I am going to start providing some of the lessons about framing I have found from various sources, starting with this simple one from Frameworks.
Topic: DON'T THINK ABOUT ELEPHANTS:
Avoid This Trap in Your Communications
Many people believe that the very structure of a conversation must be organized to "start where your audience starts." Research from the cognitive sciences suggests that this tactic is a trap, and is likely to result in your reinforcing old frames, not helping your audience appreciate new ones. What follows is a simple outline of the interaction between speaker and audience, using a traditional pattern of discourse. It is followed by a critique and a suggested reframing.
SPEAKER SAYS: Today I'm going to talk to you about the animals of Africa.
AUDIENCE THINKS: Animals of Africa? What do I know about animals of Africa? Not much. Any cues here for how to think about this?
SPEAKER SAYS: But I don't want you to think only of elephants.
AUDIENCE THINKS: Oh, yeah. They have elephants in Africa. Lots of elephants. I can now see elephants in Africa in my mind.
SPEAKER SAYS: Because it's really not about elephants. They are far less numerous than other species.
AUDIENCE THINKS: OK, there are lots of elephants. But also lots of something else.
SPEAKER SAYS: The animals that dominate Africa are really giraffes, not elephants.
AUDIENCE THINKS: Giraffes, huh? Yeah, I know what a giraffe looks like. Smaller than an elephant. I've had several minutes to think about elephants. And I've now got three elephants in my head (count them above), and only one giraffe. It's elephants I see when I close my eyes, not giraffes.
MORAL OF THE STORY: When you give people immediate cues to help them conceptualize and categorize, you are then working uphill to displace that frame. That is especially true when you first reinforce what they already believe or are familiar with, then attempt to contest it.
WHAT THE SPEAKER SHOULD HAVE SAID: I want to talk to you about the animals of Africa, especially the giraffe, the most populous species on the continent. Giraffes abound in all parts of Africa, stretching their giant necks from South Africa to Chad, and from Guinea to Somalia. There are more giraffes per person in Africa than there are cars in California. And while other animals also abound - elephants, lions, tigers, zebras - there are four giraffes for all of these animals combined. Giraffes rule.
MORAL OF THIS STORY: You have first conjured the image of the giraffe and made it highly visual before bringing in other animals. You have given people cues about "how many" giraffes there are and have given them two "social math" comparisons to bring it home. While you have acknowledged other animals, as you first set out to do in the original example, you have contextualized these animals so that we can dismiss them. And you have summed up your introduction with a clear statement that this is about giraffes.
(snip)
Remember: once the audience has identified the story you are telling them, they stop processing information.
(If) you've just reminded people of the frame they believe to be true, you've reinforced their dominant frame...no amount of subsequent facts or substitute frames are likely to dislodge it.
EXAMPLE: Even though our state ranks 49th in the country, we still have some wonderful progress to share with you on several key indicators of child well-being.
What's Wrong With This Framing?: When you lead with a vivid image like ranking low on a ruler, the emotion evoked is likely to be a sense of hopelessness. You have conveyed "Big Problems" to the listener, and then you come in with "Small Progress."
Reframe: We are making some significant progress on a number of children's issues in this state. And that progress should inspire us to tackle more problems, and to bring solutions to scale in this state. We need to think of our state as the Little Engine that Could, and apply some determination to the problems children face.
EXAMPLE: You are all familiar with the pictures we see on the evening news of teenage superpredators, kids bringing guns to school, etc. But what you won't see is the fact that youth crime is actually down nationwide and in our state. Your teenager is much safer in school than driving home from school. Teens are much more likely to be the victims of highway accidents than they are to be victims of school shootings.
What's Wrong With This Framing?: In order to get the listener's attention, this communications resorts to sensationalism or familiarity. The essential positioning is: I'm going to talk to you about something you see all the time, instead of something arcane. But by playing on the popular notion of teen perpetrators, you have conjured a very powerful model, an "elephant" that won't be easy to dismiss. After setting up the boogeyman, this communications then tries to reassure us. But in doing so, it tells us that our child is at risk for a different problem than the one we thought. Far from being reassuring, this just promotes the notion that all children are at risk for everything and likely produces a response of over-protection. Finally, by ending on the note of "school shootings," this communications trumps its own intended reframe by leaving the listener with exactly the image it set out to refute.
Reframe: As parents, our job is to figure out what obstacles and dangers our children are likely to encounter and to help prevent them. We need to pay more attention to highway safety, as it is here that teens are most likely to be at risk and it is here that we can make the biggest difference in personal actions and public policies to prevent harm.
When you begin a communication by telling the listener what "this is about," you had better be very careful that the frame you deploy is not one that comes complete with many associated pictures, values and ideas... such a powerful frame - so developed in people's minds - that it colors the rest of the communications...When you are trying to address an issue that comes with a highly developed frame (welfare, child care, bad parents, etc.), you may be better advised to come at it by avoiding that frame or substituting a frame that opens people up to a different way of thinking about that issue.
(snip)
So...before you put out a news release or frame a soundbite or draft a speech, ask yourself if you have any ELEPHANTS lurking in your communications!