{"id":1697,"date":"2012-09-19T21:04:56","date_gmt":"2012-09-20T02:04:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/onthinktanks.org\/articles\/\/"},"modified":"2016-01-23T21:08:50","modified_gmt":"2016-01-24T02:08:50","slug":"odis-award-winning-online-strategy-explained","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/onthinktanks.org\/articles\/odis-award-winning-online-strategy-explained\/","title":{"rendered":"ODI\u2019s award-winning online strategy explained"},"content":{"rendered":"

The\u00a0ODI<\/a>\u00a0digital strategy, which I first outlined in\u00a0a series of blogs for onthinktanks.org<\/a>, was awarded Online Strategy of the Year 2012\u00a0at the prestigious\u00a0Digital Communications Awards<\/a>, held in Berlin on Friday. ODI beat off competition from over 100 multinational corporations and specialist digital agencies to claim this major award.<\/p>\n

\"601503_10152103171640284_1552700698_n1\"The following post is based on the speech I gave to the jury and explains very succinctly what the strategy is and where\/why it has worked. Massive thanks to Enrique Mendizabal at onthinktanks.org and Sophy Kershaw at ODI for their help in developing the speech. I couldn\u2019t have done it without them.<\/p>\n

\"screen-shot-2012-09-18-at-18-43-03\"<\/p>\n

Tony Blair’s policy adviser<\/a>\u00a0used to say that the ‘first thing you have to do is win the battle over the problem’. In other words, if Tony Blair doesn’t think there is a problem, then you’re not going to get backing for the solution.<\/p>\n

A think tank works in the same way. You have to persuade the researchers that there is a problem before you can implement a solution. So what is the problem at\u00a0ODI<\/a>? We identified three major challenges, and three solutions that would help to tackle them.<\/p>\n

\"screen-shot-2012-09-18-at-18-57-35\"<\/p>\n

Think tanks sell ideas. Ideas based on research. Ideas that aim to change the world.<\/p>\n

But you can\u2019t sell ideas in the same way as you would a car, or an iPhone. Apple and Ford sell their products to make money, but our ideas are free. So they will always be able to use their income to shout louder and harder.<\/p>\n

Which means think tanks have to be clever, if their ideas are going to be heard.<\/p>\n

Nowhere is this truer than in the online world. A world bursting at the seams with ideas.<\/p>\n

Our response to this challenge was to return to first principles of communications. You wouldn\u2019t create a radio station to reach the listeners of the BBC, so why did we create a new website for every project?<\/p>\n

We wouldn\u2019t. Instead we would follow an approach we called \u2018being there<\/a>\u2019<\/strong>. We don\u2019t expect people to come to our sites, instead we push information to them, through the online channels they already use.<\/p>\n

How does this work in practice?<\/p>\n