Harmony was a national public service campaign with
a call-to-action to improve the quality of the environment,
mostly through sustainable soil cultivation and preservation
practices based largely by native American Indians.
A team of USDA public affairs specialists collaborated
with the Blackfeet, Salish and Kootenai Tribes in Montana
to initiate and create the Harmony campaign. The campaign
included TV, radio and print PSAs that promoted SCS's
1-800-THE-SOIL toll-free telephone line. Callers received
an action packet that included a series of conservation
tip cards featuring activities to improve the environment,
a four-color poster, a Native American coloring book,
a bumper sticker, volunteer recruitment information,
and an evaluation card of the packet materials.
The Harmony theme drew on the response to the movie
Dances With Wolves, which showed that Americans
are interested in Native American cultures and how those
cultures lived in "harmony' with the environment.
Dances With Wolves co-star, Rodney A. Grant, served
as the spokesperson for the campaign. In the PSAs, Grant
urged all Americans to "share the heritage of taking
care of our Earth" and to call 1-800-THE-SOIL for
an action packet.
Five methods were used to measure the success of Harmony:
- Media use of public service announcements
- Telephone calls to 1-800-THE-SOIL
- Volunteer recruitment
- Action packet evaluation and
- Improved relations with Native Americans.
Harmony radio and TV public service announcements (PSAs)
were released to approximately 1,000 television stations,
350 cable TV networks, and 5,000 radio stations. Stations
donated in excess of $3.5 million of airtime to the
campaign and PSAs were used in every state, reaching
reached a potential audience of more than 200 million
in Gross Impressions Print PSAs appeared in the New
Yorker, Western Horseman. Agri-Marketing, MacWorld and
Kiwanis and hundreds of daily and weekly newspapers.
The campaign generated more than 30,000 tolll-free
calls, and many callers reported taking a specific action
to improve the environment.
During the first three months of the Harmony campaign,
the number of volunteers increased by 36 percent compared
with the same period a year earlier and a 30 percent
increase was recorded in the second quarter.
The action packet included conservation tip cards featuring
"hands-on" activities for improving the environment,
a four-color poster, a Native American coloring book,
a bumper sticker, and volunteer recruitment information.
A postage-paid card was also included for callers to
evaluate the materials in the packet.
- Some 1,500 people who got an information packet
returned an evaluation card that was sent with the
packet and half of them were were from those living
in urban or suburban areas, meaning the campaign resonated
with people who may not have frequent contact with
the soil.
- Eighty percent of those returning cards read or
used most of the materials in the packet, with a third
of the respondents sharing the materials with others.
Over 15% of the respondents contacted their local
SCS office for more information.
Harmony's Native American theme significantly improved
SCS relations with Native Americans.In Georgia, Harmony
brought the Native American Cultural Society to SCS.
The society is now working with SCS to localize the
Harmony theme for northeast Georgia, as well as working
with the agency on assistance to American Indians. At
a recruitment fair in Utah, the campaign materials drew
several hundred Native American high school students
to a recruitment booth. Similar actions have occurred
in several other states.
Harmony could not have been produced without the outstanding
collaboration of the Blackfeet, Salish and Kootenai
Tribes in Montana. The Blackfeet Tribal Council passed
a resolution supporting the filming of the TV PSAs on
their reservation. Blackfeet tribal members reconstructed
a culturally authentic Indian camp for the filming,
and a tribal council member volunteered as the language
coach for Rodney A. Grant, who spoke in the Blackfeet's
native language. Tribal members also coached the narration
of the radio PSAs.
Salish Kootenai College on the Flathead Reservation
made arrangements for Rodney A. Grant to participate
in the campaign, and provided many crew members for
the filming.
The college also created the Harmony coloring book,
and shared it with Salish and Kootenai cultural committees
on the reservation. Members of each committee were so
enthusiastic about the project that they volunteered
to interpret the drawings in the color book in the Salish
and Kootenai languages. Not only does the color book
help all Americans understand the diversity among Indian
cultures, but the committees are using the book as a
language instruction tool for youth on the reservation.
Measuring the benefits of instilling an improved environmental
ethic is more difficult to assess. The majority of the
evidence is anecdotal. Nonetheless, based on the overwhelming
response from public service directors and the target
audience, it is reasonable to conclude that a significant
number of Americans are better informed to prevent natural
resource degradation and are ready to volunteer their
help to resource professionals in their communities.
Soil and water stewardship, once considered to be
the responsibility of the farming and ranching community,
is now seen as everyone's responsibility, thanks in
part to this campaign. Capitalizing on the public's
interest in the environment, a creative (nontraditional)
treatment, a clear-cut action-oriented message, and
local follow-up to distribution, were paramount to the
success of Harmony.
NIA, one of the 27 Institutes of the National Institutes
of Health, leads a broad scientific effort to understand
the nature of aging and to extend the healthy, active
years of life. One of its missions is to communicate
information about aging to the scientific community,
health care providers, and the public.

To
fulfill this mandate, the NIA produced and distributed
a PSA to promote its elderly exercise guide. The centerpiece
of the campaign was John Glenn, America’s first
astronaut to orbit the earth.
After serving 24 years in the Senate, Glenn lifted off
for a second space flight on October 29, 1998, on Space
Shuttle Discovery to study the effects of space flight
on the elderly. At age 77, Glenn became the oldest person
ever to go into space.
At the end of the TV spot, the public was encouraged
to write for the free Exercise Guide. TV PSAs were the
primary method for promoting the Guide, and the campaign
generated 35,000 phone calls to a dedicated 800 telephone
line, along with 300,000 orders for the Guide.
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