Cookies help us to understand how you use our website so that we can provide you with the best experience when you are on our site. To find out more, read our privacy policy and cookie policy.
Manage Cookies
A cookie is information stored on your computer by a website you visit. Cookies often store your settings for a website, such as your preferred language or location. This allows the site to present you with information customized to fit your needs. As per the GDPR law, companies need to get your explicit approval to collect your data. Some of these cookies are ‘strictly necessary’ to provide the basic functions of the website and can not be turned off, while others if present, have the option of being turned off. Learn more about our Privacy and Cookie policies. These can be managed also from our cookie policy page.
Strictly necessary cookies(always on):
Necessary for enabling core functionality. The website cannot function properly without these cookies. This cannot be turned off. e.g. Sign in, Language
Analytics cookies:
Analytical cookies help us to analyse user behaviour, mainly to see if the users are able to find and act on things that they are looking for. They allow us to recognise and count the number of visitors and to see how visitors move around our website when they are using it. Tools used: Google Analytics
Social media cookies:
We use social media cookies from Facebook, Twitter and Google to run Widgets, Embed Videos, Posts, Comments and to fetch profile information.
No analytics or social cookies have been enabled on this site. There are no cookies to review.
Share Engaging on your Policies I Collaborate on FacebookShare Engaging on your Policies I Collaborate on TwitterShare Engaging on your Policies I Collaborate on LinkedinEmail Engaging on your Policies I Collaborate link
In achieving the development of a policy that gets to the heart of your community's needs you could consider co-design elements utilising other EngagementHQ tools that draw on your community sharing in an open and safe manner.
Involving your community and allowing them to share their insights, ideas and experiences helps to build trust in the engagement process and shape Council policies and decisions from the very beginning.
Option 1 - Ideas Board
Ideas provides “virtual” post it notes for individuals to add their ideas to a collective board. Being part of a collaborative contribution to Council is much more enticing to individuals and provides the opportunity for them to easily encourage others to join. People can like the ideas that inspire them most, helping align your priorities with what matters most to the community. The ideas tool is an excellent tool for driving participation in your projects as it has an easy to use interface.
Option 2 - Discussion Forum
Discussion forums have existed since the early days of the internet and long before social media allowing people to share and connect. They remain to this day, the simplest, most transparent and most democratic tool for engaging your community online.
A well facilitated online forum has the potential to strip away power relations between participants and provides a safe two way dialogue on topic unlike social media threads. Council can respond to contributions, drive further dialogue and seek clarity in a way that is not possible with a simple survey.
In achieving the development of a policy that gets to the heart of your community's needs you could consider co-design elements utilising other EngagementHQ tools that draw on your community sharing in an open and safe manner.
Involving your community and allowing them to share their insights, ideas and experiences helps to build trust in the engagement process and shape Council policies and decisions from the very beginning.
Option 1 - Ideas Board
Ideas provides “virtual” post it notes for individuals to add their ideas to a collective board. Being part of a collaborative contribution to Council is much more enticing to individuals and provides the opportunity for them to easily encourage others to join. People can like the ideas that inspire them most, helping align your priorities with what matters most to the community. The ideas tool is an excellent tool for driving participation in your projects as it has an easy to use interface.
Option 2 - Discussion Forum
Discussion forums have existed since the early days of the internet and long before social media allowing people to share and connect. They remain to this day, the simplest, most transparent and most democratic tool for engaging your community online.
A well facilitated online forum has the potential to strip away power relations between participants and provides a safe two way dialogue on topic unlike social media threads. Council can respond to contributions, drive further dialogue and seek clarity in a way that is not possible with a simple survey.