The Center for the Development of Non-Profit Sector launched its project the “PR
for NGOs” within its counseling and experts helps activities. The main
goal of this project is to establish contacts and strengthen presence of NGOs
in the media and broader public, to identify journalists interested in cooperation
with non-governmental organizations and to promote the exchange of information
among NGOs. Consequently, the NGOs will be helped in obtaining their basic
communication skills and tools necessary for the systematic activities in their
relations with public and, thus, be able to more clearly convey their messages
to clients, media, governmental and international institutions and general
public.
The daily news about the work of NGOs
In order to promote the exchange of information among NGOs and to strengthen
presence of NGOs in broader public, the public relations coordinator broadcast
daily news on NGO activities at the website of
the Center for the Development of the Non-Profit Sector. The realization of
this segment started in October 1999. The news is broadcast on the daily basis
(in Serbian and English). Since October 2000, the news is sent to non-governmental
organizations, interested institutions, media and individuals in the country
and abroad once a week by e-mail (currently, to 1647 e-mail addresses).
Training of NGOs for Public Relations
Within its Public Relations Program, CRNPS launched the serious of seminars
designed for persons who are responsible for public relations in an NGO. The
trainings are conducted by PR experts and renowned journalists and editors.
The topics of lectures and workshops are as follows:
- Shaping the message and the specifics of communication between NGOs and
the media
- Announcement
- Interview
- Press Conference
- Communication via Internet
- Photographs
- Creating documentation
- Specifics of appearance in different media (press, radio, television)
Each seminar is adjusted to the needs of participants and consequently, the program
and lecturers can be changed and developed in a certain direction.
Center for the Development of Non-Profit Sector intends to develop the program
that will help journalists in their covering of NGO activities by introducing
them to basic concepts from this sector, as well as by stressing the specifics
of communication with non-governmental organizations.
The Journal “Non-Profit Sector”
The main goal of this project is to inform NGOs about the plans and activities
that CRNPS carry out in improving their work, as well as to provide them with
useful information and advises.
From the beginning of 2001, this newsletter developed into the journal for
information, analyses and education in the non-profit sector. The situation
imposed the need for such a journal that would deal with the development of
the third sector and, through different exchange of opinions as well as the
analyses, discussions and expert articles, help in the development of the sector.
Counseling - Contacts with the Media and Non-Governmental Organizations
Within this program, the NGOs are provided with advises in establishing contacts
and keeping the communication with the media, while the media are provided
with information on work and activities of non-governmental organizations.
For the purpose of this program, the Media Guidebook for NGOs is published,
in order to improve the NGO contacts with the media.
Survey
The survey “Media
and NGOs in Serbia” (conducted by CRNPS and UNDP, in the end of
May 2002, covered 306 – local and national, public and private media),
has shown that media editors are considerably interested in topics connected
to the NGO sector covered in their publications. According to these stances,
the “third sector” topic is socially important, attractive
to the public, and what is even more important, it is commercially viable
in the information market. The general opinion is that media and NGOs are
connected with a joint interest in the new structure of society. The extremely
benevolent and wide support to the NGO sector by the surveyed journalists,
was made relative by their extremely generalised understanding of the significance
and the role of the NGO sector in modern societies. This has shown that a
declarative social desire and the absence of a strategic approach to the
topic were incorporated into this positive stance. Misunderstandings between
media and NGOs are the result of specificity of the ways of financing the
non-profit sector, and a widely spread doubt that NGOs operate with relatively
large assets for this country.