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The Message Box A tool to keep you “on message” The Message Box A tool to keep you “on message”

The Message Box A tool to keep you “on message” - PowerPoint Presentation

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Uploaded On 2020-07-03

The Message Box A tool to keep you “on message” - PPT Presentation

Helps distill your key arguments to the ones you need to repeat over and over Keeps you focused on Level One Values and Solutions Gives you the cheat sheet for interviews and debates The place you bridge and pivot back to from hard questions and damaging frames ID: 793956

communities people values message people communities message values bridging box justice solution families oregon life vision problem locking crimes

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Presentation Transcript

Slide1

The Message Box

A tool to keep you “on message”

Helps distill your key arguments to the ones you need to repeat over and over.

Keeps you focused on Level One Values and Solutions

Gives you the “cheat sheet” for interviews and debates.

The place you bridge and pivot back to from hard questions and damaging frames.

Slide2

Vision

Values

Solution

Problem

Slide3

Vision

A clear statement of the problem you are trying to address in a way that everyone can see their stake in addressing the issue.

The solution you are proposing and the principles or outcomes it is designed to achieve.

The Level One Values that underpin the challenge and your proposed solution. The answer to the “why does it matter” question.

Values

Solution

Problem

Your vision for the community, state, society. A sense of the purpose and goal that drives you to seek the change you are working for. Your aspiration and inspiration.

Slide4

Vision

Our criminal justice system focuses most of it energy and resources on locking up those who commit crimes and too little on helping them become productive citizens again and prepare them for returning to our communities.

Investing in re-entry services and supports is proven to actually make our communities safer. It costs less than locking people up and helps those who have committed crimes in the past to become productive members of our communities

again.

Justice, redemption, security, opportunity

Values

Solution

Problem

We want communities that are safe and secure and offer opportunities for all people to live and work together peaceably.

Justice means the fair and moral treatment of all people – both those who have been wronged by crimes and those who have paid their dues to society and seek the opportunity to return to community life.

Slide5

Vision

Values

Solution

Everyone deserves a safe place to call home. We believe in an Oregon where families and neighbors are supported in times of crisis, and given opportunities to contribute.

The economic downturn means that too many families and individuals can’t afford to pay their rent and may experience homelessness. All families and individuals have critical moments of needing assistance, and too many Oregon families don’t have personal safety nets to protect them during these times. We need to protect those most impacted by the economic downturn who don’t have a strong safety net.

We believe in an Oregon where families and individuals live in healthy communities, have opportunities to succeed in life, and those most impacted by the economic downturn are protected from the worst of its impacts. We believe that housing provides children with an opportunity to succeed in life. We believe in an Oregon where we pull together as a community during hard times.

We need to continue our existing efforts to prevent and end homelessness for families and individuals throughout Oregon. We need to protect the Emergency Housing Account which meets some needs of those most impacted by the economic downturn across Oregon. This proven, effective and efficient program will help prevent and end homelessness for thousands of Oregonians.

Slide6

Bridging and Pivoting

One of the important uses of the message box is to help you stay off of the opponents turf and keep you from repeating damaging frames in the questions you receive.

A technique to help you do this is called

bridging, or pivoting

; as in bridging from one side of the argument to another.Useful bridging and pivoting phrases:“Actually . . .”

“That’s a good question. (pause) Here’s how I think about this issue . . .”“The real question is . . .”

Slide7

Do not Repeat a Damaging Frame!

Q:

Our Criminal Justice system needs to be focused first and foremost on locking up criminals, not providing them all sorts of expensive services. Why should we spend any money on people who have broken the rules?

A: Its true that we all want to make sure that dangerous criminals are locked up.

But most of the people in prison today are going to be released into our communities at some point. We should at least make sure they can do that without returning to a life of crime.

Slide8

Using the Message Box

Q:

Our Criminal Justice system needs to be focused first and foremost on locking up criminals, not providing them all sorts of expensive services. Why should we spend any money on people who have broken the rules?

A: (Values) Justice means the fair and moral treatment of all people – both those who have been wronged by crimes and those who have paid their dues to society and seek to return to community life. Providing people with the tools they need to re-enter our communities successfully is the smart and just thing to do.

Slide9

Practice

Four steps:

Fill out a message box on an issue or policy you work on.

Share your message box with your partners for feedback and modify based on comments.

Prepare three hard questions about each others’ issues.Role play Q&A with the questions, using the message box to keep your answers “on message.”

Slide10

Resources

Wallack, Lawrence, Katie Woodruff, Lori Dorfman and Irene Diaz,

Using Pivot Phrases

in News for A Change: An Advocate's Guide to Working With the Media, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 1999.The FrameWorks Institute E-Zine on Bridging

http://www.frameworksinstitute.org/assets/files/eZines/bridging_ezine.pdf