Tag Archives: Indonesia

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.

AusAID releases concept note for new Maternal and Newborn Health and Nutrition Program for Indonesia

Aloisa Ernesta, head midwife in the perinatal unit at Ende District Hospital in Eastern Indonesia. Photo: AusAID

Aloisa Ernesta, head midwife at Ende District Hospital. Photo: AusAID

AusAID has released a draft concept note for the new Maternal and Newborn Health and Nutrition Program for Indonesia. The 8-year A$200 million program of support for maternal and newborn health aims to assist Indonesia to close the socio-economic and geographical equity gap in reducing maternal and neonatal deaths and child stunting.

Our initial review reveals that one of the outcomes is “Greater informed demand and changed individual, household and community knowledge and behaviour related to family planning, maternal and neonatal health and nutrition” (p. v) which is a welcome sign of the integration of behaviour change and social marketing approaches. Sufficient investment in creating demand for services will be key to the success of this program.

Individuals and organisations are encouraged to submit views and issues that they would like to see further considered or clarified during the design process. The closing date for submissions is 30 June 2013.

DKT International – the purest marketing approach to behavior change?

DKT International is a social marketing nonprofit working in Asia, Latin America and Africa to improve access to reproductive health products and services. DKT adopts one of the “purest” market-based approaches to behavior change. It now boats the enviable record of around 75% of its revenue brought in from the sale of condoms, birth control pills and other products and services, including the highly successful Fiesta brand of condoms.

Founded in 1989 by Phil Harvey, DKT was named after Dharmendra Kumar Tyagi (1928–1969), who was an Assistant Commissioner for the Indian Family Planning program. An early pioneer and champion of family planning in India and elsewhere, he invented the well-known (in India and some other countries) “Red Triangle” symbol as a branding effort to familiarize and popularize the idea of family planning.

Many of the branding and mass communication techniques DKT developed are now used throughout the developing world to combat disease (such as HIV/AIDS) and poverty. His success in saturating the country with simple, attractive messages and designs (including the Red Triangle, which is now in use in several other countries) overcame age-old communication barriers and greatly increased public awareness of birth control. DKT’s staff consider its model to be the purest form of marketing and therefore most sustainable. Is this true? And if so, can it be applied to other behavior change efforts, especially those which don’t use products?

Women change agents help address Avian Flu in Indonesia

Community radio Aisiyah facilitator talks about halal food, sanitation and cleanliness (JHU-CCP)

Community radio Aisiyah facilitator talks about halal food, sanitation and cleanliness (JHU-CCP)

DAI, the Johns Hopkins Center for Communications Programs, Aisyiyah and partners have adopted an innovative approach to behaviour change which engages women change agents to ensure the effectiveness of a program helping to prevent Avian Flu in Indonesia. The project has engaged female preachers spread over thousands of islands to help create demand for healthy poultry products as part of the Strategies Against Flu Emergence (SAFE) project in Indonesia.

SAFE is a response to a persistent problem for Indonesia: the highest number of human cases of H5N1 avian flu in the world, exacerbated by an 84% fatality rate across 31 of its 33 provinces. Begun in 2011 by DAI and JHU-CCP with funding from USAID, SAFE works at all levels of the poultry value chain, including consumers.

Most interestingly, SAFE strategically targets Muslim women. Muslim women are targeted because around 88% of Indonesians are Muslim and its women traditionally purchase and prepare the food for their families. For these reasons, messages about selecting fresh poultry products, handling poultry properly and good sanitation behaviors are being integrated into sermons and other religious activities delivered to women by female members of one of the country’s largest Islamic organizations, Aisyiyah. This draws on a combination of community psychology, social movements and social networks to drive change.

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.

Sustainable change marketing: an approach to development and communications programs in Indonesia and beyond

Growing Sustainable CommunitiesThe following is the abstract for a chapter I’m writing in a soon-to-be-released book edited by Linda Brennan et al. Thank you in advance for any feedback.

The sustainability of development programs is affected by the way in which information is produced and disseminated. This chapter examines the role of communications in social and behavior change, with a focus on an Indonesian sanitation project, ‘Fantastic Mom’, which aimed to reduce infant mortality. It highlights the link between communications and sustainability, particularly the importance of empowering individuals and their communities through participation and capacity building. The chapter then combines these elements and introduces the Sustainable Change Marketing (SCHEMA) model, using it to analyze the results of Indonesia’s Fantastic Mom project. This project succeeded in changing behaviors and building capacity but failed to effectively engage decision makers, affecting its sustainability. Finally, the chapter reviews these findings and their implications for sustainability work in Southeast Asia and beyond, providing guidance for those planning, implementing and evaluating similar programs.

Reference: Linda Brennan, John Fien, Lukas Parker, Hue Duong, Mai Anh Doan and Torgeir Watne (2013 in press), Growing Sustainable Communities: A Development Guide for Southeast Asia, Tilde University Press.

Understanding and building brand communities

The following is the abstract for a chapter I’m writing in Doug Evans‘ soon-to-be-released book, ‘Psychology of Branding’, New York, USA: Nova Science Publishers.

This chapter aims to show that understanding and building brand communities is essential to the success of marketing and the brands with which you work. It examines the global evidence and experience of brand communities from research and practice, from both the commercial and public sectors. It begins with an overview of traditional approaches to branding, marketing and communications and introduces the disruption caused by new technologies and ideas. It then examines ideas of community found in a wide variety of fields, including psychology, sociology and anthropology. It introduces Muniz and O’Guinn’s idea that the brand community is “a specialized, non-geographically bound community, based on a structured set of social relationships among admirers of a brand. It is specialized because at its center is a branded good or service. Like other communities, it is marked by a shared consciousness, rituals and traditions, and a sense of moral responsibility.”

The chapter then describes how to understand and build more effective brand communities. It draws on community psychology, which provides an ecological perspective with the person-environment dynamic as the focus of research and action to address a commercial or social issue. It also introduces the idea of a sense of community as a way to understand these dynamics. Change agents, eg. opinion leaders, peer educators, community facilitators, counsellors, outreach workers etc, can assist in building and strengthening brands, influence relationships and can shape behavioural norms. We know from work done on sustainability that involving the intended beneficiaries of the program and their communities is important, however why and how this is done is critical.

The chapter then examines how working with a variety of partners from the private sector, industry groups, government agencies and community organizations brings to the table new resources, expertise and networks to help build a brand community. It shows that capacity building for brand communities is a process of strengthening the abilities of individuals, organizations and systems to sustainably and effectively respond to their needs. The chapter draws on the author’s experience managing and researching projects in Asia and Australia. One of the cases covered is Hello Sunday Morning, an online community changing the culture of alcohol in Australia. Another case is on approaches to building a brand community in Indonesia to improve sanitation. From the commercial sector, new technologies are making it possible to reach new consumer markets, lift more people out of poverty and provide access to communities previously out of reach – bringing change and highlighting commonalities. The chapter closes with a discussion of the implications for brand communities and recommendations for more effective marketing and stronger brands to enable commercial success and improved social impact.

Communications for Development: an analysis of the role of change agents in public programs

Here’s the abstract from a paper Nick gave yesterday at the 2012 Indonesia International Conference on Communication.

Governments, non-profits, businesses and other social change leaders face significant and persistent challenges to their efforts to address public policy issues. Attempts to improve outcomes through use of social and behaviour change models and strategies have had mixed results. Social marketing and other communications programs developed to address social issues, such as alcohol-related harm among young people, often focus on narrow frames for individual behaviours. Such programs often fail to reach target populations, to meet their understanding of an issue and their means to address it.

Public programs, for example those focused on health or education, often require “change agents” to effectively disseminate the messages that lead to social and behaviour change. This study will shed light on the moderating effect a community has on the effectiveness of change agents – peer educators, community health workers and counsellors – in disseminating information and influencing how it is received and used by members of any given group.

How government-led and other communications programs identify, construct and interpret these communities, populations and publics, helps determine how the problem is represented and addressed. To borrow from Marshall McLuhan (1994), it is a community – the masses – which moderates individual and social change, by affecting both the medium and the message.

The role of social dynamics, hierarchies of influence, information dissemination and consumption are often poorly understood or applied as vectors that influence behaviour change. Theories of diffusion of innovations and community psychology are useful to frame how information is moderated, shared and influenced within communities. This study will draw on these theories to develop a new approach to make social marketing campaigns more effective.

This study will adapt a field experiment design to test this approach in two case studies from Australia and Indonesia, using qualitative techniques to verify the findings. This will combine the relative strengths of internal validity for experimental work and external replicability for qualitative analysis. The Australian case study will focus on alcohol-related harm reduction programs implemented by the non-profit, Hello Sunday Morning (HSM). The Indonesian case study will focus on ‘High-5’, an integrated hygiene improvement program managed by the Cipta Cara Padu (CCP) Foundation.

If we can better understand how a sense of community influences change agents, we can design better interventions. This research will help governments, non profits and businesses to better understand how a community influences the dissemination of information within it and improve interventions aimed at achieving individual behaviour and social change.

AusAID issues tender for new Empowering Indonesian Women for Poverty Reduction (MAMPU) project

AusAID has launched a new initiative, the Empowering Indonesian Women for Poverty Reduction (MAMPU), that aims to improve the lives of up to 3 million poor women. The program has been designed to build and strengthen gender networks and coalitions in five thematic areas:

  1. Improving women’s access to government social protection programs
  2. Increasing women’s access to jobs and removing workplace discrimination
  3. Improving conditions for women’s overseas labour migration
  4. Strengthening women’s leadership for better maternal and reproductive health
  5. Strengthening women’s leadership to reduce violence against women.

The first phase of the program is expected to commence in February 2013 and will run for three and a half years. The proposed implementing service provider will support the program by managing the resourcing, oversight, administration and monitoring of activities across the program. This will include the recruitment of key personnel, the delivery of technical assistance and capacity development across all components, administering and overseeing the provision of grants, and coordinating activities with the program partners.

New Jala PRT campaign to help address Indonesia’s domestic worker issues

A new campaign from Jala PRT, the Indonesian National Network for Domestic Workers Advocacy, has focused attention on the issues affecting Indonesian domestic workers when they are employed overseas and in their home country. According to The Jakarta Post, domestic workers account for the largest percentage of total women workers worldwide. Globally, domestic workers have reached more than 100 million people. In Indonesia alone, there are 10.74 million domestic workers. Domestic workers struggle with low wages, poor conditions and violence. There have been several high profile cases of murder and injury to Indonesians working overseas.

The theme for the campaign is “When domestic helpers themselves need help.” and it was developed by Ogilvy on behalf of Jala PRT. It is an advocacy campaign that aims to persuade policy makers, through pressure from the general public, to improve working conditions for domestic workers.