A commitment to partnership working
Key to the effective functioning of devolved areas is balancing (potentially) competing local priorities to develop and maintain strong relationships between the senior leadership, councillors, and council staff. A clear and unwavering commitment to work together at all levels is needed for communications staff to have the ability to communicate on devolution issues with one clear and impactful voice.
A good example of this is Greater Manchester, where there are strong relationships between the Mayor’s office and each of the ten Greater Manchester councils which make up the Greater Manchester Combined Authority. This has been fostered through many years of joint working following the establishment of the Association of Greater Manchester Authorities in 1986 as a voluntary collaboration that helped to shape policy and governance across the metropolitan area. A wide range of similar examples exist elsewhere in the world such as shared regional planning between the city-state of Berlin and the surrounding state of Brandenburg in Germany, or within Oregon, USA through a Metro Council aiming to advance regional planning goals.
“If we are the sum of our parts, we are a stronger whole.”
From a communications standpoint, devolution presents a very clear remit around advocating, promoting and seeking investment on behalf of the devolved area. The Mayor (or equivalent leader) is the directly elected voice of residents and councils who all work together to achieve common goals. Using unifying language like ‘more money’ and ‘fair share’ in public-facing communications helps indicate that the devolved authority is working on behalf of the wider region.
Communications teams shouldn’t underestimate how much time and effort is required to navigate local, regional and national politics. Having staff within the communications team that come with public affairs and political management experience is helpful, as is investing in supporting policy leads within the devolved authority to manage stakeholder relations. This requires constant attention, with tailored approaches for each individual project that the devolved authority leads on.
Teams should invest time in supporting the profile and activity of local councillors from across member authorities. This includes publicising the decision-making process within devolved areas and, in the case of mayoral combined authorities, illustrating the role that cabinet members play in this in conjunction with the Mayor. Examples of other ways in which the communications team can help to build positive relationships between local stakeholders include: making space for them to appear on the social media channels of the combined authority, engaging local democracy reporters to cover cabinet members on issues relevant to the devolved authority, and helping cabinet members with public speaking engagements (e.g. through supporting them with speaker notes to present cabinet papers).
It is also critical to develop strong relationships and partnership working arrangements with communications (and customer service) counterparts in constituent member local authorities early. Meetings should be held regularly to ensure everyone understands what the purpose of the devolved authority is (and communications within this). This won’t always be easy, but it is important to keep offering opportunities to talk, to find common ground and to try to keep separate from the local politics. Building a strong partnership – by recognising and supporting the priorities of different authorities - helps to develop a shared belief and commitment to partnerships, and to minimise reputation management issues. Communications practitioners can then build on this to foster a shared identity that sparks passion, interest and engagement about the devolved authority and the Mayor, and how this can support everyone in achieving their goals.
“You need to invest the time to build relationships with cabinet members, councillors, policy and communications. Building trust and mutual understanding doesn’t happen overnight.”
Recognising the value of strategic communications
Devolution communications is challenging for many reasons, not least because the form it takes in any given area will differ at different times, making it difficult to pin down. Knowing what success looks like and being able to shape and to deliver against the strategy to achieve success is crucial for communicators tasked with engaging potentially disparate stakeholder audiences.
Communications is critical in ensuring effective stakeholder engagement and management, and the most effective communications are strategically planned and delivered, with clear measurable objectives and intended outcomes, and rigorous evaluation. Direct lines of communication between the Head of Communications and the Chief Executive and/or Senior Management Team (SMT) are key in ensuring issues on the horizon can be foreseen and prepared for. In some cases this has been achieved through a governance structure that includes Communications within the SMT, while in others it is achieved through more formalised briefing processes and procedures.
“If you want to build trust the Head of Communications needs to be at the top table.”
The communications team will be most effective in delivering on the priorities of the devolved authority where it is valued as a strategic function, with direct access to senior management and the decision-making process, and resourced to deliver against the desired remit. Where communication is seen as something tactical and operational that happens at the end of a process – a press release - it severely limits the opportunity for communicators to plan strategically and help senior leaders to maximise the effectiveness of their messaging.
Establishing and leveraging a shared identity
To make people feel good about something, it is important to understand what forms the identity of an area/ place. In the context of a devolved area, you need to understand what brings people within the area together and what binds them as a collective under a shared identity relating to place. If people feel part of the same ‘club’ there is a shared feeling of identity.
For example, in the West Midlands, places like Birmingham, Coventry and the Black Country are very different areas, each with strong individual identities. But there is also a shared regional identity of being from the West Midlands, an identity grounded in the creation of the county over 25 years ago and bolstered through strategic communications uniting regional transport services under a common ‘West Midlands’ brand identity. Metro Mayor Andy Street commented at the launch of West Midlands Transport: ‘This is our chance to inspire a similar sense of pride and identity for people in our region and the transport links that connect their lives.’
Similarly, when the Tees Valley Combined Authority was created in 2016 it took on the remit of regional culture and tourism, with ambitions to attract 20 million visitors journeys to the region. The Tees Valley hadn’t had a regional tourism brand for nearly seven years before launching ‘Enjoy Tees Valley’ as a destination and marketing organisation, with a website, tourism service and brand. Campaign activation included the creation of large letters spelling ENJOY (in the style of the famous ‘Hollywood’ sign) which toured the region, gaining significant media and social media coverage and boosting awareness of a common identity as part of the launch and subsequent communications and marketing activations which also generated and augmented support from local authorities and private businesses.
To deliver effective citizen-focused communications in newly devolved areas it is critical to develop a deep understanding of the different identities that already exist. Where there is an existing shared identity (such as the Tees Valley or the West Midlands) then the communications team and leading figures like the Mayor should emphasise this. An example of successfully communicating the shared identity of the area is exemplified by the Mayor of Tees Valley, who doesn’t speak of a particular borough, but speaks of the five boroughs as one region: Tees Valley or, often for a more local audience, “Teesside, Darlington and Harltepool”. Where there is no existing shared identity, the communications team will need to foster a place-based identity that people from each of the member local authorities can relate to.
One example of this may be rallying around issues which impact different communities within the devolved authority, such as flooding, and ensuring that different members are engaging on shared social media channels. The LGA has guidance on creating a place brand that can be used to tell the story of your place.
Fostering a shared identity isn’t just important externally, but is also fundamental to the efficient functioning of a devolved authority. A significant body of research already exists highlighting the importance of shared identity on communications, teamwork and performance[1]. The challenge for newly devolved authorities is that they are often formed, relatively quickly, through combining staff from a range of different organisations, each with their own existing sets of practices, values and identities.
Aligning staff around a common identity relating to the work and aims of the devolved authority is something that can easily be overlooked, with an expectation that this will arise simply through joint-working. While collaboration will help people feel part of the same organisation, this can be expedited and made more efficient through staff buying in to a common vision and mission as early as possible in the authorities lifecycle. The communications team have an important role to play in fostering this identity through ensuring internal communications (messaging, branding, newsletters, on-boarding information etc.) consistently develop and reinforce this shared identity. Staff are the key advocates for a devolved authority. Having everyone pull together under a common banner will help in then presenting a unified front externally.
Keeping communications relevant and relatable
A lot of activity being undertaken within a newly devolved area is strategic and high level – it relates to pilot projects, feasibility studies, partnerships, and setting the infrastructure for future growth. Lessons from combined authorities suggest that most residents care little about civil governance structures, and more about the performance of services that impact on their daily lives, or flagship projects which impact on their sense of belonging and pride in an area. Focusing on these aspects helps to convey how devolution has added value to a region.
Businesses meanwhile require a clearer focus on the role of the devolved areas in attracting investment (through creating an environment that is attractive for businesses – in terms of skills, transport and infrastructure) and developing an international profile. As part of their communications toolkit, Cornwall Council created a plain English guide to the Cornwall devolution detailing exactly what devolution meant for specific devolved areas such as business support and rates, health and social care, and transport[2].
A tangible example of success in keeping communications relevant and relatable comes from the Tees Valley Combined Authority where, through collaboration amongst partner authorities, the Mayor was able to bring Teesside International Airport back into public ownership. The airport deal – a promise made in the Mayoral campaign –- included 817 acres of land and presented significant development opportunities to drive inward investment and the creation of new jobs. This presented a significant opportunity to communicate and illustrate the value that the Mayor and the combined authority brought to the Tees Valley. The 2022 Commonwealth Games is another example, where each member of the West Midlands Combined Authority has collaborated in setting the foundations for promoting a high profile event that benefits each authority.
Another mechanism for achieving cut through with audiences is to provide a human-interest angle, for example through case studies and personal experiences conveying the benefits of a scheme that the devolved authority has had responsibility for delivering. Traditional, print media tends to cover local authority areas and so stories have to be shaped and made local to be most relevant and relatable.
Leveraging the Mayoral profile
Communications teams will face an uphill battle in building another tier or structure of government in people’s minds. Instead, the opportunity for newly devolved areas is to centre communications around a key spokesperson or figurehead such as the Mayor and to rally partners across the private and public sector to work in collaboration for the benefit of both their interests and that of the whole devolved region.
Many communications teams in established combined authorities don’t push awareness of what the combined authority does; instead the Mayor is used as a proxy for the combined authority. The Mayor is a key figurehead for devolved authorities and can have a significant profile at both the regional and national level. As such they have a key role to play in facilitating successful communications through leveraging the attention that can be gained from local and regional media. Similarly, the Mayor’s social media account typically has a higher following than that of the devolved authority.
To maximise reach, the communications team can ensure that there is duplication of content across both the Mayor’s personal channels and those of the devolved authority, helping raise the profile of the devolved authority through the medium of the Mayor. There should also be recognition that Mayors have been successful in utilising their own profile and platform to act as ambassadors for initiatives that serve to support the region on both a national and international stage. As an example, the recent Institute for Government report on devolution highlights how the Mayor of London Sadiq Khan has been a ‘cheerleader for a form of gorgeous mosaic’, pro-development, city policy’[3].
Active dialogue with the public and businesses
Businesses have long been actively engaged in strategic planning decisions at a local and regional level, most recently through Local Enterprise Partnerships, which also form a key stakeholder in combined authority membership structures. A key trend over the past 10-15 years has been an increasing recognition of the importance of actively consulting and engaging with the public around decisions on policies and services that will impact them. This helps to not only ensure that they feel heard but that their expectations and needs are accounted for in design, delivery and communication.
At a local authority level, recent examples have included a multiplicity of citizens assemblies and juries on climate change. Where such public dialogue is done well – as has been the case in participatory planning activities in Barcelona ranging from roaming face-to-face on-street engagement[4] through to participatory online platforms such as Decidim.org[5]; and in the San Francisco Transbay Redevelopment Project [6]- it can provide a powerful vehicle for public involvement in decision making. Similar examples exist in relation to businesses, albeit using different structures (such as the Committee for Sydney or the more traditional London Chamber of Commerce and Industry). There are a wide range of digital platforms that now exist to support participatory planning, budgeting and consultations, as well as many experienced practitioners in public dialogue and citizens juries.
Devolved authorities would do well to leverage these tools and skills in maximising the opportunities for both the Mayor and authority staff to actively engage citizens in two-way dialogue. As highlighted by the Institute for Government[7], examples of this within combined authorities are relatively nascent and have tended to focus on specific subgroups. For instance, Greater Manchester and the West Midlands have both established ‘youth combined authorities’ – which serve both as a governance opportunity and development programme for those young people participating. The North of Tyne Authority, like both London and a number of other combined authorities, have successfully employed Mayor’s Question Time events to support opportunities for dialogue. Expanding on this, standardising and formalising an approach to ongoing public dialogue that are directly related to the planning and strategy process could be an inspired step for future combined authorities.
Think strategically and plan ahead
The communications team in a devolved authority has a hugely varied remit, both internally and externally due to the fluid nature of devolution. Newly devolved authorities will likely be inheriting a range of staff, including within the communications team. One of the first actions for the Head of Communications is to undertake some form of audit to identify what skills are available in the team and to map these against current and future need. The current trend is for a multi-disciplinary team (though with delineated lead responsibilities), rather than a team of specialists, enabling greater resilience and flexibility to account for the changing demands and budgets available for communications.
Examples of the kind of skills that may be required include:
- Marketing and creative skills. These are important initially as a range of work needs to take place in relation to corporate (re)branding around values and behaviours, and the associated corporate documents such as the staff induction pack, recruitment materials, brand guidelines, logos etc. Video content is also great for repurposing for repeated use in different circumstances. For example, when launching an environmental manifesto you might create a video summarising the key points with vox-pops from relevant stakeholder audiences. These can be shown on roadshows, party conferences, social media channels and internally on screens within the organisation.
- Public engagement. With changes in the nature of public expectations around accountability and involvement in decision making, the channels and skills required to engage with members of the public effectively are increasingly important. This includes understanding the opportunities presented by citizens juries, public dialogue and democratic structures for specific groups.
- Digital capabilities. The remit and priorities for the authority will change rapidly over time so it is important to ensure that there is sufficient flexibility in the digital channels (the website and social media accounts) used to accommodate this, and that search engine optimisation is set-up to increase the visibility of channels on topics relevant to devolved priorities.
- Crisis management. With a wider and more reactive remit, it is important that communications professionals in devolved authorities have the capacity and capability to manage a 24/7 response.
The communications team needs to be clear about organisational objectives, how these translate into communications objectives, and the audiences to reach in order to achieve those objectives. Evidence-based segmentations can help teams to target different people through different channels. This includes the effective use of digital channels - Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn - which enable targeting via paid for advertising and are likely to become increasingly important in the future. Having clarity on objectives also enables teams to evaluate the relative effectiveness of different campaign tactics, providing evidence on return on investment.
“Sending out a press release to all and sundry doesn’t work, you must target your audiences from the start, you’ve got to choose your communications and communicate at the right time.”