Outreach
Your outreach seeks to educate, involve, and engage your organization's stakeholders. Outreach that honors diversity, equity, and inclusion is no different, other than the intentionality of your decisions. It requires you to understand who your audience is beyond the data points. It requires you to know what their priorities are, and then to craft messages and engagements that are inclusive to them. DEI outreach goes beyond reaching out, it requires them to bring people in.
We’ve created these nine tips with the communicator in mind. It’s flexible, so use it as a checklist, a launching point for a discussion, or even an assessment survey to improve your DEI communications.
Outreach
Periodically expand your media list Evaluate whether you have substantial relationships with reporters, editors, and news media staff who are able to reach African American, Latino, Asian American, Native American, and Alaskan Native communities.
In addition to cable TV and national media outlets, focus on reaching out to local, ethnic media organizations.
Be aware of the costs associated with large media outlets: Are there digital paywalls or print subscriptions that prohibit free access to your content?
Invite local, nontraditional journalists and organizations to your event — the staff of a high school newspaper, members of various religious organizations, local collegiate club members, bloggers, and podcasters are all good options.
Learn More: Inclusive Outreach
Mix up your mediums.
Establish a direct line of communication to your stakeholders to get a better understanding of what types of media they prefer, and what outlets they’re using to stay informed.
When reaching out to the community, don’t just create flyers or send emailers — consider using innovative technology and new social media sites to extend your reach and elevate your platform such as podcasts, Instagram, Live Q&As, guest newsletters, etc. The more content you can push out into the world, the more engagement you’ll get.
Consider directly connecting with communities through town halls, virtual meetups, and community events. In-person outreach can create deeper connections.
Learn More: Top 6 Social Media Trends for 2023
Do your due diligence.
Reach out to those in your organization leading the efforts that you will be communicating about. Ask them to explain the details of the work.
Research the topic to learn about the system that impacts the situation and its history.
Have direct conversations with those affected by the issue to learn its impact on them personally.
Center your key messages on people instead of your organization.
Acknowledge the people your organization works with as individuals and not statistics. This will help strengthen trust and respect.
When reaching out directly to communities, address their needs and the topics that are most relevant to them (and not your organization's agenda).
Center people and their aspirations as the hero of the outreach, uplifting their strengths and positive contributions.
Consider how your organization defines people.
Use people-first language that separates the person from their circumstances (i.e. low-income family vs. a family with low-income)
Use asset based language that describes people based on their strengths and aspirations rather than their deficits. (i.e. at-risk highschool student vs. a student who aspires to go to college)
Differentiate the statistics of a community from the individual people of that community. Statistics tell the story of a population, they do not tell the story of a person.
Learn More: You Can’t Uplift People by Putting Them Down
Feature a variety of identities in your outreach storytelling.
Consider what voices and stories you are featuring. Crowdsource for story ideas within all levels of your organization — make sure Black, Latino, American Indian, or other staff members of color are involved in not only the storytelling, but the idea-generating process as well.
Go beyond speaking to traditional leadership. The board member of a fund focused on food systems will have a completely different perspective from a volunteer, or a community member that’s experienced food insecurity.
Consider compensating storytellers for their time and insights. Their lived experiences and opinions are their thought leadership and is worth compensating them for.
Learn More: How (and Why) We Should Be Telling the Stories of “Quiet Influencers”
Catch blind spots through internal collaboration.
Take a bottoms-up approach to information-gathering. Collect feedback from multiple facets of your organization and partners to gain a more intimate understanding of the organization’s work and the people it seeks to impact.
When gathering materials for promotion, think about who you are quoting, and whether the end communications product is an accurate and genuine reflection of your organization and the people you work with.
Create a recurring meeting with various members of your organization to re-evaluate your messaging. Review the various taglines in your communications toolkit to figure out whether they are an accurate and positive reflection of the work and the people.
Learn More: How to Make Your Communications Team a Catalyst for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
Create ongoing feedback loops with communities.
Understand that community outreach is ongoing, and a successful communications team cannot operate in a silo.
Have frequent contact with community members and volunteers. Make their priorities your priorities, and show them how their voice matters with not only your words, but in your actions as well.
Through stories, surveys, interviews, focus groups, and evaluations, enable community members to influence and enhance your communications and outreach strategy. Allow for their creative input, and keep that door open.
Learn More: Shifting Power Through Authentic Corporate Community Engagement
Pass the storytelling baton.
Test out new voices within your communications in order to provide your audience with a new perspective.
Temporarily relinquish control of your platform – whether it’s a blog, an op-ed, a social media handle, or a newsletter.
Consider compensating these new voices for their work.
Learn More: Taking a Long-Term Approach to Nonprofit Storytelling
“If there isn’t opportunity to own that these equity statements are aspirational and show clear mechanisms by which the organization is owning its equity work, it has the potential to create damage.”
Lauren Shweder Biel, Co-Founder and Executive Director, DC Greens