Understand the context
Clarify what is happening, who is affected, what is already known and what needs care.
Insights / The Practical Engagement Cycle
Community Engagement Framework
A six-step framework for designing engagement that is respectful, structured and useful beyond the meeting itself.
Framework summary
Use this framework to move from early planning to visible action without treating engagement as a single meeting, survey or forum.
The framework
Use this section as a practical reference when planning, facilitating or reviewing work with communities and stakeholders.
Clarify what is happening, who is affected, what is already known and what needs care.
Engage through relevance, respect and trusted relationships before asking for input.
Use clear questions, accessible methods and reliable ways to capture what people say.
Identify patterns, barriers, assets, priorities, risks and practical opportunities.
Show what changed, what could not change and why decisions were made.
Return to participants with outcomes, next steps and a clear account of how input was considered.
When to use it
This page is designed to help professionals apply the framework in practical settings, not just read it as theory.
Design consultations that move beyond collecting feedback toward clear outcomes.
Plan forums, information sessions and public-facing engagement with a stronger line of sight to action.
Use community insight to inform program priorities, settings and delivery choices.
Keep stakeholders connected to purpose, process and follow-up expectations.
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.
Do not start by choosing a survey, meeting or forum. Start with purpose, people and context.
Be clear about what can change, what cannot change and who holds decision-making authority.
Failure to close the loop can make people feel used rather than respected.
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 / The Practical Engagement Cycle
Community Engagement Framework
A six-step framework for designing engagement that is respectful, structured and useful beyond the meeting itself.
Framework summary
Use this framework to move from early planning to visible action without treating engagement as a single meeting, survey or forum.
The framework
Use this section as a practical reference when planning, facilitating or reviewing work with communities and stakeholders.
Clarify what is happening, who is affected, what is already known and what needs care.
Engage through relevance, respect and trusted relationships before asking for input.
Use clear questions, accessible methods and reliable ways to capture what people say.
Identify patterns, barriers, assets, priorities, risks and practical opportunities.
Show what changed, what could not change and why decisions were made.
Return to participants with outcomes, next steps and a clear account of how input was considered.
When to use it
This page is designed to help professionals apply the framework in practical settings, not just read it as theory.
Design consultations that move beyond collecting feedback toward clear outcomes.
Plan forums, information sessions and public-facing engagement with a stronger line of sight to action.
Use community insight to inform program priorities, settings and delivery choices.
Keep stakeholders connected to purpose, process and follow-up expectations.
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.
Do not start by choosing a survey, meeting or forum. Start with purpose, people and context.
Be clear about what can change, what cannot change and who holds decision-making authority.
Failure to close the loop can make people feel used rather than respected.
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