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'Got wheels? Get a helmet!' Gets the attention of media, parents.


In 2002, Safe Kids Canada (SKC SKC Salish Kootenai College (Pablo, MT)
SKC Sky Clear (Meteorology)
SKC St Kevin's College (Melbourne, Victoria-Australia)
SKC Chief Storekeeper
), a charitable organization This article is about charitable organizations. For other uses of the word charity, see Charity.
A charitable organization (also known as a charity) is an organization with charitable purposes only.
 dedicated to preventing childhood injuries, took safety head on. Each spring, the organization and Johnson & Johnson join forces for Safe Kids Week, a national campaign to raise public awareness about a specific safety issue. For Safe Kids Week, 3-9 June 2002, SKC engaged Environics Communications Inc., a North American North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
 public relations public relations, activities and policies used to create public interest in a person, idea, product, institution, or business establishment. By its nature, public relations is devoted to serving particular interests by presenting them to the public in the most  agency, to develop a national awareness program about safety on wheels. The result was a clear and simple message for parents and children ages 5 to 14: "Got Wheels? Get a Helmet helmet Public health A personal protective device of hardened plastic worn on the head to ↓ severity of injuries in the event of an accident. See Pro cap helmet. !"

OBJECTIVES

SKC and Environics set the following campaign objectives:

* Generate at least 25 million positive media impressions through national and regional media coverage.

* Increase parents' awareness of ways to prevent injuries to children on wheels.

* Motivate parents to change their children's safety behaviour with respect to safety on wheels.

* Position SKC as a national authority on childhood safety.

* Reinforce the commitment of SKC's corporate sponsor, Johnson & Johnson/McNeil Consumer Healthcare, to family safety.

Environics' strategy involved making news through high-profile launch events; providing parents with simple, enforceable messaging; working with local grassroots SKC partners; and promoting the national retail program (in-store Johnson & Johnson product displays carrying campaign information).

IMPLEMENTATION AND CHALLENGES

Each year, SKC competes with several other safety-related campaigns. Adding to this challenge, Environics was working with a theme that received substantial media coverage preceding the campaign. A new bike helmet law in Alberta and a controversial recommendation out of the U.S. stating that children younger than 8 should not ride scooters List of scooter models per manufacturer Aprilia
  • Aprilia Area 51
  • Atlantic
  • Mojito
  • Scarabeo
  • Aprilia SR
  1. SR Viper/Urbankid
  2. SR Max Biaggi
  3. SR WWW
  4. SR Racing
  5. SR 2000
  6. SR Ditech
  7. SR R
  8. SR Factory
  9. SR Street LC
 garnered much media attention in early 2002.

To overcome this obstacle, Environics developed a new story angle by focusing on all wheeled activities, spotlighting safety messaging for bikes and for new and emerging wheeled activities (scooters, in-line In-line

Used in the context of general equities. (1) An order or market in a specific security within the inside market; 2) any announcement (earnings) that adheres closely to Wall Street analysts' expectations.
 skates Skates may refer to:
  • Ice skate
  • Roller skates
  • Skate Skates, Family of fish
  • A nickname given to the supporters and fans of Portsmouth F.C. by their rivals, fans of Southampton F.C.
See also
  • Skate (disambiguation)
  • Skating
 and skateboards skateboards

mini surfboard supported on roller-skate wheels; 1960s craze enjoyed renaissance. [Am. Hist.: Sann, 151–152]

See : Fads
). Because Environics had to convey safety messaging around four kinds of "wheeled" vehicles, it decided to focus on a dominant central message. The most important element of safety on wheels is to ensure that children wear helmets during all of these activities. Thus the slogan A slogan is a memorable motto or phrase used in a political, commercial, religious and other context as a repetitive expression of an idea or purpose.

Slogans vary from the written and the visual to the chanted and the vulgar.
 "Got Wheels? Get a Helmet!"

Environics publicized pub·li·cize  
tr.v. pub·li·cized, pub·li·ciz·ing, pub·li·ciz·es
To give publicity to.

Adj. 1. publicized - made known; especially made widely known
publicised
 Johnson & Johnson's commitment to family safety by ensuring that the company's logo appeared on all materials. The agency also recommended that Johnson & Johnson donate more than CDN (Content Delivery Network) A system of distributed content on a large intranet or the public Internet in which copies of content are replicated and cached throughout the network. $100,000 worth of helmets to kids in need across the country. Environics then leveraged this donation at launch events, throughout news releases and during media pitches.

Safe Kids Week kicked off with events in Toronto and Montreal. To generate media interest and capture more in-depth coverage, Environics conducted a poll of 11-to-14-year-olds to provide a realistic picture of their helmet use and the role parents play in influencing safety. The survey, which was released at the events, showed that more than half (55 percent) of the preteens and teens polled don't always wear helmets when they ride bicycles; 70 percent don't always use helmets when wearing in-line skates; and 84 percent don't always wear helmets when riding skateboards and scooters.

In addition, at each event a child gave an account of how a helmet saved his life during a bicycle accident, or a mother recounted how her child sustained a head injury while riding without a helmet.

To draw the media's interest in photographing the events, Environics set up four interactive stations showing kids demonstrating safe wheeling practices and created a "Wall of Helmets" as a backdrop Backdrop may refer to:
  • Theatrical scenery
  • Filming location
  • A pro wrestling move that's also called a belly to back suplex.
  • The Back Drop Club, website with BDSM resources, including BDSM related .
 to illustrate Johnson & Johnson's donation.

MEASUREMENT AND EVALUATION

The campaign exceeded expectations by garnering more than 46.3 million positive media impressions. There were no errors in the accuracy of the safety information in media coverage, and all stories carried some, if not all, of the main messages. Many of the news stories covering the campaign were longer and had more depth, more context and better placement than those covering previous campaigns. For example, the 2001 campaign focusing on scald and burn prevention received just a photograph in the Toronto Star The Toronto Star is Canada's highest-circulation newspaper, though its print edition is distributed almost entirely within Ontario. It is owned by Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd., a division of Star Media Group, a subsidiary of Torstar Corporation. , whereas the 2002 campaign received a lengthy story and large photo on the front page of a prominent section of the paper.

As the overriding (programming) overriding - Redefining in a child class a method or function member defined in a parent class.

Not to be confused with "overloading".
 objective in the campaign was to get parents to play an active role in keeping children on wheels safe, the campaign's success was measured not only by the quality and quantity of media coverage, but also by the level of success in changing parents'/caregivers' behaviours. Environics examined feedback from a follow-up phone survey commissioned by SKC of 250 parents who had heard or read about the campaign and 250 who had not been exposed to it. The results were compared to find outcomes that were statistically significant and directly attributable to the Safe Kids Week campaign. Parents who knew about the campaign were significantly more likely to have recently checked the fit of their children's helmets than parents who didn't know, and those exposed to the campaign were more likely to know that helmet size was important to proper fit.

To evaluate the success of positioning SKC as a national authority on childhood safety and reinforcing Johnson & Johnson's commitment to family safety, Environics looked at a number of statistics, one of which showed that 26.2 percent of all coverage mentioned Johnson & Johnson either verbally or visually.

The final measure of success was found in SKC's report on Safe Kids Week 2002: "This appears to have been the most successful Safe Kids Week campaign to date."

STATISTICS SUPPORT CAMPAIGN'S SUCCESS

Environics Communication Inc. used the following statistics to show the success of the weeklong week·long  
adj.
Continuing through the week: a weeklong conference.

Adj. 1. weeklong - lasting through a week; "her weeklong vacation"
seven-day
 safety campaign.

* A substantial number of Canadian parents (one in three) heard about the Safe Kids Week campaign, more than twice the exposure of the 2001 campaign (one in seven).

* Coverage was spread across various media as follows:

** Print: 122 clippings in 2002, up from 95 in 2001

** TV: 66 broadcasts in 2002, up from 49 in 2001

** Radio: 51 broadcasts in 2002, up from 26 in 2001

* The majority (74 percent) of parents who knew about the Safe Kids Week campaign were likely to have recently checked the fit of their children's helmets, whereas only 58 percent of parents who didn't know about the campaign were likely to have checked.

* Twelve percent of parents exposed to the campaign were likely to know that helmet size is important to proper fit, as opposed to just 4 percent of unexposed parents. (Although this number may seem low, it is statistically significant because this information was provided unprompted, rather than as a response to a list of options.)

Jennifer Schipper is a senior vice president and Tina Gladstone is a senior consultant it Environics Communications Inc., a North American public relations and public affairs Those public information, command information, and community relations activities directed toward both the external and internal publics with interest in the Department of Defense. Also called PA. See also command information; community relations; public information.  agency with offices in Washington, D.C., Metro New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, Montreal and Toronto. They can be reached at jschipper@environicspr.com and tgladstone@environicspr.com.
COPYRIGHT 2004 International Association of Business Communicators
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Title Annotation:case in point
Author:Gladstone, Tina
Publication:Communication World
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2004
Words:1131
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