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WILDLIFE
2000
Finding new audiences
for biodiversity
Ruth Hayhurst
1 Introduction
WILDLIFE 2000 was a one-year pilot scheme in south west
London which succeeded in involving new groups of people
in biodiversity through organising and promoting a programme
of innovative events.
It was a partnership of six London boroughs: Hounslow,
Kingston, Merton, Richmond, Sutton and Wandsworth, the London
Wildlife Trust and Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. It was funded
mainly by the boroughs and a Millennium Commission lottery
grant (Millennium Festival scheme).
2
The WILDLIFE 2000 approach
WILDLIFE 2000 was divided into seven main projects. Each
project interpreted the idea of biodiversity through a different
medium: dance, sculpture, painting, gardening, story-telling,
poetry or photography. Each project comprised a series of
events that aimed to raise awareness of local biodiversity
among new audiences. The longer-term aim was to encourage
people who had taken part in WILDLIFE 2000 events to get
involved in the local biodiversity action plan process.
In planning each event, WILDLIFE 2000 decided:
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What
message did we want people to take away at the end of
the event |
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Who
was the event for |
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How
could we remove any barriers between the event and the
target audience |
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How
should we best market the event |
2.1 The message
The overriding message we wanted people to remember was:
The great variety of living things in south west
London enhances our lives and is worth celebrating.
We can all do something … however small … to protect
and improve this variety of life for the next millennium.
2.2 The target audiences
WILDLIFE 2000 identified the following target audiences:
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Ethnic
minority groups |
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Families
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Gardeners
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Members
of local societies |
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Middle-aged
people with no children |
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People
with disabilities or special needs |
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Recently
retired |
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Young
people (12-25 year olds) |
We wanted to reach these target groups for a variety of
reasons:
Target Group
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Reason
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Gardeners
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They could easily do
something tangible to benefit biodiversity
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Young people, ethnic
minority groups and people with disabilities
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They had been under-represented
at wildlife sites and events
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Recently retired and
middle aged people with no children
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They may have enough
time and money to get involved in promoting biodiversity.
They may also have useful skills.
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Members of local societies
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They already supported
the ideal of community effort, which may make them
more willing to work collectively for biodiversity.
They may also have useful skills.
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Families
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They were consumers of
activities at which it was relatively easy to get
across a biodiversity message.
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Most of the main projects comprised several events targeted
at different audiences. For example, the photography project
included separate workshops tailored for teenagers, local
photographic societies, families and people with disabilities.
2.3 Removing barriers
Barriers between the target audience and the events could
be physical, cultural or intellectual. They may also include
inappropriate timing, transport problems, perceived lack
of relevance or shortage of time. WILDLIFE 2000 aimed to
remove some of these barriers by introducing the idea of
biodiversity using a setting or media with which the target
audience was comfortable. Points 2.3.1-2.3.4 illustrate
how we used these techniques.
2.3.1 Choosing venues already used by the target audience
We ran young people's photography workshops at local sports
centres; wildlife-themed sculpture sessions for families
at an annual country fair; and a wildlife gardening show
case at a spot on Wandsworth Common popular locally with
recently retired and middle-aged people.
2.3.2 Working with partners already trusted by a target
audience
We worked with a group of African students and their tutor
to make wildlife sculptures that were later included in
an exhibition. Other examples included: wildlife-themed
story times at libraries that were already attracting large
numbers of Asian and African families; and photography and
painting workshops for people with disabilities organised
with Age Concern and mental health charities.
2.3.3 Using a topic that already interested the target
audience
As part of the gardening project, we ran wildlife gardening
competitions and demonstrations throughout south west London
designed to appeal to people already interested in gardening.
We also organised wildlife-themed creative writing and photography
workshops targeted at local poetry and photography societies.
2.3.4 Using a method that already appealed to the target
audience
We used lectures and field visits to deliver the biodiversity
message to photography societies because we knew they were
familiar with these methods. Similarly, we used formal dance
workshops in schools because students were comfortable with
this approach.
We were also aware that people would want to take part
in events in different ways. In planning events, we made
sure that we took this in account and offered a range of
opportunities. For example, in the photography project,
people had the chance to look at an exhibition of wildlife
photos, find out more at a photography workshop or develop
their skills further by entering a competition.
2.4
Marketing for the target audience
WILDLIFE 2000 used the following marketing techniques:
web sites, posters, fliers, mailing lists, exhibitions,
newsletters, mascot; banners, badges and stickers, press
releases, radio and TV interviews. For each event, we varied
the techniques, depending on the target audience. For example,
we posted fliers door-door to attract local residents to
a wildlife gardening demonstration while for a poetry workshop,
we worked with local societies to distribute material.
3 Achievements of WILDLIFE
2000
During the year, WILDLIFE 2000:
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Organised
and promoted 186 events, attended by nearly 22,000 people
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Promoted
another 380 events organised by 37 different groups
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Produced
and distributed 62,000 copies of an events diary
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Established
a mailing list of nearly 1,500 names |
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Organised
an exhibition of wildlife photos taken by local people
that visited 7 venues and was seen by around 3,000 people
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Organised
a two-week exhibition of wildlife sculptures made by
local artists and visited by 900 people |
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Worked
with 77 different partners |
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Increased
attendance at events run by 11 different local wildlife
groups |
At WILDLIFE 2000 events people were invited to fill in
an evaluation questionnaire. Of those who did, 70% said
they were attending a wildlife event for the first time
and 71% asked to receive information about how they could
help local wildlife.
4 Lessons learned
WILDLIFE 2000 learned many lessons, often the hard way,
about building audiences, running events and marketing.
Here are some of them.
4.1 Building a new audience
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Be
clear about your objectives and target audience.
This is essential in deciding what you do, where,
when and how. |
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Take
your events to your audience. This is one of the most
effective ways of overcoming barriers between your target
audience and your event. |
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Work
in partnership.
This can give you credibility among your target audience
and access to: mailing lists, skilled and experienced
supporters, marketing opportunities, good venues, equipment,
special expertise, materials and funding. |
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Think
about your audience's needs.
To most people, Physiological Needs come first
(Are there toilets, food and drink?); Emotional Needs
come second (Is the venue friendly? Are the people approachable?);
and Intellectual Needs come third (Is the subject
interesting to me?). A cup of tea and a smile can work
wonders in getting across your message at a workshop.
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Be
prepared to be patient and realistic.
Reaching some audiences may take a lot of time and effort.
You may never get to some of the people you want to
target. |
4.2 Event organising
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Match
your objectives to your resources.
WILDLIFE 2000 discovered that running a professional
events programme is costly and very hard work. Be realistic
about what you can achieve with the resources (money,
staff, time and materials) you have.
|
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Get
the basics right.
Ensure that you have the following: the permission
you need; enough of help of the right kind; enough time
and money; an accessible venue; acceptable risk assessment;
appropriate promotion and signing; a contingency plan
for wet weather; a tool kit with essential spare equipment.
In a partnership, ensure that the responsibilities are
defined and agreed. |
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Focus
on families.
WILDLIFE 2000 proved there was huge demand for environmental
events for families and, during the school holidays,
for children. |
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Have
hobby, will travel.
People were prepared to travel at least 10 miles to
take part in some WILDLIFE 2000 events. This suggests
that boroughs and organisations within a London region
could co-operate in future, sharing costs of delivery
and promotion. |
4.3 Marketing
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Target
your marketing.
There is no such thing as the general public. WILDLIFE
2000 found that the more specifically we targeted our
marketing material, the more successful it was.
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Be
prepared to put in a lot of effort.
Much marketing was time-consuming, hard work and boring
… but essential. The WILDLIFE 2000 sculpture competition,
for example, required five separate mailings to local
schools, colleges and youth groups to ensure we got
enough entries. |
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Distribution
… the weakest link.
Marketing is only as good as the distribution system
you use. The WILDLIFE 2000 system generally worked well
but sometimes outlets ran out of event diaries without
telling us or never received them. Monitoring is crucial.
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Get
a good logo.
The WILDLIFE 2000 logo was successful because it was
simple, worked in colour and black/white, worked big
and small and was memorable. |
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Make
a mascot.
They attract media and public interest, break the ice
and give people a reason to talk to you. Design a mascot
to attract children, make sure it is machine-washable,
allows the wearer to have hands and feet free, has a
hat to go with it, is cuddly and suitable for hot and
cold weather. |
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Push
your product hard.
At promotional events: give material to whoever
will take it; don't stand or (worse) sit behind a desk;
don't try to run a stall single-handed; always have
a form to collect names for a mailing list; design activities
in a way that helps collect any information you want.
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Mind
your language.
Keep it short, simple, personal and direct.
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Be
big, bold and beautiful.
Make your material attractive, professional, simple
and organised. |
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Get
on-line.
Websites are an effective way of delivering information.
The best are quick to load, easy to navigate and find,
easy to update, linked to lots of other sites and well-placed
on the search engines. You don't need a professional
designer and they don't need to be expensive.
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For more details
about WILDLIFE 2000
email Ruth Hayhurst at [email protected]
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