No matter how sophisticated, data analysis cannot tell the full story. You have got to go and talk to people on the ground, hear what they think and understand how they feel.
At GHD, we use the International Association of Public Participation, also known as IAP2, as our main methodology for how we research and evaluate, inform, consult, involve, collaborate and empower.
The most important thing to do when starting a stakeholder engagement process is firstly formulating a really tight terms of reference, designing with a mission, knowing exactly what you want to find and defining what the problem at hand is. What is the information you need to find or test? Who are you not hearing from? And secondly, setting really clear expectations for your client, your community and your project team.
GHD’s bespoke ‘Loveable Language Model’ produces query-able insights based on what a specific community loves in accordance with our Loveable principles, an approach that puts people outcomes first. Targeting community aspiration and desire, we can use natural language processing to understand and analyse free-form text from the Loveable engagement process, producing insights in dashboards and visualisations that better inform and support decision-making.
A great example is Pyrmont in Sydney, a linear connector project that seeks to improve the experience of transit while creating destinations and urban moments of interest along the way. The outcome is a powerful demonstration of elevated decision-making where, for example, indigenous and cultural outcomes are prioritised.
Most useful at the beginning of a project, adopting this approach can help identify what really matters to the community. What do they love? What do they wish? What do they wonder? By embedding community values into the traditional multi-criteria analytical approach, we can inspire a new phase in the evolution of community building.
There is a big opportunity for government clients, in particular, to ensure that targeted social value opportunities are identified during procurement, and that data and community engagement is used to inform the social value proposition during the life cycle of the project. For the private sector, there are opportunities to offer new services and to deliver a real legacy in the communities impacted by the projects being delivered.