Problems + Research
Communicating
Stakeholders
Outputs + Solutions
Advocacy
100

Good policy problems are...

  • Framed in form of a question

  • Answered by an action 

  • Narrowly scoped

  • Iterative

  • Based on prelim research

  • Not necessarily solved by legislation or regulation

100

What's the number one rule for communicating for policy? 

Always lead with your Bottom Line Up Front 

100

Stakeholder mapping includes...

Brainstorming stakeholders, connecting them, investigating their motivations. 

100

Outputs are...

Deliverables that speak to your stakeholders

100

Advocacy is...

Convincing the stakeholder to take action and adopt solution

200

1 way to narrow a problem

  • Narrow the actors

  • Narrow to a specific jurisdiction

200

What should you do with jargon and acronyms in policy writing?

Avoid jargon and define acroynms 
200

Key legislative powers 

  1. Make laws

  2. Oversight

  3. Budget/tax

  4. Declare war

  5. Support constituents

200

Solutions are

What you want the stakeholders to do. The answer to your policy question.

200
The three types of policy impact are...

direct, indeterminate, and indirect 

300

Policy research is for....

you, not your stakeholder!

300

What are common policy documents? Name 3. 

Policy memos, white papers, public comments, emails

300

Key White House Powers

  1. Commander in chief

  2. Nomination power

  3. Pardon power

  4. Take care that laws are faithfully executed

300

Asks are...

The specific ask you make of each stakeholder: Implement your solution or help with steps along the way

300

The 5 steps of advocacy are...

  1. Theory of Policy Impact

  2. Identify Asks

  3. Create Outputs

  4. Build Advocacy Plan

  5. Make the Ask (and keep making it)

400

Types of policy research

People

Paper

400

Policy writing is....

Direct, thoughtful, straightforward, simple

Makes a recommendation 

400

Key Agency Powers

  • Pseudo-legislative power: Issue regulations

  • Pseudo-judicial power: Adjudicate actions 

  • Executive power: Manage and enforce government programs 


400

The 4 categories of outputs are... 

Informational

Solution

Supporting

Advocacy

400

Name 3 example asks of companies

  • Put out a press release

  • Make a public statement

  • Release a policy paper

  • Attend a conference

  • Build a new tool

  • Change the way a tool works

  • Donate money

500

Policy research is... (name 3 things)

1. It's quick

2. Requires prioritizing 

3. Assesses the nature of the problem, context of the policy ecosystem, provides info about potential solutions 


500

What are the components of a policy memo?

Executive summary, background, recommendations
500

Name 2 key differences in state/local gov vs. federal

- Balanced budgets

- Ballot measures + direct democracy


500

A suite of outputs should cover

  1. What your solution is;

  2. Why it is important;

  3. How it can be implemented; and

  4. The ways in which you can help make it happen

500

The 4 Ts of the advocacy campaign are...

  • Tactics 

  • Timing

  • Technology

  • Tell your story

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