A good case statement for government relations will include:
- What you need from the elected official
- What your organization does
- Who it impacts
- Where your work is
- Why your work is important
- Why your work is unique
- How long you have been working
The best case statements also include:
- The organization’s value to the state/county/city
- Consequences of the requested action
- Metrics quantifying the organization’s work
- How funding is used
You’re developing language for a business document, so a case statement is not the place for:
- Rote statements of misson, vision, and values
- Waxing poetic about your cause
- Anecdotes and personal stories (this comes later in your government relations planning)
A written case statement should be no longer than a few paragraphs and able to be easily inserted into letters or memos. If verbalized, it should be like a “30 second elevator speech.”
Here's an example for a fictitious organization:
Please protect water quality for 15,000 residents by voting to fully fund the Sucarnooche River Society. Since 1981, we have protected 1,000+ acres of land around the Sucarnooche, Sumter County’s main water source, resulting in cleaner drinking water for residents and fewer environmental interventions by state government. Our state appropriation directly funds land acquisition around the river and education programs that help 1,000 residents, farmers, and construction companies each year.What's the case for your organization?
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