Resources
Having identified your target audiences and their needs you need to develop your brand and message. This section will help you develop your communications brand and its identity, the tone of voice for your communications and explains how to link to the national Recycle Now campaign brand to get the most out of it. It uses some of the most recent research into people’s barriers to recycling and looks at the implications for messaging.
- Collections & recycling
- Service design
- Communicating with residents
- Local Authorities
This section helps you to identify and describe your target audience. There are four main groups to consider:
• Householders - the focus of your communications.
• Internal groups - your staff, senior officers, elected members, other council staff who need to know about your communications plan and may be able to help.
• External groups - such as the media, community groups, other local authorities.
• Specific subgroups – community groups, hard to reach/engage groups, potential partners to help communicate your messages such as caretakers, landlords and housing associations.
- Communicating with residents
- Local Authorities
This section looks in detail at defining your communications aim and setting your overall objectives.
- Collections & recycling
- Service design
- Communicating with residents
- Collections and sorting
- Kerbside collection
- Local Authorities
This section looks at how to develop a situational analysis using the information gathered in Section 2.
- Communicating with residents
- Local Authorities
This section looks at the information you need to gather to assess your current position and carry out a situational analysis (the next stage of the strategy development process).
• The area and the people living in it – who they are, how old they are, where they live, what types of houses they live in, what their lifestyles are.
• How well they use the local recycling and waste management services.
• What are their barriers to recycling?
- Collections & recycling
- Service design
- Communicating with residents
- Local Authorities
A practical guide to improving recycling performance through effective communications with your residents.
- Collections & recycling
- Service design
- Contamination prevention
- Collections and sorting
- Kerbside collection
- Local Authorities
The purpose of this guide is to:
- Raise awareness and understanding of the design process needed when developing recycling promotions.
- Signpost you to other guidance documents available to help you plan your communications.
- Provide advice on how to work with a design agency or internal design team to develop and deliver promotional material and the timescales involved.
- Collections & recycling
- Communicating with residents
- Collections and sorting
- Local Authorities
This document aims to help you estimate the cost of communications activities. The indicative costs will help you develop an initial budget for your communications and give you an indication of what is acceptable value for money.
- Collections & recycling
- Communicating with residents
- Collections and sorting
- Local Authorities
Monitoring the impact of communications is essential to determine what has been effective and demonstrate the value and success of communications activity.
- Collections & recycling
- Communicating with residents
- Collections and sorting
- Local Authorities
This is a guide for local authority waste and recycling officers to help develop kerbside collection calendars. These are essential communication tools and provide householders with information about their waste and recycling collection frequency and instructions on how to participate.
- Collections & recycling
- Consistency in collections
- Communicating with residents
- Collections and sorting
- Local Authorities
The purpose of this guide is to raise awareness and understanding of print processes in common use and how they work.
- Collections & recycling
- Communicating with residents
- Collections and sorting
- Textiles sourcers, producers and designers
- Waste management and reprocessors
- Local Authorities
Setting out the UK’s vision for best in class design in rigid household plastic packaging. Includes plastic packaging currently classed as recyclable and the ambition for recycled content.
Updated Guidance: November 2022
- Plastic Packaging
- Eliminating problem plastics
- The UK Plastics Pact
- Plastic packaging design
- Manufacturers
- Retailers and brands
- Waste management and reprocessors
- Local Authorities
- Packaging producers
- Trade associations