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Pro Walk /Pro Bike Conference Madison, WI September, 2006 Share The Road For A Healthy Maine.

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Pro Walk /Pro Bike Conference Pro Walk /Pro Bike Conference Madison, WI Madison, WI September, 2006 September, 2006 www.BikeMaine.org Share The Road For A Healthy Maine
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Pro Walk /Pro Bike ConferencePro Walk /Pro Bike ConferenceMadison, WIMadison, WI

September, 2006September, 2006

www.BikeMaine.org

Share The Road For A Healthy Maine

www.BikeMaine.org

National Strategies for Advancing

Bicycle Safety

1. Motorists will share the road

2. Bicyclists will ride safely

3. Bicyclists will wear helmets

4. The legal system will support safe bicycling

www.BikeMaine.org

1. Identify current STR

campaigns

2. Determine effective

means of educating

motorists & bicyclists

3. Utilize promotion &

marketing strategies

to reach specific

populations

4. Improve road safety

And…

www.BikeMaine.org

Project Partners

www.BikeMaine.org

Process, Implementation &

Lessons Learned Along The Way• Questionnaire

• Data collection & synthesis

• Message development

• Message testing

• Comparisons of Pre-test and Post-test

• Conclusions from campaign

Demographics

www.BikeMaine.org

PretestSubgroup

PosttestSubgroup

Young (15-24) 100 52

Elderly (64+) 35 31

Parent (w/children under 18) 139 109

Non-U.S. Born 84 64

All Others 130 95

www.BikeMaine.org

The Instrument…

What we wanted to know

• The most watched TV stations

• The most listened to radio stations

• The most read newspapers

• The most utilized community resources

• The best time of day to air ads

www.BikeMaine.org

What we wanted to know • What do motorists and bicyclists in the four

groups know about sharing the road?

• What motorist and bicyclist behaviors require the most attention?

• Rights and responsibilities?

• Demographic information

www.BikeMaine.org

Distribution Venues

• Bureau of Motor Vehicle offices (2)• AAA education classes• Maine Bureau of Highway Safety

education classes• Community centers• Seniors centers• Colleges & universities

www.BikeMaine.org

www.BikeMaine.org

The Incentive…

Pre-test Results

• 33 different TV channels (affiliates & cable) watched

• 40 different radio stations listened to

• 42 different newspapers read

• 38 different towns represented in greater Portland

area

www.BikeMaine.org

Pre-test Results

• All sub-groups indicated same three most

watched TV channels

• All sub-groups indicated same three most read

newspapers

• Each sub-group indicated different most

listened to radio stations

www.BikeMaine.org

Pre-test Results

• I use head & tail lights at night

• I use hand signals when turning

• I wear a bike helmet

www.BikeMaine.org

Pre-test Results

• Before I open my door, I look for bicyclists

• When I make a turn, I yield to approaching bicyclists

• I honk at bicyclists when I come near them

www.BikeMaine.org

Message DeliveryTelevision (two stations)

• One ad for motorists• One ad for bicyclists

Radio (six stations, three languages)• Three ads for motorists• Two ads for bicyclists

Print - Same ad for three newspapersWeb - Web links on two TV stations’ web sites

www.BikeMaine.org

www.BikeMaine.org

Messages

1. 115 television ads

2. 276 radio spots

3. 10 newspaper ads

4. 300,000 web impressions

www.BikeMaine.org

The Ads- Radio (Bicyclists 1)

www.BikeMaine.org

The Ads- Radio (Motorist 1)

www.BikeMaine.org

www.BikeMaine.org

Car Safety Behavior difference from Pre-test to Post-test

www.BikeMaine.org

Bike Safety Behavior difference from Pre-test to Post-test

“Have you recently heard or seen anything about Share The

Road?”

www.BikeMaine.org

0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140

Television

Radio

Newspaper

Web

Other

Have Not SeenAnything

85

127

45

27

40

6

Out of 271 Respondents

“If you heard the share the road message, did it change

your awareness or behavior as a;”

www.BikeMaine.org

Behavior Change

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90

Motorist

Bicyclist

Did Not ChangeBehavior

Did See or HearMessage

72

80

44

40

Behavioral Change by Sub-group

www.BikeMaine.org

Young (15-24)

(N = 52)

Elderly(64+)

(N = 31)

Parent(w/childrenunder 18) (N = 109)

Non-U.S.Born

(N = 95)All Others

(N = 95)

n n n n nMotorist

15 9 15 31 24

Bicyclist13 3 7 24 9

Did not changeawareness orbehavior

7 2 2 16 21

Did not see or hearmessage 15 8 29 30 30

Challenges

• Distribution and finding populations• New statewide BMV computer system• Focus groups problematic & expensive• Turnover at partner institutions• Adjustments and prioritizing commitments• Communication & timeliness

www.BikeMaine.org

www.BikeMaine.org

The Ads- Video

www.BikeMaine.org

Next Steps

• Further scrutiny of data

• More ways to access respondents

• Electronic polling

•Statewide campaign

•Longer duration for campaign

www.BikeMaine.org

Share The Road

For A Healthy Maine


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