Knowledge Mobilisation and Comms Table
Knowledge mobilisation and communications compared
Knowledge mobilisation (KM) |
Communications |
|
Definition |
To bring different communities together to share knowledge to catalyse change |
To get key messages to mass audiences across cultures using a variety of channels and media. |
Overall purpose |
To generate impact through research-informed decision-making. Without KM there is no impact. |
To ensure target audiences know about research in a way that is meaningful for them and aligns with the goals of the research. Without comms there is limited awareness/reach. |
Key concept |
Transformation |
Transmission |
Emphasis |
Interactions. Localised. Relationship-building. Incremental. Targeting specific ‘right people’ to build network/ team to make changes happen. |
Mediated. Tailored. Targeted (at specific ‘right people’). Timely. Shared. |
Participants |
Researchers and anyone who can make the change happen – practitioners, policymakers, service users, parliamentarians, charities, managers etc |
Researchers and anyone who can help get the message out there - comms officers, press officers, partner organisations involved in research (e.g. third sector), media (print, broadcast, online), web team, designers, social media experts, multimedia content creators, PPI members etc |
Activities |
Networking, meetings, workshops, training, service changes, embedding new procedures, creative arts e.g. theatre, developing apps, system dynamics simulations |
Press releases, social media (e.g. Twitter), websites, newsletters, blogs, feature articles, podcasts, broadcasts (radio and TV), infographics, videos, posters, events.*
*online events are increasingly reaching mass and cross-cultural audiences |
Primary medium |
Conversations |
Written, visual and audio materials |
When start |
Before research question when topic is an idea |
Typically when funding announced but can start before then (e.g. if you want to help build case for or support for funding) |
Duration of effort |
On-going. Can last years. |
Lifetime of a project, usually weighted towards the end (results). |
Resources |
Needs time and money allocated for researchers, targeted participants and knowledge mobilisers to work together for months if not years. |
Flexible - there are usually paid for and free options for reaching target audiences. Time-intensive at specific points. Include researcher time as well as comms officer/press officer – we can’t do it on our own! |
NB KM and comms work well together. For example, people from different communities can come together to share knowledge about a particular topic (KM) with the intention of developing a video (comms). A Twitter campaign spreading research-informed messages (comms) can attract the attention of key influential individuals with whom researchers can build relationships to bring about changes (KM).
Created by Lesley Wye, Helen Bolton and Clare thomas, HPRU BSE November 2020