Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Tony Cox Community Fund Grantee Highlight

The long-term goal of the Tony Cox Community Fund is to facilitate an AIDS Service Organization with the resources in order to establish a long standing relationship with their local cable network, in order to partner a continuous joint effort in the fight against HIV/AIDS. This marriage of HIV prevention and media collaboration can be seen in the work done by The Penn Center for AIDS Research (CFAR) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 2006 and 2007.

In 2006, CFAR staff and interns developed a campaign to encourage young adults to develop positive HIV/AIDS prevention strategies by emphasizing the importance of knowing one’s status, entitled “The Join Those Who Know, Get Tested.” With support and funds from Cable Positive, CFAR was able to design a campaign to encourage the youth of Philadelphia to go and get an HIV test; utilizing adolescents in order to make a campaign that spoke their language, spreading the word out as effectively and quickly as possible.

The grassroots outreach for the campaign started as an anonymous campaign logo displayed on flyers and stickers posted throughout the city (by outreach volunteers) in venues such as: local universities, coffee shops, gyms, grocery stores, etc.; two weeks before the airing of the public service announcements, the logos were updated with the Join Those Who Know, Get Tested slogan, in addition to the campaigns’ website address and toll free phone number in order to schedule an HIV test. Media venue and HIV prevention collaboration was further strengthened when CFAR partnered with the National Cinemedia in order to have the PSA played in all the mainstream movie theaters in the Philadelphia County area, before every showing of every movie, from June 16th, 2006 to June 27th, 2006.

The combination of good production, ingenious marketing, strong collaborations, and a passion to get the message of HIV prevention and testing across in a new and fresh way paved the road for CFAR to obtain results at many different levels. Comcast was originally slated to provide $10,000 work of in-kind media donation and ended up providing over $53,000 work of media value support. The number of hits to the CFAR website markedly increased in the months following the PSA campaign, showing an increase in the community’s awareness of the agency. Lastly, the Join Those Who Know, Get Tested PSA and grassroots was adopted up by Philadelphia Fight’s as their official National HIV Testing Day campaign for 2007. The multi-tiered and innovative approach to HIV prevention, testing, and outreach, coupled with start up funds from Cable Positive’s Tony Cox Community Fund, and truly stellar support from Comcast, allowed for a strong and lasting marriage between HIV prevention and media promotion.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

TCCF 2008 Cycle 2 is just around the corner…

Did you miss the Tony Cox Community Fund 2008 Cycle 1 deadline? There is really no need to fret, as Cycle 2 is just months away; we anticipate a deadline of around September 14th, 2008.

For those agencies that were not able to apply for the TCCF 2008 Cycle 1, the question is why did you not make use of the only unrestricted media funds available to AIDS Service Organizations in the United States? There can be so many answers to this question: not enough time to complete the RFP (request for proposals), there is no staff to oversee the project, you feel your agency does not have the infrastructure to take on a PSA campaign, your agency does not have the staff to write the application, the agency could not get a cable partner agreement, the list can go on and on. The project may have seemed like an additional headache and that completion of the grant application was easier said than done, right? Well you may be correct in understanding that TCCF 2008 Cycle 1 might not have been the best time to submit an application for your agency, but what about Cycle 2? The next few months would be a great time to identify which staff can complete the application, oversee the project, implement the timeline, and start the process of securing a cable partner.

We at Cable Positive understand the additional work that a PSA project can provide to an agency that is already strapped by overworked staff, under developed budgets, growing numbers of clients, and the trappings of paperwork, paperwork, paperwork (can anyone say a COBRA service plan??, WE KNOW!). Yet, think of that traditional pro/con’s list when you are thinking about applying for Tony Cox monies; I can promise you that the pros will always win. While the grant initial grant application may seem taxing, the results can be tremendous, including: a partnership with a local cable system (that can only grow), increased agency clientele, agency branding, increased agency recognition within your community (and in the surround areas), increased participation in agency events, increase in potential grant monies from PSA exposure, etc. etc.

Remember that creative and innovative partnerships are fostered and sometimes those relationships come from taking a risk. Take risk on media, we promise it won’t hurt; apply for Tony Cox Community Fund 08 Cycle 2, coming to an ASO near you in September 2008.

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Ask not what you can do for media; ask what media can do for you!

Who has never found themselves parked on the couch, channel surfing, looking for something, anything to watch on television? Now picture a public education campaign (or public service announcement) for your agency’s HIV testing event flashes across the screen. Happily you can now settle into a program knowing that other channel surfers in your neighborhood have been educated about HIV and might take the opportunity to come to your agency’s event. This scene is not a fantasy, it is the main objective of Cable Positive’s Tony Cox Community Fund grant; what is different about TCCF is that is not a grant just to support an ASO’s programs, it is to encourage ASOs to use the media as a resource and to fund an ASO’s campaign, with the long term goal to help form a relationship between that ASO and their local cable network.

According to the Global Media AIDS Initiative, 72% of Americans identify television, radio, and newspapers as their primary source of information about HIV/AIDS; surpassing doctors, family, and friends as primary sources of information. Media organizations have an enormous sphere of influence on all demographics, defining what people wear, what they say, and even, what types of food they eat. Media frames products and ideas and allows them to enter our lives through mainstream points of entrance, i.e., our radios, televisions, computers, cell phones, iPods, etc.

Media’s role in HIV/AIDS prevention is vital; media allows for easy access to the homes of millions of people around the world. It allows for extremely pertinent information to be flow through trust worthy channels and be viable and accessible over an extended period of time. Media can, and has been used, to combat HIV/AIDS denial, stigma, discrimination, and apathy across all socioeconomic levels and can bring messages of tolerance and awareness through a medium that is available and accessible to most of the population. By working hand in hand with the media, ASOs can assure themselves that their HIV prevention message will reach as many of their target population as possible, while also serving to educate the general population at the same time; which is a win/win situation. Whether it is an HIV education podcast, radio commercial, or PSA, ASOs must continue to recognize the value of cable network partnerships and not be afraid to jump into these relationships feet first.

Friday, February 1, 2008

Greetings!!!

My name is Jennifer D. Medina and I am the new Director of Programs at Cable Positive. I have been working in the HIV/AIDS field for the past ten years; from my internship in Development to my work as a COBRA Case Manager and then Assistant Director of Health Education and Prevention, my years in the field have truly been phenomenal learning experiences. As I come on board to the Tony Cox Community Fund, I hope to use my HIV/AIDS prevention skills and meld them with the new cable industry language that I am slowly but surely learning! Although I am newly integrating into the Cable Positive family, I have been able to introduce myself to quite a number of grantees and I must say that I am extremely excited to continue the great relationships established.

Now some of you AIDS Service Organizations (ASOs) and Community Based Organizations (CBOs) out there are reading this blog and may be saying to yourself, what is Cable Positive and what is the Tony Cox Community Fund? Let me bring you up to speed! Cable Positive was founded in February 1992 by three concerned cable executives, with the mission of organizing cable's resources in the fight against AIDS. Our mission is to mobilize the talents, resources, access and influence of the cable and telecommunications industry to raise HIV/AIDS awareness; support HIV/AIDS education, prevention and care; and strive to end stigma by creating a more compassionate climate for people whose lives have been affected by HIV or AIDS. Cable Positive’s Tony Cox Community Fund is a national grant program that exists to encourage community-based AIDS Service Organizations (ASOs) and cable outlets to partner in joint community outreach efforts, or to produce and distribute new, locally focused HIV/AIDS-related programs and Public Service Announcements (PSAs). Over the years, the Tony Cox Community Fund has become one of the nation’s largest and most targeted HIV/AIDS grassroots funding mechanisms.

In layman’s terms, Cable Positive and its’ programs strive to be the liaison between the cable industry and national HIV/AIDS prevention efforts. Understanding that funding sources do not always allocate enough money for media outreach, the Tony Cox Community Fund works to bridge that gap. Through a grant of up to $7,000, the TCCF endeavors to produce public education messages, or public service announcements, for agencies that have a fantastic program that they would like to promote or a very important event (focused around HIV/AIDS prevention) that they would like to advertise to the television watching public, which is basically, all of us!! I look forward to seeing your submissions for Cycle 1, which are due on March 14, 2007. If you have any additional questions or need further clarification on what we do as an agency, please do not hesitate to contact me at either jennifer@cablepositive.org or at 212.459.1504.

Best Regards,