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Volume 1: No. 3, July 2004
TOOLS & TECHNIQUES
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Download
the VERB Coolness Tip Sheet (PDF 313K) |
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Place is where the target audience either performs the behavior or accesses programs or services; place must be readily available to enable the desired action (5,6). A VERB place is where tweens can be physically active in a safe environment. As interest or demand rises, parents and communities need to increase the supply of accessible places and opportunities for tweens to be active every day. If the supply side is inadequate or inaccessible, tweens cannot act on their interest and intent to be more active. For VERB, a place may be a backyard, youth-serving organization, community-based organization, church, park or recreation department, school, public or private sports organization, business, government agency, or any other place that can provide facilities and year-round or periodic event-based opportunities for tweens to be physically active and have fun.
Partner organizations such as parks, schools, and youth-serving organizations can reap the benefits of tweens’ affinity for the VERB brand and interest in becoming more active. Keeping VERB a “cool brand for tweens” is a critically important goal for partners as they collaborate on the campaign. (More information on keeping VERB “cool” is available from the VERB Coolness Tip Sheet.)
Promotion is not simply the placement of advertisements — communication messages and activities are included as well, and those in charge of promotions must consider multiple ways to reach the target audience to promote the benefits of the behavior change, including its product, price, and place components (6,7). The following sections provide descriptions and examples of the VERB campaign’s messaging strategies, advertising and marketing strategies, and campaign tactics for reaching tweens and parents.
Messaging strategies
Advertising and promotions do more than merely sell the features of a
product; they depict a lifestyle that consumers aspire to achieve. By
association, consumers perceive the product as providing the means to a
desired outcome. In commercials, for example, a soft drink is more than a drink; it is a
social experience. Running shoes are more than footwear; they make a
statement about an individual’s lifestyle. In the VERB campaign,
commercial strategies for marketing to youth are applied to public health
and used to “sell” physical activity to tweens, creating a distinct
brand culture for VERB.
VERB aims to sell physical activity to consumers, but boys and girls cannot simply go to a store to buy it. Rather, tweens must develop a positive disposition to physical activity through a positive association and relationship with the VERB brand. To make the product of physical activity compelling and cool to tweens, VERB messages diverge from the “just-the-facts” delivery that is central to many public health campaigns. Rather than say, “Engage in moderate-to-vigorous physical activity for at least 60 minutes each day,” the campaign asks tweens to discover new activities they like to do.
The fact that the campaign’s brand name, VERB, immediately connotes action increases the audience’s comprehension of the brand. To inspire tweens to do their own VERBs (physical activities), the campaign does not simply tell tweens that physical activity is for all tweens, it shows them with appealing visuals. Casting for television and print ads includes children of varied racial and ethnic backgrounds, body weights, and ability levels — including children with disabilities — to convey a sense of “kids like me do this” and “I can do that.” VERB shows tweens playing backyard games in addition to participating in organized physical activities such as team sports.
If tweens are inspired by a VERB commercial and motivated to be active, parents will more likely support their participation. Had the campaign’s strategy primarily focused on asking parents to encourage their children to be active, however, tweens might not have embraced VERB as their own brand. The campaign would have taken on a parenting agenda rather than becoming something for tweens. Notably, VERB features positive “can do” messages, not negative adult-delivered or adult-enforced “must do” or “don’t do” messages.
Parents and others who influcence tweens are asked to support, recognize, and praise children for being active; to encourage them to try new activities; and to be physically active as a family or group. VERB gives tips on how to communicate to tweens and engage them in being active in creative, positive, and fun ways. At the same time, facts on the health risks of inactivity and excessive screen time and on the benefits of being physically active are messages for adults. The messages are further tailored for different audiences, especially ethnic audiences, to address the specific parenting priorities learned through audience research.
All VERB campaign messages and the way they are presented in ads (i.e., television, radio, print) are tested with tween-aged focus groups to ensure they are motivating, clearly understood, and resonating positively. The messages are tested primarily with mothers to ensure they are acceptable and not offensive or inappropriate.
View the VERB "Bumper sticker" ad | |
Advertising and marketing strategies
The VERB campaign strives for high brand awareness and affinity among
tweens. The theory is that when tweens are positively bonded with VERB, they
will be more receptive to messages about physical activity. In the first
year of VERB, marketing efforts were dedicated to creating and introducing
the VERB brand to tweens. As a previously nonexistent brand, VERB initially
had no value to tweens. To sell VERB successfully to tweens as “their
brand for having fun,” the campaign associates itself with popular kids’
brands, athletes, and celebrities, and activities and products that are
cool, fun, and motivating.
Communications for parents and tweens are separated from each other to maintain tweens’ positive affinity for the VERB brand and to avoid associating physical activity with something adults say “they have to do.” Tweens’ interests and trends evolve rapidly, whether the subject is music, clothing, electronics, or the enjoyment of being active. It is all about being “cool” to their friends and doing what’s popular. The delicate balance of keeping the VERB brand cool for tweens while relying on parents and other adult influencers’ support to help them be active is an ongoing campaign challenge.
VERB is distinct from traditional public service announcement (PSA) campaigns because advertising placement is purchased. In the first year of VERB, the campaign averaged 115 weekly gross rating points1 (GRPs) in the national television media market with 50 percent more GRPs in the high-dose communities. The purchase of media enables the campaign to control when and where advertising appears and to concentrate ad placement in delivery channels that reach the most tweens; popular delivery channels include kids’ television networks (e.g., Nickelodeon, Cartoon Network) and teen magazines (e.g., Teen People, Seventeen). Furthermore, it assures that tweens are sufficiently exposed to the advertising to recognize and develop a personal relationship with the brand and to understand the campaign’s messages to become active and have fun doing it. Having the funding to purchase media placements allows VERB to compete with commercial youth marketers to capture the attention and brand loyalty of tweens.
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Campaign tactics
VERB employs a broad mix of campaign tactics to reach tweens and their
parents. The campaign is designed to surround tweens at home, in school, and
in the community to give VERB visible presence in tweens’ everyday lives.
Paid media advertising. The primary vehicle for reaching into the home is paid advertising in general market and ethnic media channels. VERB commercials air on age-appropriate television and radio channels such as Cartoon Network, Nickelodeon, The WB, ABC Saturday Morning Disney (including Radio Disney), Telemundo, and BET. Print advertising is placed in youth publications such as Sports Illustrated for Kids, TIME for Kids, Teen People, and Seventeen. Examples of parent publications include Family Circle, Parent Magazine, Ebony, and Indian Country Today. Spanish and Asian in-language advertising and advertorials appear in publications such as Korea Times, World Journal, and Los Padres. (An inventory of current VERB advertising is available from http://www.cdc.gov/youthcampaign/ advertising/index.htm.)
Added-value opportunities. In addition to paid media placements, the campaign negotiates added-value opportunities from media partners. VERB’s media partners donate their talent and properties or placements to help promote VERB’s physical activity messages to tweens. For example, media partners have produced VERB PSAs using their television talent, such as the stars of The WB’s Gilmore Girls and 7th Heaven and properties such as Disney’s Kim Possible and Cartoon Network’s Courage the Cowardly Dog. The PSAs are aired in prime time during these shows. For parents, The WB produced VERB PSAs featuring Reba McEntire and CBS produced VERB PSAs featuring Deion Sanders. Other examples include VERB sponsorship of Nickelodeon’s Wild and Crazy Kids Show, Sports Illustrated for Kids’ Road Show, and Teen People’s Break for the Beach. These added-value PSAs and sponsorships increase the “cool factor” and marketing reach of the VERB campaign among tweens.
Activity promotions. Several times a year, VERB features promotions that invite community-based organizations and schools throughout the United States to participate. For example, in 2003, VERB proclaimed the day of the summer solstice (the longest day of the year) as the “Longest Day of Play” and created a promotion with Radio Disney to motivate tweens to be active all day long. During fall 2003, when the clocks were turned back one hour from daylight saving to standard time, VERB featured its “Extra Hour for Extra Action” (EHEA) promotion, which included a kit of innovative and fun VERB materials for teachers and youth-serving organizations to use in activating tweens. Participating EHEA schools and organizations were eligible to apply for a small grant to support physical activity at the end of the three-week promotion.
Download
the Weekly Reader (PDF 477K) This planner is also available in HTML format. |
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VERB
Student Planner 2003–2004 Download the current Student Planner (PDF 16mb). This planner is also available from VERB in HTML format. |
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Schools. School is a natural venue for reaching tweens; it also gives youth a prime opportunity to discover their interests and develop skills. For example, working with youth publications like Weekly Reader and TIME for Kids, VERB distributes custom-developed materials to middle schools throughout the country. Primedia’s Channel One allows VERB advertising to reach tweens through schools. In-school vehicles include book covers, day planners, and customized lesson plans that incorporate physical activity into the classroom and encourage tweens to try many different VERBs.
Community-based events and grassroots marketing. VERB participated in existing community events, including cultural festivals such as the Harvest Moon Festival (Los Angeles, Calif), Calle Ocho (Miami, Fla), and the Gathering of Nations Pow Wow (Albuquerque, NM). At these grassroots community events, VERB hosted an “activity zone,” a dedicated space for tweens to try out different activities such as kicking a soccer ball, dancing, performing martial arts, or other activities. Another community-based tactic is the use of “street teams,” teams of five to eight college-aged men and women hired to engage tweens in being physically active at events and tween hangouts, including malls, parks, and community centers. Street teams create buzz about VERB and build affinity for the brand as tweens tell their friends and siblings about their fun experiences and show off their VERB premiums. The street teams distribute VERB-branded premiums to tweens, such as foot bags, T-shirts, temporary tattoos, and Frisbee disks.
Contests and sweepstakes. To increase the value of the product and reward tweens for being active, many media partners sponsor VERB contests and sweepstakes. For example, Channel One sponsored a pedometer-based middle-school competition, Make Every Move Count. The schools that accumulated the most steps won an "Action Pack" of physical activity equipment and materials to support their physical activity programs. In addition, YM (Your Magazine) featured the VERB Move It to Groove It contest, where tween contestants competed to win a video dance party for their entire school.
Public relations. VERB continuously communicates with the news media, stakeholders, and partner organizations to offer information on the importance of youth physical activity to parents and other influencers and to spotlight current campaign activities, such as events and promotions. The campaign maintains good relationships with key members of the tween/teen and parent news media to keep them current on the campaign and to serve as resources for information about youth physical activity, childhood overweight, and related topics. News media materials are tailored to meet specific needs, media tours are conducted in key markets, and special news media coverage is arranged when appropriate.
Community partnerships. In the first year of VERB, the campaign developed local partnerships in the nine cities that received extra marketing activities to bring the VERB brand to life and to establish a foundation of support in those locations. Now, the goal of VERB is to recruit organizations across the country to become site partners (organizations that can provide opportunities for tweens to be physically active) or outreach partners (organizations that can reach parents or influence the environment to support tweens' participation in physical activity). The campaign is actively reaching out to organizations that have a network of affiliates or chapters across the country and also is contacting regional, state, and local organizations. (More information on VERB partnerships is available from http://www.cdc.gov/youthcampaign/partners/index.htm.)
VERB poster "It's What You Do. Native Style." | |
VERB poster "Sal y Juega." | |
Corporate partnerships. VERB also is seeking partnerships with corporations to extend the reach and appeal of the campaign to tweens. For example, VERB is successfully negotiating partnerships with professional sports leagues for its ProVERB initiative; those who have made commitments include the National Football League, National Hockey League, Major League Soccer, and Women’s Tennis Association. These sports leagues will provide content for the VERBnow.com Web site for tweens, donate athlete-signed merchandise for prizes, and provide opportunities for VERB sponsorship of their grassroots sports clinics.
Web sites. In partnership with AOL, VERB has created http://www.VERBnow.com, a Web site designed exclusively for tweens that includes the VERB Recorder, where tweens can report their participation in physical activity and become eligible to win prizes for being active. A parent site, http://www.VERBparents.com, includes in-language pages (Spanish, Chinese, Korean, and Vietnamese) in partnership with ethnic media partners. In addition, http://www.cdc.gov/VERB was created for partners and stakeholders to access information about the VERB campaign and to view advertising.
The VERB campaign is a public health and marketing partnership based on the social marketing principles of product, price, place, and promotion. It brings together a diverse array of public health, marketing, and community experts to engage tweens in being physically active every day by playing, having fun, and trying new VERBs, or new ways to be physically active. A lifestyle or behavior change such as increasing physical activity is difficult to achieve and even more difficult to sustain. One can speculate, however, that success in changing behavior among tweens is more likely to be achieved when the following conditions are met: consumers have an in-depth understanding of the product and price associated with it, they have easy access to appropriate places where they can perform the behavior in everyday life, and product promotion portrays benefits in a positive, appealing fashion and reaches audiences through channels they value.
Rigorous multiyear evaluation of the VERB campaign will determine its effectiveness in motivating tweens to be more active. To ensure objectivity, the CDC has retained an evaluation contractor. The outcome evaluation is designed as a nationally representative longitudinal study of more than 6000 tweens and their parents across the country, half of whom are from the six high-dose communities. A baseline survey was conducted before the campaign's launch in June 2002. Two follow-up surveys, one conducted in 2003 and one to be completed in 2004, will measure the effectiveness of the campaign. The evaluation methodology, a longitudinal dose-response analysis, controls for numerous baseline factors and allows evaluators to measure changes in physical activity specifically attributable to the VERB campaign.
The authors acknowledge and thank former CDC VERB campaign strategists Michael Greenwell, Suzanne Gates, and Claudia Parvanta; former campaign team members Jami Fraze, Victor Medrano, and Enbal Shacham; and current campaign staff Bill Wood, Wanda Price, Juanita Mondesire, Lula Anna Green, Heidi Melancon, Dana Robinson, Cynthia Mitchell, and Judy Berkowitz. We also thank the VERB campaign contractors Frankel (Chicago, Ill); Saatchi & Saatchi (New York, NY), Publicis Dialog (Chicago, Ill), Garcia 360 (San Antonio, Tex); G&G Advertising (Alburquerque, NM); A Partnership, Inc. (New York, NY); PFI Marketing (New York, NY); and Westat (Rockville, Md).
Corresponding author: Faye Wong, MPH, RD, VERB Campaign, Division of Adolescent and School Health (DASH), National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (NCCDPHP), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 4770 Buford Hwy NE, Mail Stop K-85, Atlanta, GA 30341-3717. Telephone: 770-488-6427. E-mail: fwong@cdc.gov.
Author affiliations: Marian Huhman, PhD, Lori Asbury, Rosemary Bretthauer-Mueller, Susan McCarthy, MPH, Paula Londe, VERB Campaign, DASH, NCCDPHP, CDC, Atlanta, Ga; Carrie Heitzler, MPH, VERB Campaign, Division of Nutrition and Physical Activity, NCCDPHP, CDC, Atlanta, Ga.
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