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Building on Success: Using and Sharing Lessons Learned From Your Town Hall Meeting Experience

You’ve held your Town Hall Meeting (THM)…now what? First, give yourself a pat on the back and celebrate your accomplishment! Over the past several weeks, you and your planning committee worked feverishly to discuss and finalize all details related to your event. You double-checked your To Do lists and at times piled on more action items than you were able to complete. The weeks leading up to your event became days, which then became hours.

While planning your Town Hall Meeting (THM), you may have experienced working twice as hard to promote your event because a community activity was scheduled for the same date and time as your THM. Perhaps you had to cancel or reschedule your event due to inclement weather. You may have even lost support from a key partner, worked with very limited resources, or scrambled to acquire another panelist or featured speaker after your first choice canceled due to a personal emergency. But you persevered and now your community is more informed and better able to address the many underage drinking issues confronting the adolescents you serve. Before you depart for a well-deserved break, convene with your planning committee to discuss lessons learned.

This stage is very important to you as an organizer of a reoccurring THM on underage drinking prevention. Though you may not realize it, your Lessons Learned meeting will benefit all involved―from your planning committee to your partners and sponsors to the youth in your community who have been empowered with knowledge and tools to engage in fun-filled activities that don’t include alcohol.

Consider these key objectives during your Lessons Learned meeting:

  • Give thanks. It is nice to be important but more important to be grateful for the service of others who supported you through tough times. Extend your thanks and gratitude for the role played by each member of your planning committee and others involved in your THM.
  • Be open to constructive feedback. Members of your planning committee should feel compelled to give honest feedback on what worked and what needed improvement. In addition, think about asking for comments from those outside the planning committee, such as your panelists, audience members, and media representatives. Exchange your ideas with one another. You can do this by telephone, via email, or an informal feedback form.
  • Document and review all comments. During your meeting, record all discussion points to increase your potential for success in the future. Stay focused. If you succeeded in one area, you want to avoid compromising it needlessly while correcting a problem. Review the comments and circulate among your planning committee.

After assessing your event planning strategy from the Lessons Learned meeting, review The Surgeon General’s Call to Action To Prevent and Reduce Underage Drinking (PDF 1.4 MB) for ideas on how your community can move beyond awareness and implement strategies that promote environmental change. For example, team with educators and local officials to enforce underage drinking laws and policies, marketing practices, pricing, and the physical availability of alcohol. Invite your target audiences to contribute to the format of your next THM and ensure an even greater success. Sustain efforts and momentum by planning THM follow-up activities. This should not be delayed. Start brainstorming while it is still relatively fresh on your mind and on fellow committee members’ minds. As word about your successful THM event gets around, it will continue to grow and help your community focus on underage drinking prevention (PDF 2.08 MB).