Thursday, February 23, 2012

Campaign Week 3: Press and Prep

Our launch event invite -- similar to one of the two billboard designs/messages.

It occurred to me that I might have started with this blog post, i.e. what are we doing here and why? Press release following.  We had a press briefing this week to inform the press about the launch and encourage some coverage before the event.  We created a guide for journalists that outlines the correct terminology and facts surrounding domestic violence in Cote d'Ivoire, and how they can be part of the solution.  We created similar guides for health, civil and education sectors, see below. 

Media Guide

Issouf Fofana, our uber-campaign manager, talking with RTI, 
the naitonal TV station.

T-shirt prototype with one of the women'smessages
 (but we are doing a woman's cut of course!)






Campaign - Week 3 already? Moving our message via public trans...


Last day of the TV spot (#4) shoot-- actors in the kitchen.
7 hours into a very hot day, spent in the car 
from meeting to meeting. So glamorous!
This week we hired an event planner—admittedly about 3 months too late, as our launch event is less than a month away, but alors, if anyone can do it this team can!   We need to fill the Palais de Culture, one of the most impressive and massive buildings in Abidjan, and it seats 4,000.  We hired a guy named Jazz and his colleague Ferdinan who have promoted and planned some pretty big acts at the same venue.  They came up with some great suggestions for stage design and lighting for our miniscule budget.  As it will be 2-4 in the afternoon on a Monday, there are limited things we can do with lighting, but we’ll do the best we can. Next, how do we fill the venue with our target audience? They came up with the idea of going to the private Universities (the public ones are closed because of the recent conflict) and the high schools to engage the principals and directors and convince them that the event will be a good reason for 300 of their students to leave school early.  Issouf, Fernand and I went to 5 schools near the Palais de Culture and all but one were run by a woman – Issouf would get through three paragraphs on who the IRC is, what we are doing etc. and the principals would reach for their official stamps and sign our letter on the spot.  Issouf truly has a gift of gab—he is soft spoken but very convincing!  At one of the universities—University Voltaire, we were immediately greeted at the entrance by a man in a suit named Joseph, who took us directly to the director of the Marketing Program for the school.  It was really eye-opening to see what these schools do with so little money.  None of the directors had computers at their desks, rather the old rolodex and day planners, but the students had an air-conditioned computer room.  They even made their own desks there—with someone welding together chairs on the spot.  I felt like I had been transported back in time, to my years in the Peace Corps (ugh, 20 years ago!) 
The buses, non of which have advertising on them!
Orange, the telecom company, has already completely 
taken over the South station of Abidjan.



Issouf and I went to the Sotra, the Municipal Bus company run by the government, and spoke with them about putting our posters on the exterior and interior of their buses for a reduced price.  He met with us even though we were 2 hours late.  He told us he'd talk to the Chef (boss) and get back with us about our proposal.  He did call back later, and we learned that because of the conflict (near civil war) last  year, Sotra's contract with the company that was placing ads on its buses was suspended, and they are in dispute, so no advertising we were told could be put on the buses interior or exterior.  They did offer the North and South stations though, were all the lines meet, so we took a very hot trip there yesterday and found one a possibility at the North station but the other was covered in orange paint and "Orange" advertising-- Orange is a huge European cell phone company, that unfortunately has about 1000x more $ than we do, so hard to compete.  Still, we're going back tomorrow to propose using the North Station and the mini shelters around the city that aren't already covered in orange. (They also have the advantage of being the same color as the countries football team "Les Elephants") We're also going to propose that since we're non-profit, perhaps the company that is contracting the advertising will look the other way if we put ads on the buses.  We would be the only advertiser, quite a coup! 

Our campaign chanson is almost ready!


See Youtube link here, we recorded at the super cool Zion Sound Builder's studio. Napthaly, the sound engineer, is a true genius.


Monday, February 13, 2012

Brisons le Silence! (Break the Silence!) Launch Prep: Week 1

L to R: Moi, DJ Mix, Kajeem,
Veronique and Monika (IRC Women's Empowerment Office)

I am amazed at how efficient the team is here. Thankfully we hired this wunder-kid named Issouf Fofana locally a few months ago, and he has checked nearly all of our “wish list” off one by one, including the participation of several actresses, celebs, the soccer star Kolo Toure, and pop stars to promote our campaign and message.  


But let me back up a bit. What exactly am I doing here?  We're launching a social marketing campaign to combat violence against women. When I came the last time to train the staff in the fundamentals of a creating a social marketing campaign, we went through the process of audience segmentation, that is determining our target audiences as well as the potential messages for the campaign, based on focus groups we had previously conducted around the country.  Using that info, in conjunction with a 2010 baseline survey by the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine on the prevalence and type of violence in CI, as well as a literature review completed for the IRC in 2010 by Elizabeth Levy Paluck and Laurie Ball on the efficacy of social norms marketing to combat gender based violence, we determined that intimate partner (domestic) violence was the most common form of violence against women.  We would target 2 audiences: 1) housewives, ages 18-35, and 2) men ages 18-35. The men, it must be noted, are what we call the “lowest hanging fruit,” i.e. not the perpetrators but the good guys, who need to act as supporters for women and act as messengers to promote the idea that violence is not acceptable in the home.

For each of the target groups, we came up with 10 possible messages targeting both the desired action, that is reporting violence or supporting the reporting of violence, and the ideal social norm, that is the idea that the target group’s peers are all on board that violence is not acceptable or condoned.

After testing the messages in each of the regions of the country where IRC agents work, we came up 2 messages for each group.

For the women the action message is:

      1)    Brave femme, lèves-toi contre la violence! (Brave woman, stand up against violence!)
     2)   And the norms message: Chez-nous, la violence n’a pas sa place! (In our home -also reads as community- there is no place for violence.


For the men:
     3)    Protéger les femmes, c’est aussi notre affaire! (Protect women, it’s our business too!)
    4)    Nous sommes une équipe contre la violence. (We’re a team against violence.)

Interesting cultural note--The director of the IRC here in Cote d’Ivoire (who is French) was insistent that “Brave femme” had a negative connotation. This may be the case in France, but here in Cote d’Ivoire it has only positive connotations, as it was the favorite choice of all 12 regions by the target group.

Jean Noël Bah Gbehi’s firm JNB Productions will do all the production of both TV and print. He has already designed the logo, and made several incarnations of the posters and billboards—I’ll show the ones when they are final, but here is the logo nonetheless.  We’ll also be producing t-shirts, bracelets, bumper stickers, and calendars, all strategically placed depending on the audience, and whether they are action or norms messages.

Oh dear, did I mention our launch event is in less than a month and we need to fill a 4,000 seat venue at the Palais de Culture? Judging by what I’ve seen so far, I think we can do it. The launch event will include an introduction the campaign, speeches from ministers (oh lord, let them be brief!) hopefully the First Lady of CI, a dramatic sketch, a testimonial from a woman who stood up against violence, and some great music (saved for last of course!)


Nash recording  in studio.
Ahh, the music—Issouf managed to convince 3 of Cote d’Ivoire’s most popular musicians to come together to produce a song for the campaign.  We went to the studio last week, which looked more like coconut shack than a studio from the outside! Inside, we met --- the engineer, and artists Kajeem and Nash had already laid down the base track for the song. DJ Mix arrived later, and he assured us he would keep it on message. (He recorded the huge hit “Le Bobaraba” also a dance, about a passion for “huge derrieres” several years ago.)  I'll post the final song when it's done.

Thursday, we recorded the first set of radio sketches for the campaign launch. I peeked in at the actors’ rehearsal and it was really impressive to watch—these are true professionals—one suggestion and boom, they nailed it.  


Finally, if that wasn’t enough excitement for my first week here, My boss, Monika Bakayoko-Topolska, the head of the IRC’s Women’s Empowerment Program, and Issouf, our campaign manager, took a meeting with one of West Africa’s biggest mobile companies Moov, and managed to snag a huge sponsorship to cover all of our billboards and the cost of our TV ads.  This is HUGE, not only from a budget perspective but considering over half of the country’s nearly 22 million people own a cell phone, we can now easily implement messaging and interactive participation via mobile tech.
Actors rehearsing sketch.
Roger is producing all the radio spots and
sketches for the campaign.
The only reason I had time to write this was because due to the Africa Cup last night (CI didn’t win) we have a day off—of course I was the last to know, par for the course. : ) 

Lay of the Land: Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire




In transit 15 hours en avion!
I’m here, back in Cote d’Ivoire after a year and a half break, working for the International Rescue Committee (IRC), with their women’s empowerment division to design and implement a nationwide social marketing campaign to combat domestic violence. It turned out to be a longer break from design to implementation than expected, as a result of the conflict that arose right after my first visit in October of 2010. The national presidential elections were held shortly after I left, and after the votes were cast and counted, the incumbent president, Laurent Gbagbo refused to leave office.  After much bloodshed on both sides, Alassane Ouattara, the elected president, assumed office and Gbagbo awaits trial at the International Criminal Court (ICC) at The Hague.

That's Drogba, possibly the best soccer player in
the world, and me, the dork in the t-shirt.
It’s been 10 months since the upheaval, and the atmosphere here is much more relaxed if not cautiously optimistic. It’s the eve of the Africa Cup final match and with Cote d’Ivoire’s “Les Elephants” the favorite, it’s downright giddy.  As we speak I’m sporting the organge t-shirt, to show my allegiance, of course!  

3 blocks away?
Il faut prendre une voiture, bien sur!
Supermarche "Sococe" where you can
get everything but a local vegetable! 
Giddy would not be the word, however, to describe the operations and security team at the IRC.  We are under a “Level 2” security threat, according to my briefing, I’m basically not allowed to leave the hotel alone, take a taxi alone, buy vegetables from the local merchants, or go to markets not in the “Cocody” neighborhood where the office and hotel are located.  These two “sanctioned” markets are basically huge supermarkets akin to K-mart with overpriced European goods.  Luckily after a few days the rules were eased a bit and I was granted permission to walk the 3 blocks to work.  Ahem du le Allah!  This hyper-security is curious, given where I was delivered upon arrival, an apartment not far from the office but a far cry from where I had stayed during my previous visit.  If there is what thing that can be said about the IRC as a development organization, they don’t spend $ on needless perks and indulgences for their staff or contractors. Trying dutifully not to be a typical “whiney” American, I bit my lip rather than complain too heartily about the broken stove, lack of Wifi or working tv, moldy closet, or the cockroach that popped out onto my nose to greet me when I opened the bedside table to retrieve my reading glasses! 

 The view from the kitchen was a busy bidonville, and soon after discovering this “rear window”- look into another life, I was humbled.  Getting a look into a world so far removed from my plush life at home made even this roach motel seem like something to be thankful for. The sounds emanating from this little village were fascinating. One night I heard what sounded like whales underwater – a low, dull groan of an animal in heat.  But, after a few minutes of closer auditory observation, I realized it was someone—probably a child, making bold attempts to play a horn, probably retrieved out of some wealthy person’s trash.  Another night, as I lay staring at the ceiling in jet-lag induced homeostasis, I heard shouts and cries coming in waves from below—a few minutes apart.  I realized soon after that, that it was the finals match of the Africa Cup with CI vs. Morocco that I was hearing, but not seeing, due to my non-functioning TV–cum-oversized paperweight.  The final morning I was there, a Saturday, music blared across the bidonville from speakers on the periphery of community.  Starting with Bob Marley’s “Get up Stand Up,” and interrupted by the radio jock’s inspirational preacher-like rants, it would’ve been a horrible cliché in a movie had it not been followed by “House of the Rising Sun.” Huh?   My rear-window theater came to an end when the procurement office realized that maybe it was better to put me up in the old hotel, despite their $5,000 Franc ($11) per night rate increase, than trying to get all that fixed.  Even for the most patient of locals, it might’ve taken the entire month and a half that I’m here.  Sitting by the pool as I write this, I can’t say I miss the “character building” apartment much. : )  

Sunday, February 5, 2012

MAMA is born!



My work with the International Museum of Women (IMOW) comes to a close as we launch MAMA: Motherhood Around the Globe!  MAMA is a global online exhibition that fittingly enough, took 9 months to develop and will take 9 months to unfold, via topic galleries highlighting key issues related to motherhood and maternal health.  As Content Producer for the exhibition, it is with great pleasure that I invite you to explore MAMA at mama.imow.org, and hear from a powerful new generation of global mothers through art, multimedia, and creative writing.
For me, it was truly a labor of love to have had the opportunity to help compile the creative ideas and expressions of so many different women related to motherhood. 
Visit MAMA and you’ll hear from:
Lusina, a tribeswoman and mother of six from Kenya who says motherhood in a word is a “manager,” with a grin. (Meet the Mamas, Mamas’ Voices video installations)
Shira Richter, an artist from Israel whose incredible photography poses profound questions to a woman’s transformation into motherhood. (Art Gallery, Hero feature, Mama & Me)
Samina Ali shares in the short story Labor of Love, a gripping account of her near-death experience during the birth of her son, and what it taught her about life. (Stories)
These are just a few of the many contributions that inspired me. We hope MAMA will be a springboard for creativity, awareness and action on vital issues that affect mothers on every continent, and we have reason to believe our hopes may be fulfilled.  Just a week after launch January 24, 2012, MAMA had over 15,000 unique visitors from around the world!
If you sign up for IMOW E-news or Friend IMOW on Facebook or Twitter, you’ll get a reminder to visit the site as soon as a new topic gallery opens.
Here is a list the topics to be covered throughout the exhibition: 

MAMA TO BE?:   Who decides if, how and when a woman has a child? (Jan Launch)
HEALTHY MAMA, HEALTHY BABYWhat are the realities of 21st Century Pregnancy and Childbirth? (Mid Feb - March)
MAMA THEN & NOW: How do the experiences of mother, grandmothers, and daughters compare? (April)
MAMA’S WORK: How do women around the globe juggle work and motherhood? (May)
PAPA: What is the changing role of the modern Dad? (June)
MAMA IN MANY WAYS: How is the role of “mother” evolving? (July)
MAMA & ME: How do mothers’ identities shift and change? (August)
MAMA POWER: What kind of power do mothers wield? (September)
Please come back to see new content, explore the virtual galleries, engage in ongoing creative conversation, or take action on an issue you care about. MAMA: Motherhood Around the Globe is an evolving and vibrant creative community that needs you to thrive!
I hope you will be inspired to help spread the word about this exciting new exhibition. Please visit MAMA online and:
·         Post a Facebook status update about the exhibition
·         Follow Christy Turlington’s lead and Sign the Maternal Health Pledge, then send it to at least three friends
·        Leave comments on the exhibition content that most inspires you

My colleagues at IMOW and I are passionate about getting this exhibition out to the widest possible audience – at least 100,000 people. If every one of our friends does just these three things, we’ll be so much closer to that goal!
Thank you for spreading the word about MAMA!
My future blog posts will cover my work as a Consultant for the International Rescue Committee in Cote d’Ivoire, where we are launching a social marketing campaign to combat Violence Against Women on March 5th across the country. If you are interested in learning about the mechanics of a social marketing campaign, as well as our progress/challenges as we head to launch, please subscribe to this blog by adding your email up at the white box at the top of the blog page.  


Thanks very much for reading, and please tell me what you think! 


Virginia