PR Firm To Create MMGW Newspeak
The non-profit PR shop ecoAmerica finally released the findings of its public opinion research today, bringing a trove of information about how on-the-fence Americans respond to different messages about climate change and energy.
The firm conducted an impressive amount of research in February through Marchfocus groups, a phone survey, an online surveyall focused on finding better talking points for wooing folks who are undecided about this whole global warming/clean energy/green jobs business.
This was the report whose summary was accidently sent to a bunch of media outlets after a White House briefing from ecoAmerica in April, leading to a not-very-flattering story in the New York Times. The story suggested its cynical to try to sell the climate crisis the way youd sell toothpaste, and its true that the report wholeheartedly embraces a public-relations way of looking at things:
Remember to speak in aspirational language about shared American ideals, like freedom, prosperity, independence and self-sufficiency while avoiding jargon and details about policy, science, economics or technology.
--Ditch global warming. It makes people think of Al Gore more than anything else, too polarizing. Climate change is almost as bad. Our deteriorating atmosphere is the term soccer moms and other environmental agnostics respond to best, the report found.
--Likewise, people dont want to hear about cap-and-trade. Too wonky. When youre talking about cap-and-trade, call it Clean Energy Dividend or Clean Energy Cash Back. This fits a central theme of the reportthe climate-action camp needs to learn how to translate think-tank language into kitchen-table language. To hear how this sounds in action, try out ecoAmericas blog post explaining the report.
--Even renewable and alternative energy are too vague. (Were you clear on the difference anyway?) Instead, talk about energy sources that run out and ones that dont run out. Or energy sources you have to burn and ones you dont have to burn.
--Talk about values, not facts.
--Activating multiple values tends to be stronger than just invoking a single value. Bring prosperity, national security, and personal health into your argument. The report doesnt mention human rights or climate justice argumentsodd, since evangelicals have already shown they can rally behind this perspective.
--One the other hand, one good fact packs more punch than a string of facts. You dont win people over with a relentless barrage of facts, says the report. That only muddles the brain. Somehow this connects to Joseph Stalins One death is a tragedy; a million is a statistic.
--For your one key fact, the reports authors especially like the phrasing, Local temperatures always fluctuate naturally. But when the 10 hottest years on record have all occurred since 1990, we have a problem.
--Finally, the report says it would be a travesty to let the Right own comprehensive energy solutions. Show why your side, not theirs, is the true all-of-the-above option. As with everything else, it works better to stay on the offensive and make the other side defend their position.
Posted by: Anonymoose 2009-06-13 |