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Community Consultation

Helping people be heard
with purpose.

Consultation works best when people understand why they are being asked, feel safe enough to contribute, and can see that their voice has been treated with care.

Good consultation is not just asking questions. It is building the conditions for honest participation.

Many organisations need to hear from communities, service users and stakeholders before making decisions. The challenge is that people do not always feel invited, respected or confident that their contribution will matter.

I support consultation processes that are practical, respectful and grounded in context. This can include helping shape the approach, prepare the room, facilitate the conversation, identify barriers to participation and support clearer next steps after people have spoken.

The aim is not consultation for appearance. The aim is to create a process where people can contribute meaningfully and organisations can act with better understanding.

Why consultation needs care

People can tell when
the process is not real.

Communities are often asked for feedback, views and stories. The issue is not whether organisations ask. The issue is whether people understand the purpose, feel safe to speak honestly, and can trust that their contribution has been taken seriously.

Consultation should not feel like a box being ticked. It should feel like a process people can trust.

When consultation is rushed, unclear or poorly prepared, people may attend once but disengage from the process. Good consultation protects trust before, during and after the conversation.

01

Purpose must be clear

People need to know why they are being asked, what is open for discussion, and how their input may influence what happens next.

02

Barriers must be understood

Language, confidence, transport, timing, past experience and cultural context can all affect whether people feel able to participate.

03

The room must be held well

Strong facilitation helps people contribute without the conversation becoming unclear, unsafe, dominated or disconnected from purpose.

04

Follow-through matters

People are more likely to trust future engagement when they can see that their time, experience and contribution were respected.

How I help

Consultation that is planned,
held and followed through.

I support organisations to think through the consultation process before people are invited into the room. That includes purpose, audience, access, tone, questions, facilitation and what happens after the consultation has taken place.

01

Clarify the purpose

I help define what the consultation is trying to understand, what decisions it may inform, and what should be made clear to participants from the beginning.

02

Identify who needs to be heard

I support thinking about which communities, service users, stakeholders or groups should be involved, including those who may not usually attend.

03

Design the engagement approach

I help shape the format, questions, flow and method so the consultation fits the people, the context and the purpose of the work.

04

Facilitate the conversation

I can hold the room, guide discussion, manage different perspectives and help people contribute in a way that stays respectful and useful.

05

Read barriers and dynamics

I bring attention to trust, language, access, cultural context, confidence and group dynamics that may affect how people participate.

06

Support practical next steps

I help organisations reflect on what has been heard and consider how the consultation can inform planning, communication or follow-up.

The value is not only in the meeting itself. The value is in designing a process where people understand the purpose, feel able to contribute, and can see that the organisation has listened with care.

What the process can include

Support before, during
and after consultation.

Every consultation should be shaped around the purpose, the people involved and the decision or action it is intended to inform. Depending on the need, my support can sit across one stage or the full process.

01

Consultation planning

Clarifying purpose, audience, timing, format, questions, risks and what the organisation needs to learn.

02

Community mapping

Identifying relevant communities, service users, stakeholders, leaders, networks and participation pathways.

03

Engagement design

Shaping the session structure, discussion flow, prompts and methods to suit the context and participants.

04

Outreach advice

Supporting more thoughtful invitations, messaging and access considerations so people understand why they are being invited.

05

Facilitation

Holding the room, guiding discussion, managing dynamics and helping people contribute in a focused and respectful way.

06

Reflection and next steps

Helping interpret what has been heard and identify practical implications for planning, communication or further engagement.

The process should match the people and the purpose.

Consultation should not be over-designed for appearance or under-designed because time is limited. The right process is clear, accessible, respectful and useful enough to support better decisions.

Suitable for

Organisations that need to listen
with care and purpose.

This support is useful where decisions, services, programs or public conversations need to be informed by people’s real experiences, not assumptions about what communities need.

Local councils

For place-based consultation, community forums, neighbourhood engagement, multicultural engagement and public-facing service planning.

Government agencies

For engagement processes that need to hear from communities, service users or stakeholders affected by policy, programs or service delivery.

Not-for-profits

For organisations seeking to design, review or improve services through stronger community listening and practical engagement.

Settlement and multicultural services

For work involving newly arrived communities, culturally diverse groups, community leaders, volunteers, families and service users.

Community and faith networks

For conversations that rely on trust, relationships, participation and careful connection across grassroots communities.

Public institutions and service providers

For organisations seeking to understand barriers to access, participation, communication, service use or community confidence.

This work is especially useful when the issue is not only what people think, but why they may not be engaging, returning, speaking honestly or trusting the process.

Outcomes

What good consultation
can make possible.

The outcome of consultation should not simply be a list of comments. Done well, it should help an organisation understand people more clearly, make better decisions and strengthen the trust required for future engagement.

1

Clearer understanding

Better insight into what people are experiencing, what they need, what is getting in the way and what matters most to them.

2

Stronger participation

A process that makes it easier for people to take part, contribute honestly and feel that their presence has value.

3

Better decisions

More grounded planning, communication and service design informed by people’s real experiences rather than assumptions.

4

Greater trust

A stronger basis for future engagement because people can see that the organisation listened with respect and intent.

The measure of good consultation is not only who attended. It is whether people understood the purpose, felt respected in the process, and could see a credible pathway from what was heard to what happens next.

Plan the consultation well

Ready to create a consultation
people can trust?

If your organisation needs to hear from communities, service users, stakeholders or people affected by a decision, I can help you shape a process that is clear, respectful and useful. The first conversation can clarify the purpose, audience, format and level of support required.

Useful to include when you enquire

The community, service users or stakeholders you need to hear from.
The decision, program, service or issue the consultation needs to inform.
Whether you need planning support, facilitation, outreach advice or follow-up input.
Any timing, location, accessibility, language or participation considerations.