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Marketing Class to Create a Shark Awareness Public Service Campaign for the FWC
By Keith Morelli
TAMPA (September 13, 2021) -- Ever since âJawsâ splashed across the big screen in 1975, sharks in general have gotten some pretty bad press. Beachgoers stopped wading in surf that came up past their knees and many just plain stopped going into the water at all.
What sharks need is an image makeover, something that highlights their redeeming qualities over gnashing teeth, the benefits of their place in the ecosystem over soulless black eyes approaching in murky water.
Enter a Muma College of Business undergraduate marketing/communications management class, which recently got the go-ahead from the Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission to research and develop a statewide messaging communications campaign for the 27 species of sharks native to Floridaâs waters. Amanda Nalley, the marketing chief for salt water marine fisheries for the Tallahassee-based state agency met (virtually) with the class last week to answer questions about expectations.
âSharks are a very complex issue for us,â she told the class. âSharks are an apex predator and when there are lots of sharks around, thatâs a sign of a healthy ecosystem. They keep the system healthy by culling out unhealthy fish. They are a very charismatic species.â
Objectives of the campaign include driving awareness of Florida sharks with a positive portrayal, empowering residents and visitors to feel theyâre the heart of the solution for the sharkâs future, and informing people that shark fishing is popular in Florida and legal from the beach or the boat, if properly licensed.
The message the state wants to get across, she said, is meant for three groups of people. Those who love nature and sharks, and that may include fishermen; those who live near the water and may cross paths now and again with sharks, and anglers who fish for sharks from boats and the shoreline.
âThey all are stakeholders,â Nalley said.
âRight now, she said, âthe shark population is doing pretty good in Florida. Thatâs not the case in other parts of the world.â
Some misconceptions that arise is that shark fishing is illegal. It is not, she said. People can fish from shore for sharks, though there are some beachgoers who challenge them from time to time, mistakenly thinking angling for sharks is illegal.
âShark fishing from the shore is a hot topic for us,â she said, âand we now are taking measures to educate people about this.â
That is part of the message she wants the class to consider in creating pitches.
âThe objectives cover awareness of the sharkâs importance to the Florida ecosystem, changing the image and perception of the shark, encouraging conservation and humane treatment among Florida residents and visitors and educating anglers and beach-goers about shark sportfishing, which is legal from shore or off-shore,â said Carol Osborne, marketing instructor who teaches the class.
Osborne said the experience will involve the students in work that is for a statewide campaign and not the usual private sector brand promotion.
âSharks also is a âcool brandâ as the state tries to push sharks as one of Floridaâs charismatic species,â she said. âItâs a cause but not one with a political stigma, unless the shark is related to donkeys or elephants, but I donât think so.â
In a marketing brief written by Osborne and presented to the class last week, she wrote that in Florida, the most immediate threat to sharks comes from humans.
âResidents and visitors and people running corporations pose a constant threat to sharks from pollution, unsafe boating, red tide and other man-made environmental disasters like oil spills,â she wrote. âHowever, the focus ahead of next springâs tourist season and summerâs boating is on the abuse and cruelty, and the mishandling and misunderstanding of sharks.â
She cited recent incidents in which boaters were fined for abusing and killing sharks.
âPrevalent misunderstanding (lack of education, knowledge, compassion) of the shark and its natural part of the Florida (and worldâs ecosystem) leads to abuse,â she wrote. âThe problem being, with the poor image of the shark as a biter, killer, predator which [is a result of] peopleâs lack of awareness, knowledge, fishing know-how and especially, a dearth or human compassion.â
The marketing class is made up of about 140 students from three campuses, who will be broken into 27 teams to conduct research and come up with a marketing campaign. Osborne said the best campaigns will be pitched to the FWC at the end of November.
The best ideas created by the students will be part of a message will be sent out on multiple FWC social media platforms, through emails to stakeholders and the media in the spring, Nalley said. It could end up on conservation podcasts and maybe radio and in airport advertising campaigns throughout the state.
âWe want something from you that we are not thinking about,â Nalley said, âsomething we arenât already doing.â