Yesterday's #Net2uganda #Meetup Training Event for NGOs on how to share compelling stories of their work went on well. The training was facilitated by two International Journalist Trainers from USA Bill Ristow and Theresa Morrow and it was hosted at Maendeleo Foundation Uganda in partnership with Mukono District NGO Forum and #Net2uganda
A great number of things were covered including writing tips as follows below:
-Yours must have a purpose
-You must use words that paint a picture of your story
-Use active words rather than passive
-Use short sentences
-Use contract
-Make your story clear
2. Telling your NGO’s story –
compellingly!
Good writing:
Helps the reader identify with the subject
Helps them see the real people you are helping
Puts a face with a story
Lets the community use their own words
3. Look around: What sounds do you hear? What colors
are in the room? What can you see that makes you
understand the person better?
Pay attention to what your senses are capturing, think
about which of those things help tell the story – and use
them
Telling:
“Forrest Whitaker’s life changed when he played Idi Amin.”
Showing:
“Forrest Whitaker’s forehead wrinkled into a frown as he
struggled to describe how his portrayal of Amin affected him.”
4. More examples
Acan Grace seems to float when
she moves despite the fact that she
is usually toting her one-year-old
twins.
The giraffe looked down at me, his
big brown eyes as calm as the
savannah evening.
5. Make your story come alive
What does she FEEL about her situation?
How old is she?
Where is she from, and what is it like there?
What does her little house look like? Does it flood in the
rain? How many people sleep there?
How many other children does she have?
What color are the clothes that she is wearing?
What is her hairstyle like?
MAKE ME SEE HER!
6. More writing tips
Your story has a
purpose
Show the problem OR
Show the cause OR
Show the impact OR
All three
Words that paint a
picture: She makes
necklaces in the
beautiful colors of the
earth.
Use active verbs rather than
passive:
He burst into the room NOT He
had entered the room
Short sentences
Use contrast
Make it CLEAR. If it is a
complicated issue, illustrate it
with people
And mostly:
READ IT ALOUD
& have someone else read it
7. Let them speak for
themselves
“BeadforLife brushed the dust off my soul.”
“There was so much excitement during the Mobile Solar Computer
Classroom training at our library, and so many people flocked to
the library with eagerness to continue with their computer skills.
With Maendeleo’s help we now have 10 laptops connected to the
internet and are able to provide valuable information to our library
users and researchers.”
-- Daniel Ahimbisibwe, a librarian at Kitengesa Community
Library
When you are talking about something big, start small.
8. Your “people” file
Collect quotes and visual material for proposals, annual
reports, PR, etc.
Interview the people you are helping to get their
testimonials – and emotions
YOU CAN’T HAVE ENOUGH of these things!*
*BUT make sure it is relevant to your project – and tell the
people how you are going to use it
9. Now, try it again
Go back to your earliest memory
Write about it again, using “show,
don’t tell”
What was happening around you?
How did you FEEL when it happened?
Make me SEE the memory
10. Documenting your project
1. Concept note
Summary of who you are, what your project
is, and why it’s important
2. Annual report
Market your NGO
11. 1. Concept Note (or Paper)
What does it include?
Context statement – Organization description, no more
than 300 words
Problem & rationale: What you are trying to solve and
specific issues you will address
Project goals and objectives
Strategy or activities– How you are going to do it. The
steps. And also the impact by the end.
Innovation & sustainability – What is different about
this project and how will it continue?
Financials
13. Pre-reporting
Before writing, research your own organization!
Know your community – and their participation
Know your Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and
Threats (SWOT)
Know your proposed budget – work it out
Know your donor!
Know your donor’s priorities and issues
Get the donor’s country strategy paper
Proposal guidelines
Previously funded projects & programmes
14. Context statement
THIS IS WHERE YOU GET TO SHINE
Anecdote – make it human!
Crisp description of organization
Be clear about your project proposal & its impact on the
community
Hook them in – you are advertising your project
15. Context statement - example
Please give a brief description of your organization, including its
vision, mission and date founded.
At a small library in the village of Busembatia, an elderly woman sits at
a computer next to a secondary school student. Using local-language
software, the student reads instructions from the screen to the woman,
who starts to giggle and then develops a huge smile as she starts
writing, using a simple Paint program. It is not only the first time she has
seen a computer: it is the first time she has seen her name written out.
The mission of Maendeleo Foundation is to help bring the power of
technology to the citizens of Uganda, a country where 87% of the
people live in rural areas plagued with endemic poverty and only 9% of
the total population has access to electricity. We overcome these
challenges using an innovative mobile classroom, computers powered
by solar energy, and our own teaching software, called emPower, that
works with all 42 languages spoken in Uganda.
16. Presenting the
Problem
Research
Country details: population, economy, etc.
Back-up info: Poverty statistics, employment, gender
issues, HIV/AIDS stats, etc.
Definition
The cause and the effect
Cause: No power in rural communities causes computer use to
be inaccessible.
Effect: Rural youth can’t get jobs, literacy slow,, etc.
Community perception of this problem – use “show,
don’t tell!”
“With computer
knowledge, I have hope
for my future,” said Opio.
“I want to be a doctor but
I’ll never get to
University if I am not
computer literate.”
17. Goals and Objectives
Goal is broad purpose, objective specific
and measurable
Goal: “Reducing the impact of natural
disaster over communities belonging to
the hilly region”
Objective: “Provide housing facilities to
earthquake-affected victims”
Include location and time frame for
objectives
18. Words in writing objectives
Use these …
Decrease…
Increase…
Strengthen…
Improve…
Enhance…
Not these …
Train
Provide
Produce
Establish
Create
19. Writing about activities and
results
Activities are what you
will do to accomplish
the project objectives
Tip: Show that the
community identified the
activities – not just you
Use numbers or a chart
so they can be tracked
easily
Monitor, monitor, monitor
20. Results and impact
The result happens because of the activities:
Activity: “X number of women participating
in training on gender development.”
Result: “X number of women aware of
gender rights”
Impact: There will be less domestic
violence …
21. Remember …
Stick to the donor requirements
Write a COMPELLING cover letter
Short – a preview of what you will prove
Use people affected
Show your impact
Demonstrate your innovative nature (not like anyone else)
Show sustainability
Be honest …
Use active verbs
22. Context statements: A review
When you write your 300 word draft context statement
Make it human
Make it clear
Anecdote
Crisp description of organization
Clear about your project proposal & its impact
on the community
23. 2. Annual Reports
Opportunity to build your brand
Advertises who you are
Demonstrates your accomplishments and
your mission, your success and your vision
Use it to inspire new donors, and motivate
current ones
Describe what you are doing, how well you
are doing it, and the difference you are
making in the world
24. Annual Report Includes
Photos and captions
Description of organization (history, etc.)
Financial statements
Objectives & activities
Reports on achievements and performance
Memberships and partnerships
Press coverage
Donor recognition
25. Annual Report: Make it
human
Do you present general summaries of your work? Or do
you tell real stories about real people?
Do you have masses of tables and numerical
comparisons? Or do you humanise your statistics with
individual profiles and examples from ‘the field’?
26. Connect to the reader
Photos and captions
Letter from executive
27. Financials: How the money
was used
When reporting on fundraising the emphasis should be
on how the money was used, not the detail of how it
was raised.