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The goal of a communication campaign is to make noise and be loud, to make sure the right people know about the event, and to make sure that everyone will remember it. This chapter is intimately related to the one about Documentation.
Planning the communication campaign is typically the last step on your “to do” list. Something you can start working on after you have solved all the previous items: aims, location, audience, content, format, narrative.
A right communication campaign will address your diverse audiences via different tools and messages, according to each one of them. The best would be to have a dedicated team focused on this task integrated by someone with a PR background and someone with particular social media skills. The size of the team should be proportional to the magnitude of the event. If you have to tackle this on your own there are a few tips to look upon:
A communication campaign should be guided by the six W: What, When, Who, Why, Where, How. What Define what to communicate. It may sound obvious, but this is a tricky question to solve. When planning a communication campaign you should always think bigger than the action itself. There are tons of events happening simultaneously; what does your event have to stand apart? That is the first thing you should focus on: what makes it special. Are you communicating about an event or something bigger? Are you planning long term? Think in terms of agenda-setting. Provide interesting and valuable info in order to get the media and the people interested.
When This refers not only to the specific dates of the event but to the whole campaign. You should plan three stages: Prior the event / During the event / Post-Event
Who Who is running the event? Who is taking part? Who is it for? Who should you be speaking to? Who will be visiting/participating? Think of related data that you could add. Coordinate interviews with the developers/artists/speakers. Engage them in the communication process
Why Why is this event taking place? Why is it relevant for the community? Is it something truly new and unique? Why would it be worthy to be covered by the press?
Where Where is it taking place? Any relevant info related to the location? Any special links or history to consider? Why is that place ideal for this kind of event? Does the location/surroundings/atmosphere add value to the overall experience?
How How will the event unfold? How can the audience participate, interact and engage? How can the press relate to the different activities going on?
Consider the following:
Establishing a tone. Is this a professional/formal/academic event? Is it more like an informal hang-out? Should you be using technical language or make it easier to digest for a larger public? Always remember to think on your audience.
Where are they? Which Social Media do they typically use? What are they interest in? Are you planning an event just for gamers? will you be mixing different audiences (ex: art, technology, others?) How about the age of your audience? Are you thinking on families, students, professionals..? Once you have narrowed it down think on which media do they use: how do they found out about events? That’s where you have to be. Think now on the location of your event: Do they have a captive audience? What’s their interest? Is there a way to engage them with your event? Think on a message specifically for them and take advantage of the tools they are already using: do they have a mailing list, a web page, a Twitter or IG account? Check the “Audience chapter” for more info.