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Media Campaigns, Social
Marketing, and Social Norms
Campaigns: What is the Difference?
Center for the Application of Prevention Technologies
West Resource Team
Anne Rogers, M.Ed., CHES
CAPT Associate

This training was developed under the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s
Center for the Application of Prevention Technologies contract. Reference #
HHSS277200800004C.
The views, opinions, and content of this presentation are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect
the views, opinions, or policies of SAMHSA or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
For training use only.
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CAPT Approach to Webinars
• Audience engagement throughout
• Use of interactive techniques, including
chat boxes, polls, “hand raising”, white
boards, and small break-out groups
• Opportunities for information
dissemination, application of concepts,
and skills building
3

Primary Audience
• Community-level Strategic Prevention
Framework State Incentive Grantees,
Partnership for Success II Grantees, and
Block Grant prevention workers from
across the nation.
4

Introduction to Connect Pro
5
Communication Methods:
1. Typing:
– Type question in chat
window
– Press enter or press the
thought bubble
– Everyone will see the
question

Introduction to Connect Pro
6
2. Raising your hand in response to a question
• Raise and lower your hand by clicking
on the icon
3. Polling during the webinar

Housekeeping
• Online Feedback Forms
– We will send a surveymonkey.com link in a
follow-up email
• Presentation Materials
– We will make available for download all
presentation slides and supporting materials
– Participants who attend the entire webinar will
receive a certificate for 1.5 continuing
education hours

Learning Objectives
By the end of this webinar, participants
will be able to:
1. Identify how media campaigns, social
marketing, and a social norms campaigns
differ from one another
2. Explain how media strategies can be used
as part of a comprehensive prevention plan

Learning Objectives (continued)
3. List strategies for developing media messages
that effectively target audience needs and
produce desired behavior changes
4. Name important elements to include when
evaluating media campaigns, social marketing,
and social norms campaigns
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Polling
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Facilitator 11
Anne has worked in the field of
prevention and health promotion for
25 years, currently in the position of
data and research manager for the
Maine Office of Substance Abuse
and Mental Health Services. She
also provides substance abuse
prevention services for the CAPT’s
Northeast Resource Team.
Anne Rogers, M.Ed., C.H.E.S.

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Defining Media/Communication
Strategies
13

Media Campaigns
• A campaign is an attempt to inform,
persuade, or motivate behavior change in
a large audience.
• A media campaign uses media (e.g., TV,
radio, Internet, newspapers) to deliver a
message.
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Social Marketing1
• The application of commercial marketing
technologies to the analysis, planning,
execution, and evaluation of programs
designed to influence the voluntary
behaviors of target audiences in order to
improve their personal welfare and that of
their society.

Social Marketing (continued)
• Built on marketing industry principles
• Uses the 4 P’s: • Product
• Price
• Place
• Promotion
• More extensive audience segmentation
16

Social Norms2
• Rules developed by a group of people that
specify how people must, should, may,
should not, and must not behave in
various situations.
17

Social Norms Marketing Campaigns3
• Use marketing techniques to change
misperceptions regarding audience
behavior and ultimately change behavior
by communicating accurate group norms
of the specified audiences.
18

Social Marketing vs. Social Media
Social Marketing
• Multiple steps
• Planning
• Uses multiple tactics
for message delivery
• Over 3 decades old
Social Media
• A tactic, venue
• Tool
• Technology
• Only about a decade
old
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Social Media Social Marketing
20

Chat
• What questions or
additional insights do you
have to add to these
definitions?
21


Sample Logic Model: Identifying Issues
Students don’t think binge
drinking is harmful;
High access on campus and near
campus
X% of college students binge
drink
Campus allows alcohol sale and advertisement at
games
Local fraternities encourage binge drinking
at frat parties
University staff not aware of the extent of the
problem
Community Conditions Community Risk
Factors
Community
Consumption
Pattern

Synergistic Effects
Enforcement Strategies
*Establish campus party patrols
*Train all alcohol servers in town to request identification
*Establish anonymous phone line/email for reporting illegal serving, DUI, etc.
Norms
Communication/Educ.:
*Change views of individuals re: behavior
*Create awareness and momentum to change policy
*Change both the individual and the environment
Policy Change
*Establish drug-free campus policy
*Create climate to support enforcement of policy
*Require all alcohol servers to complete Responsible Beverage Service training each year

Targeting Your Audience 25

Planning Marketing Campaigns
• Developing your message(s)
• Choosing a theory of change
• Planning the evaluation
• Pre-testing messages
• Building capacity to support planning activities

Planning: Message
Identifying a Message
• Selecting a Campaign
– Adapting an existing campaign or
developing your own
– Selecting appropriate and affordable
channels

Message: New or Used…

Planning (continued)
• Piloting and pre-testing alternate and
culturally appropriate versions of your
message with each market segment
• Planning implementation
• Developing monitoring and evaluation
plans
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Considering Your Audience
30
• Age
• Gender
• Media habits
• Reading level
• Cultural affiliation(s)

Which Method Will Have the Greatest
Impact on Your Audience?
Positive
Negative
Normative
Educational
Relevant
Humorous

32

Chat
• Who is the target?
• What is being sold?
• What are the benefits of
the behavior?
• What are the barriers to
changing the behavior?
33

Examples of Campaign Materials 34
https://www.drugfreeactionalliance.org/

When to Consider Pre-Testing4
• Concept Development
• Planning
• Draft Review
• Comparison
• Final Development

Pre-Testing Pitfalls
• Testing too late to make changes
• Use of an untrained moderator or interviewer
• Testing the message with too limited an audience
or the wrong audience
• Using the wrong questions or misinterpreting
group responses
• Not recognizing suggestions that are contradicts
prevention best practice

37
6
www. maine.gov/partysmarter

Coaster 38
www. maine.gov/partysmarter

Coasters 39
www. maine.gov/partysmarter

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Chat
• Who is the target?
• What is being sold?
• What are the benefits of
the behavior?
• What are the barriers to
changing the behavior?
41


Process Evaluation
• Documents whether project activities are
implemented as planned
• For example:
– hours of research conducted to develop the
social marketing campaign
– number of planning sessions
– number of ads
– measures of program fidelity (i.e., faithfulness
to the planning and implementation process)

Outcome Evaluation
• Short-term outcomes are related to
changes in risk factors or intervening
variables
• Long-term outcomes are changes in
behavior related to the priority
consequence or consumption patterns

Above the Influence – Evaluation5
• Surveyed youth monthly
during the campaign on
awareness, attitudes,
intention to use
• Four independent studies
show effectiveness of
campaign to reduce
initiation of marijuana use
in youth
45
http://www.whitehouse.gov/ondcp/campaign-effectiveness-and-rigor

What to Measure
• Community attitudes, norms, traditions,
policies, behaviors
• Can also be helpful to think about
evaluation of a social marketing
campaign in terms of the 4 Ps:
– Product
– Price
– Place
– Promotion

Measuring Reach and Exposure
• Reach – Number of individuals exposed to a message
• Exposure/Frequency – Number of times exposed to the message
• Gross Impressions – Measures rate of exposure in your target
population
– Gross impression = number of people exposed x frequency, divided by number people in target population(s)

Summary 48

Chat
• What further information,
training or technical
assistance would you
like related to this topic?
49

Housekeeping
• Online Feedback Forms
– We will send a surveymonkey.com link in a
follow-up email
• Presentation Materials
– We will make available for download all
presentation slides and supporting materials
– Participants who attend the entire webinar will
receive a certificate for 1.5 continuing
education hours

Questions or comments?
Michelle Frye-Spray
Associate Coordinator
CAPT West Resource Team
(775) 682-8535

References
1. Andreasen, A.R. (1995). Marketing Social Change: Changing Behavior to Promote Health, Social
Development, and the Environment. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
2. Social Norms. (n.d). (2011). In Sociology guide: a students guide to sociology. Retrieved 4/24/2013 from
http://www.sociologyguide.com/basic-concepts/Social-Norms.php
3. Prevention First. (2011). Communication campaigns professional development resource guide: Social Norms
Marketing. Illinois Retrieved 4/1/13 from
http://www.prevention.org/communication_campaigns_resource_guide/communication%20campaigns%20resource
%20guide_opf_files/websearch/page0008.html
4. American Medical Cancer Research Center and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (1993). Beyond
the brochure: Alternative approaches to effective health communication [Brochure]. Denver, CO: Available:
http://www.cdc.gov/cancer/nbccedp/pdf/amcbeyon.pdf
5. Office of National Drug Control Policy. (2011) Campaign Effectiveness. Retrieved from
http://www.whitehouse.gov/ondcp/campaign-effectiveness-and-rigor
6. State of Maine, Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services.
(2009). Party smarter: a social marketing campaign. [Campaign materials]. Retrieved from
http://www.maine.gov/dhhs/samhs/osa/prevention/partysmarter/campaignmaterials.htm
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