 2005 by President Bill Clinton, the CGI convenes global leaders to create and implement innovative solutions to the world’s most pressing challenges. CGI Annual Meetings have brought together more than 150 heads of state, 20 Nobel Prize laureates, and hundreds of leading CEOs, heads of foundations and NGOs, major philanthropists, and members of the media. To date CGI members have made nearly 2,300 commitments, which have already improved the lives of more than 400 million people in more than 180 countries. When fully funded and implemented, these commitments will be valued at $73.1 billion.

US announces new business partner for child survival in India – Pharmasynth Formulations

U.S. Ambassador to the the UN, Susan Rice, has announced that the U.S. has added an important new partner – Indian company Pharmasynth Formulations – to its Friends of Childhood Alliance, or “Sathi Bachpan Ke,” which works to expand the availability and use of life-saving products for children.

In June, the governments of the United States, India and Ethiopia, in collaboration with UNICEF, launched a new global Call to Action for Child Survival: A Promise Renewed. This initiative aims to eliminate preventable child deaths by the year 2035, so that all children born in India and elsewhere live to see their fifth birthdays and beyond.

Solutions for improving child survival in India and so many other countries are often relatively inexpensive and very straightforward: a bednet, an oral rehydration packet, a vaccine. Provision of these products is important, however success will be driven by effective marketing to ensure their use.

Business and aid agencies form Development Alliance Korea

South Korea has launched a new business initiative as it continues to raise its profile in the international development community. The Korean government has tapped the private sector to help by launching the “Development Alliance Korea,” the first cooperative network between the government and various private partners in the field of overseas aid.

During the ceremony, representatives from eight organizations – the Korea NGO Council for Overseas Cooperation, the Federation of Korean Industries, the Korean Council for University Education, the Korea Association of International Development and Cooperation, the Global Compact Network Korea, the UN Academic Impact Korea, the Foreign Ministry and the Korea International Cooperation Agency – signed an agreement to form the Alliance. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, Chairman Ahn Hong-joon of the National Assembly’s Foreign Affairs, Trade, and Unification Committee, and Co-chairs of the UN-MDGs Forum Lee Ju-young and Lee Nak-yun all delivered addresses.

The Alliance is designed as part of an effort to implement the commitments of the “Busan Global Partnership,” which was launched in June. The network carries significance as a close partnership forged between the government and the private sector in the field of international development cooperation. Korea is a seen as a new player in international aid but has been active since 1991, especially in the country’s relationship with North Korea.

Workshops in Vietnam: 12th and 13th July

Nick will be in Vietnam next week to lead two Ogilvy workshops on social marketing, communications and behaviour change – with a particular focus on mobile communications.

The half day workshops are free and recommended for those in government, NGOs, international agencies and the private sector who are working on social and behaviour change communications. One workshop will be held in Ho Chi Minh City on Thursday 12 July and the other will be in Hanoi on  Friday 13 July. The invitations and details are below. We look forward to seeing you there!

How to change perceptions of HIV/AIDS in Vietnam

According to the Communications Initiative, an exhibition in Vietnam has helped changed public perceptions of HIV/AIDS and the people it affects. The Center for Community Health Research and Development and the Vietnam Museum of Ethnology in Hanoi, with Columbia University, organised a museum exhibition on HIV/AIDS through paintings, sculptures, photographs, digital media and interactive performance. The purpose was to generate public discussion and debate and reduce stigma against people with HIV/AIDS.

Displaying personal belongings, pictures, and memories donated by people living with HIV/AIDS, the exhibition depicted the everyday lives of infected people and their families and traced changing perceptions about the epidemic. HIV/AIDS was once considered a social evil in Vietnam with media depicting infected people with negative images. Government and international organizations have helped to change this perception through dissemination of accurate information.

Another initiative in Asia that helped change perceptions and reduce stigma around HIV/AIDS was the Positive Lives photography project, founded by Network Photographers and the Terence Higgins Trust, supported by the Levi Strauss Foundation*. By showing the everyday lives of people living with HIV/AIDS to those who don’t have access, Positive Lives helped to normalise HIV/AIDS in the community. The key to success with exhibitions is to ensure materials are made available to a broad audience, including through online access, by touring to numerous locations and translation into local languages.

*Nicholas Goodwin used to manage the Levi Strauss Foundation support for the Positive Lives project in Asia.

Reclaim “social”: how technology and participation can improve social and behaviour change communications

The rise of a generation of new technologies and services, known as “social media”, provides considerable challenges and opportunities for practitioners and analysts of social marketing. In parallel with this rise, the theory and practice has tended to concentrate on the “marketing” side of “social marketing”, leaving the “social” relatively untouched. Some point to an existential threat from new technologies, which appear to overwhelm traditional communications. This paper seeks to re-examine and reclaim the “social” side of social marketing, offering the prospect of improved effectiveness for our work.

Frustration with traditional approaches to behaviour change and community development, including poor targeting and limited success has driven social change leaders – governments, academics, practitioners and opinion leaders – to turn to new approaches (Duhaime, McTavish et al., 1985). In this context, social marketing has enjoyed a significant expansion in its application in rich countries, including Australia and North America on issues such as alcohol use, smoking, littering, heart disease, recycling and elections. Marketing is a “social and managerial process by which individuals and groups obtain what they need and want through creating and exchanging products and value with others” (Kotler, Roberto et al. 2002). Since 1952, when G. D. Wiebe asked the question, “Why can’t you sell brotherhood…like you sell soap?”, social marketers have attempted to answer it by developing and testing marketing models and applying them to social issues.

Success with social marketing in rich countries gave rise to questions about its applicability in other countries in the hope that it could hold the key to major advances on complex issues relating to poverty, injustice and disadvantage. Since 1965, when a report to India’s Central Family Planning Board recommended how existing marketing resources of the private sector could be marshalled behind family planning drives, poor and emerging countries have applied social marketing to micro-credit, infectious disease, climate change, human rights, education and access to technology (Chandy, Balakrishman et al., 1965).

While much of the debate centered on the applicability of marketing models to social and behavior change, the concept of “social” was left largely untouched. Social has meant two things – a population and its problem. Many qualitative and quantitative methods and models see “target populations” and their behaviours largely as a homogeneous object of research and intervention. This one dimensional approach means that public interventions do not engage with dynamics that the target populations themselves experience, including the social dynamics that influence behaviours (Measham and Brain, 2006). Some analysis suggests that social and behaviour change policies and interventions have been significantly limited by the ways in which “the problem”, eg. alcohol misuse or HIV/AIDS, has been conceptualised and addressed (Moore and Rhodes, 2004).

The rapid emergence and dominance of technologies and services that are referred to collectively as social media has captured the public attention. The numbers are staggering, with Facebook amassing over 845 million active users since its inception in 2004 (Protalinski, 2012). Twitter has over 300 million users, generating over 300 million short messages (tweets) and handling over 1.6 billion search queries per day (Taylor, 2011). In the twenty years from 1990 to 2011, global mobile phone subscriptions grew from 12.4 million to over 5.6 billion (Market Watch, 2011). However, there is much that is not new in the behaviours that these technologies enable. In many respects, they enable people to do what they have always wanted to do, but not had the opportunity to do so (Shirky, 2010).

Capturing the impact of these developments, the following are four elements grouped together to redefine the “social” side of social marketing:

Connectivity: the ease of access to people all over the world at any time of the day means breaking down barriers and many more opportunities to connect. New tools and new ways of sharing are making progress toward shared solutions easier and more frequent. Technology enables collaboration but human need drives it.

Collaboration: people are demonstrating that they want to be partners not just consumers in the social and behaviour change. Whether it is controversies over vaccines or same sex marriage, people are not content with a one way feed of information. They want to participate in the process of communicating and shaping change that affects them.

Community: how people feel about the groups of which they are a part is a an unexplored area of social marketing. However, there is evidence from the field and other disciplines, such as community psychology, that how a person feels about their community has an impact on the propensity toward behavior change. Social network analysis explores how the structure of linkages (or ties or relationships) between individuals in groups influences diffusion processes (Axsen, 2010).

Concern: previously known as the “problem”, this has been renamed the “concern” to reflect the empirical and social nature of its qualities. The empirical impact of a behaviour, eg. alcohol misuse and violence, can be measured and tracked. The social nature, eg. how popular a cause is, helps to predict the public and political appetites for an intervention to address it.

The four elements defined above combine to encompass an enlarged and improved concept of “social”. These recognize formally the impact of new technologies, including the profound change in the ways information is produced and shared. These elements also recognize the foundations of social in human behaviours, especially those informed by psychology and sociology. By harnessing the promise of new technologies, whilst understanding the human drivers of their use, practitioners and analysts of social marketing will have more opportunities to improve their work.

*This is a draft of an abstract submitted to the International Social Marketing Conference to take place in Brisbane in June 2012.

Two major new HIV/AIDS business initiatives launched at WEF Davos

Global business leaders, including a former Facebook executive, have announced that they will work together through two new initiatives with a common goal – end new HIV infections among children by 2015. The Business Leadership Council for a Generation Born HIV Free and the Social Media Syndicate were launched on 27 January at the annual World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Both initiatives will be implemented in partnership with UNAIDS and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, among others, to support country-led HIV/AIDS efforts in developing countries. The initiatives add to the growing number of ways the private sector is contributing to the global campaign to fight HIV/AIDS, already supported by companies such as Chevron and Johnson & Johnson.

According to Devex, The Business Leadership Council comprises executives from Apax Partners, McKinsey & Company and the Children’s Investment Fund Foundation, among others. It was started as part of the private sector’s contribution to a global plan the UN launched in 2011 to eliminate new HIV infections. With the formal launch of the council, its members are expected to bring new finances, expertise and support to meet the plan’s goals. The council will be supported by the Social Media Syndicate led by Randi Zuckerberg, former marketing director of Facebook and founder of R to Z Studios. This initiative seeks to harness social media’s potential to encourage influential users to post and start discussions about AIDS.