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Essay campaign
1. Humaira Begum 11y C&M Campaign
The nature and purpose of campaigns
The two campaigns I have chosen to look at are the NHS Smoking campaign, Think! Drink
Driving campaign. I think that all these campaigns are important because they talk about
saving people’s lives and helping people to do the right thing in life.
The NHS Smoking campaign was launched to allow people to know that the NHS can help
them to quit smoking and how smoking can have an effect on you and those around you. This
campaign was supported by posters which tell you that if you’re hooked onto cigarettes the
NHS can get you hooked off them. They were also supported by several television adverts. I
looked on the NHS website and Tangina, Rubina and I created a presentation to show our
class.
We looked at the NHS Smoking website to find out this information in our presentation. I think
that after making and presenting the power point to our class it had made me more aware on
the affects smoking can cause on pregnant smokers and also people around those that are
smoking. I am more aware about this issue because my dad smokes and my older sister has
asthma and it affects her a lot more then me and because she can’t breath in small place and
where there is somebody smoking.
The NHS website tells you what you need to know about smoking. You can also contact them
to get more information about smoking and how to quit.
2. Humaira Begum 11y C&M Campaign
The NHS smoking website has stories of real life quitters to help smokers to quit and find out
how others got through quitting smoking. This is the story of Beverly and Alishia, Edgware
who are mother and daughter from London.
Real Life Quitters - Beverly and Alishia, Edgware: http://smokefree.nhs.uk/real-life-quitters/
3. Humaira Begum 11y C&M Campaign
I watched the video below and found out that all the people that went to the NHS for help tried
to quit smoking on there own many times but they were unsuccessful. They tell us how they
quit and how they feel now about smoking. A couple tell us they use to smoke up to 60
cigarettes a day. They tell us that they saved over £500 a month which makes it £6,000 in a
year and now they plan to go to Kenya for holiday because of how much money they are
saving. In this video a man says that him and 9 other colleges of his went together to quit
smoking and 9 out of 10 of them actually quit smoking.
4. Humaira Begum 11y C&M Campaign
This poster shows how much damage
pregnant smokers can do to there unborn
baby. The bold red text “STOP TODAY!” is
showing that if you stop smoking rite now
you will be saving your baby from being a
smoking addict and be a different from a
normal child. The text is in red because it is
the most important information on the
poster. The other text is in white and bold
because that piece of information is
important too. I think that this text
“SMOKING WILL SERIOUSLY DAMAGE
THE HEALTH OF YOUR UNBORN
CHILD. FOR THEIR SAKE STOP
TODAY!” is good because it shows the
audience that your child could be really
unhealthy and might die at a very young
age. The image of the unborn baby with
smoke around him/her shows that his/her
mother is a smoker and is risking his/her
life because she is damaging herself and
her child. I think that the image is really
successful on getting the message across
because it shows how a mother can take
there child’s life away and how it can affect
your child’s health in many ways. The NHS
logo is in the corner to show that the poster
is with the NHS.
I think that this campaign is really successful because on there website they have real life
stories of people that quit smoking and there is a video that tells you how and what they did to
quit smoking.
You can visit the URL below to read real life quitters stories:
http://smokefree.nhs.uk/real-life-quitters/
“About 21% of Brits aged over 16 are smokers. And of those aged between 20 and 24, more
than 30% smoke. That means that kissing a quarter of the population of Britain is like kissing
an ashtray. It’s not just your breath that smells. Smoking dulls the skin, causes wrinkles
around the mouth and makes you look older.”
“Smoking causes more than 80% of deaths from lung cancer, bronchitis and emphysema
(chronic breathing difficulty), and a quarter of deaths from heart disease.”
http://www.nhs.uk/Livewell/men1839/Pages/Stubitout.aspx
5. Humaira Begum 11y C&M Campaign
This smoking
calculator shows
that there are about
4,000 poisonous
chemicals in the
tobacco smoke
entering your lungs.
This smoking
calculator shows on
average how much
a smoker that
smokes up to 20
cigarettes a day will
save in up to 10
years. After 10 years
they could save up
to £21,900.
The Think! Drink Driving campaign is a little similar to the NHS smoking campaign because
they both try to save other peoples lives and preventing deaths from happening. The Think!
Drink Driving campaign was created to make people aware about road safety and drink
driving affects you and everyone around you.
This campaign is about making people aware that road safety is a really big thing in life
because every day people get killed because of drink driving. The aim of this campaign is to
stop drink driving and deaths on the road caused by drivers and encouraging the belief that 1
or 2 drinks before driving is too much and not worth the risk.
The THINK! Drink Drive campaign aims to:
• increase awareness of the personal consequences of a drink driving conviction
• encourage the belief that 1 or 2 drinks before driving is too many and not worth the
risk
• reinforce and build the social stigma around drink driving
• Offer in-pub solutions to help drivers avoid consuming alcohol if they know they are
going to drive
The current campaign targets 1-3 pint drink drivers, not ‘drunk drivers’, with a particular focus
on young men aged 17-29 years old. It doesn't focus on the increased risk of a crash, as our
research has found that young men believe:
• a crash is unlikely after 1 or 2 drinks
6. Humaira Begum 11y C&M Campaign
• drink drive ads showing a crash are not relevant to them but to people who drive
when drunk
• they're more likely to be over the limit and caught after 1 or 2 drinks
We found that the long-term implications of drink driving, such as imprisonment or a criminal
record, a 12 month driving ban or an endorsement that stays on your licence for 11 years are
much more shocking and compelling to this audience than the risk of crashing and harming
themselves or others.
Key messages for Christmas 2010:
• THINK! Don't drink and drive
• Get convicted of drink driving and you’ll be processed like any other criminal
Think! Drink Driving:
http://www.dft.gov.uk/think/focusareas/driving/drinkdriving?
page=Campaign&whoareyou_id=/think/whoareyou/teens
I looked on the Think! Drink driving website to find out information about the campaign. I
found out that the campaign is about people, about the citizens, about all of us. This
campaign was launched to reduce the amount of road casualties by 2010.
This is a statement from there website that tells us that they want roads to be safer for
everyone and want to stop drink driving.
" Tomorrow's roads: safer for everyone ".
About THINK!
The UK Government has an objective of reducing road deaths and serious injuries by 40 per
cent (50 per cent for children) by the year 2010 (using the average for 1994-98 as the
baseline). Key factors in achieving that objective are improved road user behaviour and
acceptance of engineering and enforcement initiatives that increase road safety. Education
and publicity play a key role in raising consumer awareness and acceptance.
Our road safety publicity aims to:
• ensure that there is a high profile for road safety as a matter for general concern
• complement police and local authority activities
• encourage broader support from private sector partners
• get across specific messages to target audiences
• generate media interest in road safety issues
It does this by:
• involving a broad spectrum of society in promoting safer roads for everyone
• encouraging and reinforcing attitudes that lead to safer and more considerate
behaviour by all road users
• promoting understanding of the need for better road safety behaviour
• contributing to the general aim of reducing road casualties and meeting the casualty
targets for year 2010
7. Humaira Begum 11y C&M Campaign
Our basic approach is national publicity using a mix of emotion and facts that raise the profile
of road safety. We utilise a range of media channels - TV, radio, press, posters, ambient etc. -
to provide a national platform to stimulate complementary regional and local authority activity
and to encourage private sector companies to cascade messages to their employees and
customers. A range of free publicity material is made available to local authorities and others
to promote consistency of messages at national and local level. We have also entered into
sports sponsorship with the Rugby Football League and the English Football League to
enable us to get our messages across to a wider audience using a celebrity based approach.
Road Safety advertising has been a key priority for many years. In the past, advertising
focussed on specific themes such as drink drive and Seat belts. In recent years we have
communicated many more messages - such as fatigue and use of mobile phones. We wanted
people to see that these extra individual messages were part of an overall campaign to
improve road safety. So in June 2000, we launched a new campaign under one banner -
THINK! - to unite our various road safety messages.
The rationale for THINK!
The aim of Government road safety campaigns is to reinforce the need for drivers and other
road users to take responsibility for their own safety and for the safety of others on the road.
In the wider context, the theme of personal and social responsibility is central to the
Government's philosophy and to its transport policies to encourage more responsible travel
choices.
The encouragement of more people to walk or cycle instead of driving makes the promotion
of safety for more vulnerable road users and the responsible and considerate behaviour of
drivers even more important.
Road safety publicity campaigns raise public awareness that accidents do not just happen,
rather they are caused. Public awareness campaigns can help to influence the attitudes and
behaviours that cause accidents. They also create public acceptance for safety engineering
and police enforcement and they give national focus and context for local initiatives aimed at
making the roads safer and for third parties to carry road safety messages in the context of
their own commercial activities.
The THINK! campaign was therefore launched:
• To contribute to achieving the targets for road casualty reduction by year 2010, as set
out in the Government's policy strategy document " Tomorrow's roads: safer for
everyone ".
• To use all the marketing tools available to us to get across road safety messages
effectively and meaningfully.
• To draw together a wide range of road safety messages under a single concept.
• To get across specific advice to road users while impressing on all the need to
THINK! while using the road.
• To help to stimulate a year round presence under a new road safety brand.
• To encourage new partnerships to associate with the brand in promoting road safety.
The THINK! campaign is not about the motorist as such, or the pedestrians, or cyclists, motor
cyclists, etc. It is aboutpeople, about the citizen, about each and all of us. It is about how we
all use our roads safely, whether we happen to be motoring, walking, cycling or whatever.
This is mainly to build a mood of "we're all in it together" to have greater effect.
8. Humaira Begum 11y C&M Campaign
The expression, "show me the child at seven and I'll show you the adult" neatly encapsulates
our approach. We target people from childhood to adulthood, aiming to instil good practice at
a very early age with frequent reminders for teenagers and adults.
For 2008/9, we have developed separate child and adult marketing strategies - although both
will continue under the THINK! banner. The reason for separation is that in the case of
children and young people we are trying to influence the formation of habits, whereas with
adults we are trying to persuade people, mainly drivers, to change sometimes entrenched
habits.
Think! Drink Driving: http://www.dft.gov.uk/think/about?whoareyou_id=
This poster is
showing that you
will get caught
drink driving even
if you have done it
only one time.
The writing “GET
CAUGHT DRINK
DRIVING AND
YOU’LL BE
PROCESSED
LIKE ANY
OTHER
CRIMINAL” is in
bold grey writing
to show the
importance and it
is the only piece
of text on the
poster. The image
in the background
shows a locked
up cell door with a
man looking
through the hole
on it. This poster
is really effective
because it shows
where you will be
if you drink drive
and get caught by
the police.
I think that the Think! Drink Driving campaign was successful because many people have
been caught drink driving or attempting to drive after a drink. Some people know not to drink
9. Humaira Begum 11y C&M Campaign
drive because of the fines that they will be getting. On the Think! Drink Driving website it tells
you what fines you will get if you drink drive or even attempt to drink drive.
Drink driving
Sobering-up tricks do not work
Coffee and cold showers the morning after a night out don't help you sober up. Time is the
only way to get the alcohol out of your system and you could still be over the legal limit many
hours after drinking.
Drink driving and the law
The legal consequences of a drink driving conviction are severe and long-lasting.
Causing death by careless driving when under the influence of drink or drugs = 14
years' imprisonment, together with an unlimited fine, disqualification from driving for at least 2
years and a mandatory extended driving test.
Driving or attempting to drive while above the legal limit or unfit through drink or
drugs = 6 months' imprisonment, together with a fine of up to £5,000 and disqualification from
driving for at least 12 months (3 years if convicted twice in 10 years).
Being in charge of a vehicle whilst above the legal limit or unfit through drink or
drugs = 3 months' imprisonment, a fine of up to £2,500 and discretionary disqualification from
driving.
Refusing to provide a specimen of breath, blood or urine for analysis = 6 months'
imprisonment, together with a fine of up to £5,000 and disqualification from driving for at least
12 months.
Think! Drink Driving: http://www.dft.gov.uk/think/focusareas/driving/drinkdriving?
page=Advice&whoareyou_id=
On the website it also show some of the accuses many people use when they get caught.
They don’t even think about how drink driving can affect there lives and other peoples live so
much. They could get there elves or someone else killed of seriously injured which could
change their life forever.
No drinks, no excuses
'I had a drink, but it was at lunchtime.'
Even a small drink at lunchtime makes you sleepier and impairs your driving.
'I feel fine to drive.'
Any amount of alcohol affects your judgement.
'I've only had a couple.'
Even a single drink makes you drive less well.
'I've had a meal.'
Alcohol still gets into your system and affects your driving.'
10. Humaira Begum 11y C&M Campaign
'I can handle my drink.'
Alcohol affects everybody's driving for the worse. It creates a feeling of overconfidence,
makes judging distance and speed more difficult and slows your reactions so it takes longer
to stop.
'I'm only going down the road.'
A large proportion of all drink drive crashes occur within three miles of the start of the journey.
'I'm driving slowly and carefully.'
Alcohol actually makes you less alert and careful, however slowly you drive.
Think! Drink Driving: http://www.dft.gov.uk/think/focusareas/driving/drinkdriving?
page=Advice&whoareyou_id=
The Think! Drink Driving have partners that offer support in communicating the don’t drink
drive message to the publics.
Drink driving
A wide range of partners provide valuable support in communicating the Don’t Drink and
Drive message to the public.
This Christmas, our primary partnership focus is our Driver Friendly initiative which launched
in December 2009. However, your organisation can still support the campaign outside of this
area - simply get in touch with think@23red.comwith details of how you would like to be
involved.
What is Driver Friendly?
Driver Friendly aims to improve the night out experience for designated drivers and
encourages them to stick to soft drinks through a range of benefits and offers.
Thousands of pubs, bars and restaurants throughout the country have been involved in the
initiative, along with the soft drinks industry.
Coca-Cola GB is leading the way for Christmas 2010, and their Designated Driver promotion
is part of an ongoing planned programme of Driver Friendly promotions.
The Designated Driver campaign will be live in approximately 8,000 pubs from the 10th-31st
December, and provides drivers with a buy one, get one free offer on Coke and Diet Coke.
How can my venue/organisation become Driver Friendly?
11. Humaira Begum 11y C&M Campaign
1. It’s simple. Provide some form of offer linked to the purchase of non-alcoholic drinks,
to reward drivers. If you are running the Coca-Cola promotion, you are already doing
this for Christmas 2010.
2. Display the Driver Friendly window sticker in your pub door/window for as long as you
are running Driver Friendly promotions. (Please remove whenever you are not
running a promotion.)
How can the Driver Friendly team help you run promotions?
The THINK! partnerships team can supply you with a Driver Friendly promotional kit to enable
you to run your own offer, plus make sure you are updated on any future promotional offers
available to run in your pub.
To register for your kit and become an official Driver Friendly partner, contact us
on think@23red.com .
When you receive your kit, please be aware that you will be contacted by
the partnerships team to confirm the offer(s) you plan to run.
Driver Friendly partners for Christmas 2010
Leading drinks manufacturer Coca-Cola is pleased to be continuing their partnership
with Driver Friendly to encourage more people to share safer driving over the 2010 festive
period. Coca-Cola's Christmas 2010 ‘Designated Driver’ campaign follows on from the
success of last year, allowing thousands of venues across the country to reward designated
drivers with free Coke and Diet Coke during December. Leading on-trade venues involved
include:
To find a Driver Friendly venue near you, visit the Coca – Cola pub finder tool here.
The THINK! Drink Drive campaign and Driver Friendly initiative is also supported by the
following industry bodies:
The British Beer and Pub Association is pleased to support THINK! through promoting
THINK! campaigns to our members and through them to Britain's pubs. THINK! Don't Drink
and Drive campaigns are vital in complementing the BBPA's clear message - if you are
having a drink, then leave your car at home.
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The British Soft Drinks Association is pleased to support THINK! and theDon't Drink and
Drive message. Enjoy a soft drink instead.
Think! Drink Driving: http://www.dft.gov.uk/think/focusareas/driving/drinkdriving?
page=Partners&whoareyou_id=/think/whoareyou/teens
Driver tiredness
The facts
Driver sleepiness is estimated to account for around one fifth of accidents on major roads,
and is responsible for around 300 deaths per year.
THINK! strategy for driver tiredness
The March 2008 THINK! driver tiredness campaign was launched as part of our wider Driving
for Work campaign. Research has shown that people who drive for work behave in a risky
way on the road, including driving while tired. The fatigue campaign has been developed with
the work driver as a key target audience.
Think! Drink Driving:
http://www.dft.gov.uk/think/focusareas/driving/386095?
whoareyou_id=/think/whoareyou/teens&page=Overview
Both of the campaign messages was to help the world be a better place and stopping deaths
from happening. The NHS Smoking campaign and the Think! Drink Driving campaign both
have similarities because they are both here to save lives. They also have some differences
because the NHS Smoking campaign are here to help people to stop smoking and realising
how much money they spend on cigarettes and that they don’t have enough money for
anything else. The Think! Drink Driving campaign is a little different because they are dealing
with the law being broken by drink driving offences.
The details of the campaigns were that they both want to help people to make the rite
decision and that they need to know what they have been doing wrong.
13. Humaira Begum 11y C&M Campaign
Think! Drink Driving – NHS Smoking –
I think that this poster is I think that this poster is successful on
successful on getting there getting there message across to the
message to the public public because the image of the boy
because it shows 4 bottles of looking at his reflection makes you
alcohol someone has drunk think about what will happen to your
and then went for a drive in child when you die from smoking. The
there car and got caught by image makes the poster more
the police and know they are successful. You will think to yourself
again having a drink and about who will look after them and
thinking about if they should you’ll have many questions going
dive and if they will get through your head. The bold text “I’m
caught. The Text says “How not worried about my spots. I’m
much will your next round worried my dad will die from smoking.”
cost” which shows that they Makes you think about the boy and if
got fined a lot of money the his mum is still alive or not and if his
time before. dad dies from smoking what’s going to
happen to him. On the bottom of the
poster is says “Over 2,000 people die
Similarities every week in the UK from smoking
The similarities of the related diseases.” This shows that you
posters are that they both don’t have to be a smoker to die from
want to make people think smoking.
about their actions and what
they should do in the future.
They both also have there
logos on the poster.
The campaigns were very successful because they had television adverts, posters, leaflets
and partners to get there message across to the public.
I think that both of the campaigns I have looked at are very serious issues because If you
listen to the campaign messages then you would understand that they are trying to save our
14. Humaira Begum 11y C&M Campaign
lives and making the world a better place for everyone. The NHS Smoking campaign gives
you a lot of support and advice on what people can do for their benefit and for others. The
Think! Drink Driving campaign was launched to make the roads much safer for everyone and
stopping deaths from happening.