The community of Pleasanton weighed in on the City’s budget, while also sharing their top priorities for the strategic plan. The combination of an online survey and community pop-ups was a successful approach that achieved high engagement numbers with a large amount of both quantitative and qualitative data captured. In total, the City received feedback from nearly 2,000 people, including 1,709 online survey responses, 235 pop-up workshop participants, and 22 virtual meeting participants.
After analyzing the demographic information collected via the survey, we supported the City to identify which communities had not been reached and we advised on new methods to reach those communities for future iterations of this project. By setting upfront engagement goals, including priorities for reaching specific underserved groups, we suggested they could work with community partners who serve these groups to identify customized outreach and engagement approaches, such as translated flyers distributed at the food bank.
Through practical experience (right alongside us) and conversations with high-engagement departments like the Library Services and Parks & Recreation, the Finance Department also had the opportunity to learn more about approaches and tools for community engagement.