Finding & engaging those perceived as 'harder to reach' in housing settings

Finding & engaging those perceived as 'harder to reach' in housing settings

Practical outreach strategies to support you to find and engage 'harder to reach' people in housing settings.

By The Good Practice Mentor Team

Date and time

Location

Online

About this event

  • Event lasts 1 hour 15 minutes

The Good Practice Mentor team invite you to join them for a practical workshop session, exploring practical outreach strategies to support you to find and engage 'harder to reach' people in housing settings.

If you are a housing provider or engagement team, a member of a Tenants Residents Association (TRA), a community group or organisation keen to engage with 'harder to reach' local people, door knocking can help you to find and successfully engage with residents less likely to attend formal groups and activities.

We’ll discuss the practicalities of door knocking practice, including arranging access and modelling safe behaviour. We’ll also share practical tips and best practice to ensure a positive doorstep conversation. How to informally capture insight from residents, create informal steppingstone opportunities to bring residents together and promote community connection.

During the workshop you'll hear about:

• How outreach practice can address barriers to finding and engaging 'harder to reach' people in housing settings.

• The impact of ‘community’ upon participation and how to reset, ‘nothing happens here’ culture.

• Practical tips for planning your door knock including arranging access and keeping everyone (door knockers and residents) safe.

• Conversational strategies and practical tips to ensure a positive doorstep engagement and the right questions to ask to capture insight from residents.

• How to create informal feeling ‘steppingstone’ opportunities as a first step to bring together the residents less likely to attend formal groups and activities.

• How to support residents to build a sense of community and to develop their own groups and activities.

• The support available from the Good Practice Mentor Programme to support you to find, engage, connect and work together with people

Organized by

The Good Practice Mentor (GPM) programme is a new and innovative project that brings together legacy, learning and resources from Ageing Better, a seven year Test & Learn project that worked to reduce social isolation and loneliness in people aged over 50, and engaged more than 150,000 people in over 366 projects.

The GPM team includes; South Yorkshire Housing Association Age UK Camden Leeds Older People Forum Torbay Community Development Trust

Each partner brings a unique set of learning and skills to the project, and together we offer a wide range of training, bespoke support for your organisation and toolkits and resources to help you on your journey to reducing loneliness and isolation.

Find out more about the Good Practice Mentor programme and the range of support on offer by emailing Jennie Shrewsbury, Programme Lead - j.shrewsbury@syha.co.uk

FreeJul 31 · 7:30 AM PDT