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Paper No. 263 Dr Sea Rotmann




Making Energy Efficiency
  Research Relevant
  A note on the evaluation of
   social media as a tool for
 engaging energy practitioners
        and consumers
  Authors: Dr Sea Rotmann, Amardeep Sandhu, and Dr Lauren
  Christie
Emissions in NZ

In   2008 -            45%              of the Green-House gases from energy




                            1%          increase every   3 years

NZ’s 2010 Energy Efficiency and Conservation Strategy reflects this by setting a


target of saving   55PJ           with targeted energy efficiency interventions


by   2025
Connecting with the Consumer
    – the promise of social media
There is great body of work around   influencing consumer
behaviour
                     Efficiency – including buying behaviours
                     Curtailment – conservation and energy saving
                     behaviours

Social Media           holds the promise of   a two-way
engagement
    Collaborative           Real time feedback      Permanent Access

  Nudge                  Overcome locational constraint    Evidenced
                                                           M&E
    Engage – Digital Natives                     Language of the
                    Alignment with capability    consumer
The Motivating Change
          Project
                   Can   social media

        extend the reach of researchers
                          to

         engage practitioners and end
             users of research?
Motivating Change Workshop

           Behavioural Innovators
           Workshop
                        Story Telling
                        Workshop
Issues with connecting research
    with research end users
• Dry, theoretical, scientific jargon, stats
• Driven by theoretical knowledge and
  publication and citation records
• Common public and decision-makers
  rarely read scientific journals, research
  reports or attend academic seminars
• Media only covers research findings if
  sensational
• Conferences are one-time events held
  at one location                    5
Some key questions
• Can we use social media to engage a larger
  audience for research?
• Can we create a smarter way of attending a
  conference?
• Can it act as an enduring, ‘living’ store of
  knowledge
• Can it engage end users of research
  beyond the workshops and solicit feedback
  and engagement?
• Can we use key decision makers and
  influencers to better transfer the message?
                                         6
The workshops




           7
Some outcomes
CHALLENGES & GROUP IDEAS TO OVERCOME:

Sea’s Challenge: Turning research into practice and measuring the impact

 •   Research outcome evaluation tool

Aaron’s Challenge: Encouraging business to undertake more research

 •   Lunches – elite/status element to them
 •   Peer level – top down-peer level – bottom up
 •   Give them tools to walk away with


Carl’s Challenge: Collaboration between different researchers and end users of research

 •   Council portal as a way of collecting community actions


Carolyn: Different partners’ needs

 •   Sort your own needs & goals first
 •   Do research and listen to the research – what people are saying
 •   Engage and understand partner needs
 •   What can each offer
 •   Give each a role of autonomy


Scott: Finance
                                                                            8
 •   Sharpen the message to investors
Some outcomes
DEVOLVE’N’SOLVE SESSION:

Plenary Examples:

Sandy (Business hat): people won’t adopt a product/service etc until it becomes a norm.  The barrier is that we need

someone to really ‘sell’ the product/service until it becomes a norm.  This selling needs to also be consultative as well.



Sea (Research, Policy hat):

1 – it is everyone’s problem: scientists-funders-NGO’s-thinkers/doers.  They are all linked but we don’t understand

each other and instead throw rocks at (blame) each other.  Goal is to close the loop between the agents.

2 – How can we use social media better (especially for professionals)?



Lee (NGO hat): we all know the layers that need to happen, however they are all expensive and time consuming and not
everyone has the resources to do them all (or do them properly).  We don’t have a NZ hub where we all thread our bits of
knowledge, projects, learnings into. 




                                                                                                           9
Some outcomes
Offers and pledges put on the table:

 •    Paul (NERI) – 1-year’s free membership to NERI (= access to capability map and resources on website etc)
 •    Liana (Hikurangi) – can hold this space for a bit to keep the conversations going (which is an offer of our time, alumni
      & networks, facilitation). 
 •    Sea (EECA) – funding for 1 more workshop.  Will continue with her master plan on demand-side research, IEA
      International best practice guide with end-user involvement, and 2 international conferences (will feedback to this
      group)
 •    Amardeep (Midas) – will give midas institute website & forum for next 6-months and help understand what works and
      doesn’t work
 •    Lee (WWF) – Treehouse as a meeting location for another workshop
 •    Molly Melhuish – sailing lessons on Sundays (to really teach energy efficiency, functional technology, and to learn how
      to sail)
 •    Diana (IUCN) – have a commission on education and communication.  There are two workshops coming up (in
      Auckland Jan 17th and Wellington Jan 18th) on strategising communication and sharing resources.  Email her for info. 
        ◦ Google ‘love not loss’ short video about communicating bio-diversity loss
 •    Paul (ATLA) – opportunity to be involved with a community wind-farm (based in the Wellington region)
 •    Richard Morrison (KCDC) – offered to do his eco design advisor consultancy job for whoever needs it




                                                                                                        10
Social Media Technologies
          used

    The consortium piloted social networking
              site   LinkedIn
                       and a

       website/blog/vlog

    that included media sharing as a way to
     initially trial reaction and participation
The Blog & Forum
The Midas Institute                blogged the entire workshop at
http://midasinstitute.org.nz/events/motivating-
change-workshop/.
The blogs included:
•Full High Definition Video posting of the Presenter Sessions
•Full High Definition Video posting of the Workshop Sessions
•Blog posts from various participants including the Chief Executive of the
Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority of New Zealand
•Each posting had the relevant attachments and supporting documents
(for example, the power points of the presentations).
•Each posting could be:
     • Commented upon
     • Rated – based on a 5 star basis (with 5 stars being the highest)
     • The comments could also be further commented upon
     • It could be shared on various sites (for example, Twitter, Facebook
       and Digg).
Findings – Reaching a wider
                  Audience
950%      increase in participants    Over   47%    were repeat visitors




77%      of the visits were          An average visitor visited   5+
direct                               postings
Findings – Reaching a wider
                 Audience

        13 additional countries
Viewed in                         46%      attendees not from
                                  Wellington
Findings of usefulness of
          social media
√ Reached a wider audience
√ Storage of knowledge
√ Engaged the end users beyond the
     duration of the workshop

?   Solicit Feedback from the end users

?   Effectiveness of Key Opinion Leaders
Findings
• Some Qualitative and Intangible
  Findings are:
  – Use of Online Special Interest Group to
    link researchers with research end users
  – A wider mix of practitioners and end users
    than usually presented at such events
  – Interest in the creation of NZ motivating
    change community
  – Interest and input into future events
  – Pledges and offers of help
Discussion – What went well

Interest in   Participation


       Wider Engagement                with the Research and
       Community groups



               Establishing   Connections and
                              Commitment
Discussion – What else was
                 learnt ?
        cultural issues in close societies
Are there                                    in their

use of social media?


     Language differs
Social Media                   from

Research Language
Fostering engagement through ensuring
trust and
keeping the discussion professional
Some feedback on use of
             social media
   “It's accessible, convenient to me, and stays on the web.”
   “It enables easy sharing of links to reference material.”
   “Being able to watch presentations again and pull out what I think are the key points.”
    “Can access at any time.”
“The range of people there is potential to connect with.”
“That there is more freedom for and less inhibition against putting forward and
  responding to wide ranging ideas.”
“You can secretly 'stalk' the questioners and respondents to inform your own knowledge
  of who is who and what their knowledge and views are.”
“That you can quickly tap into global perspectives and comments.”

          “That it will make little difference to anything at all.”
          “That what turn out to be key ideas can get lost in the general volume of traffic
            generated.”
          “Limited shared learning of experiences and ideas - no "brainstrorming"
            potential.”
          “The interest fades and the discussion discontinues meaning the potential is
            not reached.”
      “The fear that my questions / comments will seem lame as everyone knows more than
        me!”
      “It significantly reduces the number of participants to those comfortable using that
        form of discussion.”
      “That my personal views are taken to reflect the views of my organisation.”
      “That I sound like an arse - I get something wrong or someone else contradicts or
        berates me.”
                                                                              19
Questions?

   sea.rotmann@eeca.govt.nz



   paul@neri.org.nz



   amardeep.sandhu@midasinfomedia.com




                              20

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Making energy efficiency research relevant

  • 1. Paper No. 263 Dr Sea Rotmann Making Energy Efficiency Research Relevant A note on the evaluation of social media as a tool for engaging energy practitioners and consumers Authors: Dr Sea Rotmann, Amardeep Sandhu, and Dr Lauren Christie
  • 2. Emissions in NZ In 2008 - 45% of the Green-House gases from energy 1% increase every 3 years NZ’s 2010 Energy Efficiency and Conservation Strategy reflects this by setting a target of saving 55PJ with targeted energy efficiency interventions by 2025
  • 3. Connecting with the Consumer – the promise of social media There is great body of work around influencing consumer behaviour Efficiency – including buying behaviours Curtailment – conservation and energy saving behaviours Social Media holds the promise of a two-way engagement Collaborative Real time feedback Permanent Access Nudge Overcome locational constraint Evidenced M&E Engage – Digital Natives Language of the Alignment with capability consumer
  • 4. The Motivating Change Project Can social media extend the reach of researchers to engage practitioners and end users of research? Motivating Change Workshop Behavioural Innovators Workshop Story Telling Workshop
  • 5. Issues with connecting research with research end users • Dry, theoretical, scientific jargon, stats • Driven by theoretical knowledge and publication and citation records • Common public and decision-makers rarely read scientific journals, research reports or attend academic seminars • Media only covers research findings if sensational • Conferences are one-time events held at one location 5
  • 6. Some key questions • Can we use social media to engage a larger audience for research? • Can we create a smarter way of attending a conference? • Can it act as an enduring, ‘living’ store of knowledge • Can it engage end users of research beyond the workshops and solicit feedback and engagement? • Can we use key decision makers and influencers to better transfer the message? 6
  • 8. Some outcomes CHALLENGES & GROUP IDEAS TO OVERCOME: Sea’s Challenge: Turning research into practice and measuring the impact • Research outcome evaluation tool Aaron’s Challenge: Encouraging business to undertake more research • Lunches – elite/status element to them • Peer level – top down-peer level – bottom up • Give them tools to walk away with Carl’s Challenge: Collaboration between different researchers and end users of research • Council portal as a way of collecting community actions Carolyn: Different partners’ needs • Sort your own needs & goals first • Do research and listen to the research – what people are saying • Engage and understand partner needs • What can each offer • Give each a role of autonomy Scott: Finance 8 • Sharpen the message to investors
  • 9. Some outcomes DEVOLVE’N’SOLVE SESSION: Plenary Examples: Sandy (Business hat): people won’t adopt a product/service etc until it becomes a norm.  The barrier is that we need someone to really ‘sell’ the product/service until it becomes a norm.  This selling needs to also be consultative as well. Sea (Research, Policy hat): 1 – it is everyone’s problem: scientists-funders-NGO’s-thinkers/doers.  They are all linked but we don’t understand each other and instead throw rocks at (blame) each other.  Goal is to close the loop between the agents. 2 – How can we use social media better (especially for professionals)? Lee (NGO hat): we all know the layers that need to happen, however they are all expensive and time consuming and not everyone has the resources to do them all (or do them properly).  We don’t have a NZ hub where we all thread our bits of knowledge, projects, learnings into.  9
  • 10. Some outcomes Offers and pledges put on the table: • Paul (NERI) – 1-year’s free membership to NERI (= access to capability map and resources on website etc) • Liana (Hikurangi) – can hold this space for a bit to keep the conversations going (which is an offer of our time, alumni & networks, facilitation).  • Sea (EECA) – funding for 1 more workshop.  Will continue with her master plan on demand-side research, IEA International best practice guide with end-user involvement, and 2 international conferences (will feedback to this group) • Amardeep (Midas) – will give midas institute website & forum for next 6-months and help understand what works and doesn’t work • Lee (WWF) – Treehouse as a meeting location for another workshop • Molly Melhuish – sailing lessons on Sundays (to really teach energy efficiency, functional technology, and to learn how to sail) • Diana (IUCN) – have a commission on education and communication.  There are two workshops coming up (in Auckland Jan 17th and Wellington Jan 18th) on strategising communication and sharing resources.  Email her for info.  ◦ Google ‘love not loss’ short video about communicating bio-diversity loss • Paul (ATLA) – opportunity to be involved with a community wind-farm (based in the Wellington region) • Richard Morrison (KCDC) – offered to do his eco design advisor consultancy job for whoever needs it 10
  • 11. Social Media Technologies used The consortium piloted social networking site LinkedIn and a website/blog/vlog that included media sharing as a way to initially trial reaction and participation
  • 12. The Blog & Forum The Midas Institute blogged the entire workshop at http://midasinstitute.org.nz/events/motivating- change-workshop/. The blogs included: •Full High Definition Video posting of the Presenter Sessions •Full High Definition Video posting of the Workshop Sessions •Blog posts from various participants including the Chief Executive of the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority of New Zealand •Each posting had the relevant attachments and supporting documents (for example, the power points of the presentations). •Each posting could be: • Commented upon • Rated – based on a 5 star basis (with 5 stars being the highest) • The comments could also be further commented upon • It could be shared on various sites (for example, Twitter, Facebook and Digg).
  • 13. Findings – Reaching a wider Audience 950% increase in participants Over 47% were repeat visitors 77% of the visits were An average visitor visited 5+ direct postings
  • 14. Findings – Reaching a wider Audience 13 additional countries Viewed in 46% attendees not from Wellington
  • 15. Findings of usefulness of social media √ Reached a wider audience √ Storage of knowledge √ Engaged the end users beyond the duration of the workshop ? Solicit Feedback from the end users ? Effectiveness of Key Opinion Leaders
  • 16. Findings • Some Qualitative and Intangible Findings are: – Use of Online Special Interest Group to link researchers with research end users – A wider mix of practitioners and end users than usually presented at such events – Interest in the creation of NZ motivating change community – Interest and input into future events – Pledges and offers of help
  • 17. Discussion – What went well Interest in Participation Wider Engagement with the Research and Community groups Establishing Connections and Commitment
  • 18. Discussion – What else was learnt ? cultural issues in close societies Are there in their use of social media? Language differs Social Media from Research Language Fostering engagement through ensuring trust and keeping the discussion professional
  • 19. Some feedback on use of social media “It's accessible, convenient to me, and stays on the web.” “It enables easy sharing of links to reference material.” “Being able to watch presentations again and pull out what I think are the key points.” “Can access at any time.” “The range of people there is potential to connect with.” “That there is more freedom for and less inhibition against putting forward and responding to wide ranging ideas.” “You can secretly 'stalk' the questioners and respondents to inform your own knowledge of who is who and what their knowledge and views are.” “That you can quickly tap into global perspectives and comments.” “That it will make little difference to anything at all.” “That what turn out to be key ideas can get lost in the general volume of traffic generated.” “Limited shared learning of experiences and ideas - no "brainstrorming" potential.” “The interest fades and the discussion discontinues meaning the potential is not reached.” “The fear that my questions / comments will seem lame as everyone knows more than me!” “It significantly reduces the number of participants to those comfortable using that form of discussion.” “That my personal views are taken to reflect the views of my organisation.” “That I sound like an arse - I get something wrong or someone else contradicts or berates me.” 19
  • 20. Questions? sea.rotmann@eeca.govt.nz paul@neri.org.nz amardeep.sandhu@midasinfomedia.com 20

Editor's Notes

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  3. Out here you can start with that reduction in energy consumption is predicated on people changing their behaviours. A lot of work has been done in this area – but the key is getting to communicate with the consumers – end users. Social media offers two way engagement\n
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