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  • Policy Brief for Dr Connelly, GLOBE, Warwick University

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    Research Retold

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    06/06/2018

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    Policy Brief for Dr Connelly, GLOBE, Warwick University

    This blog post focuses on the step-by-step process of producing the third GLOBE policy brief, authored by Dr Stephen Connelly and titled: “The Future of UK-EU Corporate Mobility”. 

    This brief is part of the GLOBE Centre Policy Brief Series launched in February 2018. The purpose of this series is to showcase the expertise of the researchers. We also wrote about the first and second policy briefs.

    Step 1: Introductory Call & Research Consultation

    The first step in the production of the policy brief was a call with Stephen, which covered:

    • A short introduction to the collaboration and desired outcomes;
    • An introduction to Stephen’s research;
    • The structure of the policy brief;
    • The production stages;
    • Required materials and time commitment;
    • Q&A for any clarifications needed.

    The call helped frame the process and place Stephen in the right mindset for producing the initial draft. Fortunately, Stephen has experience in the industry and had a solid idea of how he wanted to structure the content.

    Step 2: Text Editorial Guidance

    Original research source

    This policy brief was based on Stephen’s expertise and interactions with the industry about the future of companies in the context of Brexit. 

    Pre-writing questions

    To aid his next writing step, Stephen answered these briefing questions to help us understand the audience’s needs:

    • What would be the purpose of communicating my research in a policy brief?
    • Who is my audience?
    • If I could speak to three key stakeholders who would they be and why?
    • What’s their current position on this topic and what are the current gaps in their evidence base?
    • Which findings should I tell these individuals to capture their attention and respond to gaps in their evidence base?
    • What policy or behavioural changes would I want to see happen as a result of your brief?

    Structuring the policy brief

    Stephen provided us with ±750 words of material for the policy brief. He arranged the text in the following way:
          – Executive Summary: 80 words
          – Body of text: 550 words
          – Policy Recommendations: 120 words

    Unpacking the jargon

    We made the phrasing as clear as possible and crafted each sentence to drive home the main messages.


    In a further call with Stephen, we went over the changes and reached a near-final version of the text. In total, the text editorial guidance stage required 2 opportunities for feedback.

    Step 3: Design Guidance

    Visual elements

    Crucially, the policy brief contains visual elements to illustrate any key points. Most of the icons focus on illustrating the companies and the state around that. 

    Illustration of key points from the policy brief

    Incorporating the text in the template

    Incorporating the text in the template

    We worked with the template following the branding of Warwick University which we also used for PB1:

    Final polish and review

    We edited and improved the brief’s readability during 3 feedback opportunities. The final review concluded the 4-week process to produce the third policy brief in the GLOBE series. The final result is a brief that frames Stephen’s research in a policy-relevant light within the current Brexit negotiation debates.

    Step 4: Dissemination of brief outside academia

    Once everyone approved the brief, we took a few steps to publish and disseminate it:

    Publish on the dedicated website

    The brief was uploaded on the dedicated GLOBE website: https://go.warwick.ac.uk/globe/policybriefs

    Making a list of potential dissemination ideas

    In our post about Policy Briefs in the blog series ‘Ways to Present Research’, we mentioned 9 ways for a researcher to share their policy brief outside academia. These were our starting points:

    Composing an outreach message

    We composed a short email for engagement with contacts outside academia. This email doubles up as a cover letter (the brief can be printed and posted to relevant people):

    Subject: A policy brief on [topic of brief]

    Dear [Contact Name],

    I’m reaching out to you because I know you are interested in […] given your […]. I recently published a policy brief on [synopsis of brief] which contains policy recommendations for […].

    [insert image of the policy recommendations section in the email/letter]

    You can read the short policy brief in full here and let me know what you think.

    I’m a researcher and [insert title] at [insert name of institution & department]. If you would like to have a further conversation about this policy brief or share it, do get in touch.

    Best wishes,
    [name & signature]

    We’re thrilled with this policy brief and we loved working with Stephen. We would love to hear your thoughts on it, too!

    Taking a lead from my time as a finance lawyer, I had been pushing for a briefing series for some time, and Research Retold had the know-how to bring it into being. Mihaela’s professional approach delivered exactly what I was looking for, from the initial planning stage for the whole series to the swift turnaround of my own briefing note”

    Dr Stephen Connelly

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