Our Top 10 Actionable Insights from the CDC Conference

August 13th, 2009

By Kim Callinan, Jennifer Isenberg Blacker, and Alexandra Rampy

The Third Annual National Conference on Health Communication, Marketing and Media is coming to a close. It was a fabulous couple of days of sharing and learning. Our only regret is not being able to be a part of every session that took place. The ones we attended were ripe with lessons learned that can be immediately applied to our work, and to the work of our clients.

Below is our “Top 10 Lessons Learned” from the conference. Some of the insights were “ah ha” moments, where we heard an idea that just clicked. Others were things we’ve been preaching all along. And still others were themes that were so prevalent throughout the conference that it would be hard to write a summary and not include them. We hope that you find them helpful.

Consistent Themes

1. Social Media is the Wave of the Future-Enter or You Will Be Left Behind. A frequent theme throughout the conference was one we agree with wholeheartedly. Social media is happening NOW. Don’t wait until you have it all figured out-it will never happen. Get started now. Sanjay Koyani with FDA offered a nice summary of lessons learned from his efforts, which seemed to mirror others and our own experiences: 1) Start somewhere: Evolution versus revolution; 2) Start by just listening; 3) Start with low risk, high impact web 2.0 tools, such as Twitter; 4) Don’t recreate the wheel; partner with other agencies to increase your footprint, maximize your resources, and extend your reach; 5) Listen to the wisdom of the crowds; and 6) usability test to evaluate goodness.

2. Don’t Use Technology for Technology’s Sake. While there was strong consensus about the importance of stepping into social media, we also heard many presenters talk about the importance of making sure that technology is supporting your social marketing objectives, rather than driving your efforts. Know the goals you are trying to achieve and then choose the best platforms to achieve them, rather than riding the technology wave and forgetting your end goal. Our own Jennifer Isenberg Blacker discussed this at length during her presentation on NIDA’s social marketing efforts.

3. Don’t Abandon Traditional Media. Many presenters agreed with the idea that social media is an important way to reach your audiences where they are, but you can’t abandon traditional media. Social media should complement traditional outreach strategies and help extend the reach of social marketing and health marketing programs. Think of social media as one more vehicle that should be integrated into your overall social marketing efforts.

4. People Prefer to be Rewarded Today. One of the biggest challenges with social marketing is that we are asking people to give up something now for a benefit they will get in the future. The challenge that Michael Rothschild and several other presenters offered was to think creatively about whether there was a way to offer an immediate benefit (even if it’s not the ultimate end goal). Some interesting food for thought as we design future efforts.

5. Know Your Audience. And Listen. Another powerful theme was the importance of listening. Multiple people talked about the importance of developing audience-centric campaigns, a basic social marketing pillar. Others talked about the power of social media in following, learning, and understanding your audience. And Mark Weber from SAMHSA talked about the innovative approach SAMHSA is using to partner with mental health and substance abuse groups to help influence health care reform. What was interesting is that each of the presenters was talking about “listening” with different audiences and in different ways, reminding us that we need to be listening and not leaping through the phases of social marketing programs.

Other Insights

6. Change the Power Relationship. During a pre-conference workshop on health literacy, Bill Smith asked the interesting question, “How come the same person who feels comfortable going into a restaurant and asking a waitress questions about a menu will not go into a doctor’s office and ask questions about a surgery they are about to get?” The answer is obvious, and it offers very powerful insights as you think about the development of health literate social marketing campaigns.

7. Judge Social Media on the Platform, Not the Content. Another presenter told a story about how he had originally judged YouTube by the content on it and determined that there was no way a government agency would ever post there. He eventually realized that it wasn’t about the content, but about the platform that it offered. YouTube is now the second largest search engine, beating out Yahoo, Bing and Microsoft! This insight about judging the platform versus the content is an important one that offers helpful insights as we are evaluating other social media tools. Think about Second Life-a great platform for training and engaging, but the content is likely a turn-off to many. Is it a platform that more government agencies should be engaging with?

8. In Tough Economic Times, You Must Figure Out the ROI. Nancy Lee outlined the steps one should take to develop a return on investment model so you can compare, for example, the cost per program to help people quit smoking vs. the cost per taxpayer to pay for their health care costs. The model was very simple to implement and offers a way to demonstrate the value and effectiveness of your program to policy makers and funders during these tough economic times.

9. Think of Government as a Platform That Provides the Content, Not the Final Product. Erin Edgerton with CDC talked about rethinking the role that government plays in disseminating information. Web 2.0 is about providing a means for people to use the government’s content. The hope is that other organizations will take the content, repurpose it, make it more user-friendly, and disseminate it to larger audiences. She specifically discussed the creation of a widget used during the peanut recall that people could download to their sites. As information about product recalls changed, every site that had the widget was automatically updated. If you create useful content, people will use it.

10. Help Create a Social Marketing Association. Craig Lefebvre outlined efforts to create a global social marketing membership association. Expected launch date: June 2010. The most urgent call to action is a fundraising effort to collect $50,000 by September 1. Lefebvre encouraged conference participants to make a $300 pledge to the social marketing effort. An electronic petition calling for the creation of a worldwide social marketing organization is now available for signing at epetitions (or cut and paste: http://fusomar.epetitions.net/).

The conference theme, “Participation Powers Prevention” also deserves attention. Many delegates and speakers asked: Now what? Where do we go from here? How does my organization or group move the needle? The answer: participation. Whether it’s meeting with your city council in person, joining in the development of our nation’s health priorities through Healthy People 2020, or helping to create the new social marketing association mentioned above, this is participation. And, it can be leveraged for prevention, for healthier communities, and for a greater public dialogue.

Take the podium-What take-aways would you offer as #11, #12, etc?

IQ Solutions Addresses CDC Health Communications Conference

August 11th, 2009

By Dan Johnson, Technical Assistant to the CEO

conferenceThe Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) kicks off its three-day National Conference on Health Communication, Marketing and Media in Atlanta, August 11. It should come as no surprise that communicating health information through social media will be the hot topic all week. The uptick in .Gov communications and the popularity of social media among young people are creating new realities (and opportunities) for health communicators. Jennifer Isenberg Blacker, VP for Health Communications, will discuss IQ Solutions’ collaboration with the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) during a Tuesday afternoon breakout session, “Social Media Tools in Health Promotion.”

Jennifer’s presentation focuses in detail on case studies of NIDA’s use of social media to reach young people. Example: For its Drugs + HIV > learn the link campaign, NIDA used 2.0 strategies to increase views among YouTube audiences of its English-language PSA (by 390 percent) and its Spanish PSA (by 640 percent), and to boost traffic to its web site by 56 percent. NIDA also teamed with AIDS.gov and BlogCatalog to invite bloggers from many countries to participate in “Bloggers for World AIDS Day” and raise awareness among their peers. “The key to success is to involve youth in the process,” Jennifer says. “In fact, the next campaign on prescription drug misuse/abuse among teens includes peer-to-peer online and offline elements.” See the National Conference on Health Communication, Marketing and Media.

5 Ways to Prepare for This Year’s CDC Conference

August 6th, 2009

By Alexandra Rampy, Sr. Communications Associate

Buzz has been building for a while now as delegates, organizers and presenters make their final preparations for next week’s National Conference on Health Communication, Marketing and Media. Hosted by the CDC’s National Center for Health Marketing and the Office in Enterprise Communications, the conference is packed with discussion about health marketing, health disparities, new frontiers in technology, and collaboration.

IQ Solutions’ own VP of Health Communications, Jennifer Isenberg Blacker, will also be presenting on behalf of the National Institute on Drug Abuse about the use of new technologies to engage youth. Senior VP of Communications and Social Marketing, Kim Callinan, and myself will also be there to cheer her on and gain insights from other presenters, as well as share in community with other health evangelists.

As the IQ Solutions team preps for our journey down to Atlanta, I’ve identified five ways to prepare for this year’s CDC Conference:

1. Network. Nedra Weinreich has set up a community on NING, a social network that lets you create your own social community. Already boasting 60+ members, this public platform enables us to network before, during, and after the conference, and is how I learned that the CDC program book was available for download.

2. Follow the conversation. Whether you are signed up for Twitter or not, you can still follow the conversations that are happening there. Using the tool Twitter Search, type in the hashtag “#NCHCMM09” to see what people are saying about the conference. I will also be live-tweeting certain presentations and added insights through IQ Solutions’ new Twitter handle, @iQSolutions.

3. Create your own conference dashboard. If you want to be a real superstar like Chris Brogan or Christopher Penn, you can even create your own conference dashboard using iGoogle, Netvibes, or PageFlakes. The dashboard, Brogan explains, is a one-stop online location “to see the elements you might want to know about at a conference…and you can get a fast scan of a lot of data that might prove useful during the event.” Example information may include adding some Twitter search strings to your dashboard, integrating a local map, local clock, local weather information, and much more. See an example below.

An example snapshot of a conference and event social media dashboard

4. Meet-Up and Tweet-Up. They say at conferences that some of the best insights and conversations are those you have with colleagues in the hallways or over a great meal. Don’t miss out on these nuggets of opportunity for sharing. Already, CDC’s Justin Williams has organized a Tweet-up for Wednesday, August 12th from 7:30-10:30pm at STATS. This is one more opportunity to gather and meet with colleagues. Already attending are Craig Lefebvre, Andre Blackman, Susannah Fox and myself. Join us.

5. Study. It’s always good to know what you’re getting yourself into. Thus, I recommend checking out the conference’s Web site, seeing who’s who, as well as downloading and reading through the program book. Studying may be overkill, but as I mentioned earlier, this conference is packed with powerful presentations-so much so, that if you’re like me, you’re going to have to prioritize what you can attend. It’s not possible to see every single presenter, even though you’ll want to! (This is another good reason Tip #2 and Tip #3 come in handy-you can catch what you may be missing during concurrent presentations.)

Your Turn: What other tips might you offer to prep for this year’s conference?