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The Summit makes for one hell of an interesting week

Posted At : April 14, 2009 9:27 AM | Posted By : Judette
Related Categories: Political Communications, Summit of the Americas


 

Prime Minister Patrick Manning will have many publics to satisfy this week as he plays host to 34 nation states representing the 84 million people that call the Western hemisphere their home. 

That's a big number and a tall order.

 And it is going to take effective, skilled PR experts to break down the big geo-political messages in a way that makes sense to  the 1.3 million people that  Mr Manning governs.  Several of the vox populi conducted  this weekend by the 3 local dailies  showed a shift in opinion with almost 65 per cent  of those interviewed saying  that Trinidad and Tobago could benefit from the Summit. 

The shift is important since as a public, we  have had an impassioned almost knee-jerk negative reaction to hosting the  global meeting whose total cost and objectives  had  remained undefined. The shift happened only when  the central role of the Summit in improving civil society, creating business opportunities and even raising the living standards began to be properly and less painfully communicated.

There will be many complex messages  from the global meeting and Mr Manning's  PR team will have to convey the information with the right context and in the right language. This will not be an easy task.  

Already there are spoilers. 

 Hugo Chavez has already  positioned himself as the voice to take on the Cuba issue. Many are betting  that the  Venezuelan President  will perform all kinds of pirouettes to grab the attention of the media and the world. Then there is the man himself, the President of the United States, Barack Obama,  and  the almost God-like reverence that follows the US President  and his wife, Michelle, who  attracts as much attention with her polished image  and her people charm as her husband does. President Lula of Brazil too is known for colourful language and his love of the limelight. His remarks at the G 20 Summit in London  about blond haired, blue-eyed men creating the mess the  world now finds itself in found lots of traction in the international press.

 Despite the big personalities , the Trinidad  Summit represents a real chance for leaders of the Americas to communicate and  engage in substantive discussion in  ways that only face to face interactions can permit.  

There are big issues on the table: the lack of a  special envoy to the Americas, the 11 undocumented workers in the US and their path to legalistion, a cheaper and more environmentally cleaner ethanol for the US  that Brazil, Central America and the Caribbean can help produce, and the impact of the global meltdown on the developing nation states that comprise the Americas. 

This is Mr Manning's time to shine and our country to put its best foot forward. It will be riveting to see how the Prime Minister distills the messages over the next week and what role the local media plays in communicating and shaping those messages. 

One thing is for sure, this is going to be one hell of an interesting week for PR.

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Owen, Sophie and the Summit Story

Posted At : March 20, 2009 10:43 AM | Posted By : Judette
Related Categories: Political Communications, Summit of the Americas

 

 

 

 

Thanks to Barack Obama the way politicians will use the Web has been changed forever. 

 

No one said that better than Ranjit Mathoda in a New York Times piece by David Carr. According to Mathoda, Barack Obama understood that "you could use the web to lower the cost of building a political brand, create a sense of connection and engagement, and dispense with the command and control method of governing ..." 

 

Mathoda's perspective is important because it positions the politician as a marketer; someone who can supply brand, ground troops, money and relationships as well as   cultivate emotions and allegiance. 

 

This all struck me as I was listening to the 5th Summit of the Americas ads on the radio today.

 

They are wonderfully arranged, a lot of great concepts are bandied about in 30 seconds but ask Owen or Sophie on the street  and they'll tell you they  are more concerned about how they will get to the corner store  than whether they  could derive meaningful benefits from a  the 2- day meeting.

 

 It not that Owen and Sophie don't care. But thus far the messages  of the Summit have been entangled in a web  about the helpful but mundane aspects of the global meeting. In the newspapers alone this week the public viewed  brand new vehicles that would be used to transport the  leaders of the Americas,they were told about the zones that would restrict their  movement and they read how Prime Minister Manning is doing his share of rallying around Latin America in preparation for the meeting.   

 

See what I mean. Important but dull.  These stories  are the worse kind of political marketing  simply because  it fails to  fire the  imagination of Owen and Sophie and countless others on the street. 

 

Soliciting buy-in from the public is always strategic but  it requires a long view of things. It  says here is our plan and here's how you can benefit. Here's what we can gain together and here's how you can help.   Up next? Tell  that stroy  over and over again in multifaceted, multidimesional ways using channels that  are relevant and remarkable. 

 

A diligent marketer, oops politician, can make it easy for the troops  to fan the flames and get the word out as well. And to do it in an authentic, honest way that connects.

 

 

The 5th Summit of the Americas is a chance to build on the political brand and capitalise on the Obama magic. I hope it does not turn out to be  an opportunity missed.

 

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