We’re excited to share a toolkit created during the inspiring training course “Make It Visible,” held in Spain. Our team of three participated in this engaging experience back in November 2024. Over the course of the program, participants gained insights into effective communication strategies for creating impactful campaigns.
About the Project
The primary goal of “Make It Visible: Campaigns for the Dissemination of Social Projects” is to equip volunteers and youth workers with the tools they need to design, develop, execute, and evaluate campaigns that effectively promote social initiatives. This training ensures these projects achieve quality, success, and long-term sustainability, ultimately benefiting their organizations and the young people they serve.
Key Objectives
The training aimed to achieve several specific objectives:
- Understanding Campaign Planning: Learn the phases and essential components of a dissemination campaign.
- Emphasizing Impact: Reflect on the role of well-structured campaigns in guaranteeing a project’s success, quality, and sustainability.
- Practical Application: Develop a detailed plan for a campaign targeting young people.
- Sharing Best Practices: Exchange experiences, methodologies, techniques, and resources from diverse countries and contexts.
- Fostering Collaboration: Encourage intercultural dialogue and teamwork within multidisciplinary, European settings.
- Building Networks: Create a cooperative network for future projects to enhance learning opportunities for young people and youth workers across Europe.
This toolkit embodies the knowledge and experience gained during the course, serving as a valuable resource for anyone aiming to amplify the visibility and impact of their social projects.
Besides the toolkit, the video resembling main ideas of this training course was created. We warmly invite you to check it out down below.
Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Education and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor EACEA can be held responsible for them.
