Purpose
Can you explain why engagement is needed, what will be asked and how input may be used?
Insights / Community Readiness Checklist
Engagement Readiness Tool
A practical checklist for organisations preparing to run consultations, public information sessions, community forums or engagement processes.
Framework summary
This checklist helps organisations test whether they are ready to involve people in a way that is clear, accessible and respectful.
The framework
Use this section as a practical reference when planning, facilitating or reviewing work with communities and stakeholders.
Can you explain why engagement is needed, what will be asked and how input may be used?
Have you identified who should be involved, who is most affected and who may be missing?
Have you considered language, timing, transport, digital access, venue, childcare and safety?
Have you identified people, groups or networks who can help build relevance and trust?
Can the opportunity or issue be explained simply, without jargon or unnecessary complexity?
Do you know how you will respond after the engagement and what participants can expect next?
When to use it
This page is designed to help professionals apply the framework in practical settings, not just read it as theory.
Check whether people will understand the purpose and pathway to participate.
Plan accessible, respectful and useful engagement settings.
Finalise invitations, questions, methods and follow-up responsibilities.
Support programs that rely on people understanding and choosing to get involved.
Practice note. This framework is most useful when it is adapted to the community, organisation, issue and decision-making context involved.
Practice questions
Use these questions to test whether your planning is clear, respectful and practical.
Common risks
These risks can reduce trust, weaken participation or make the work less useful.
Convenient participation can miss people with the greatest proximity to the issue.
Language, timing, venue and digital barriers can exclude people before engagement begins.
If no one owns the next step, engagement can create frustration rather than trust.
Apply the framework
This framework can support planning, consultation, needs assessment, facilitation, stakeholder engagement and community-centred program work.
The community, issue, program or event you are working with.
The kind of support you need: advice, facilitation, consultation, needs assessment or engagement planning.
Email:
blaise@itabelo.com
Mobile:
0402 493 675
Insights / Community Readiness Checklist
Engagement Readiness Tool
A practical checklist for organisations preparing to run consultations, public information sessions, community forums or engagement processes.
Framework summary
This checklist helps organisations test whether they are ready to involve people in a way that is clear, accessible and respectful.
The framework
Use this section as a practical reference when planning, facilitating or reviewing work with communities and stakeholders.
Can you explain why engagement is needed, what will be asked and how input may be used?
Have you identified who should be involved, who is most affected and who may be missing?
Have you considered language, timing, transport, digital access, venue, childcare and safety?
Have you identified people, groups or networks who can help build relevance and trust?
Can the opportunity or issue be explained simply, without jargon or unnecessary complexity?
Do you know how you will respond after the engagement and what participants can expect next?
When to use it
This page is designed to help professionals apply the framework in practical settings, not just read it as theory.
Check whether people will understand the purpose and pathway to participate.
Plan accessible, respectful and useful engagement settings.
Finalise invitations, questions, methods and follow-up responsibilities.
Support programs that rely on people understanding and choosing to get involved.
Practice note. This framework is most useful when it is adapted to the community, organisation, issue and decision-making context involved.
Practice questions
Use these questions to test whether your planning is clear, respectful and practical.
Common risks
These risks can reduce trust, weaken participation or make the work less useful.
Convenient participation can miss people with the greatest proximity to the issue.
Language, timing, venue and digital barriers can exclude people before engagement begins.
If no one owns the next step, engagement can create frustration rather than trust.
Apply the framework
This framework can support planning, consultation, needs assessment, facilitation, stakeholder engagement and community-centred program work.
The community, issue, program or event you are working with.
The kind of support you need: advice, facilitation, consultation, needs assessment or engagement planning.
Email:
blaise@itabelo.com
Mobile:
0402 493 675