Public Participation Guide: Stakeholder Interviews
Interviews with stakeholders are one-to-one conversations about a specific topic or issue. The primary purpose of these interviews is to obtain project-relevant information and elicit stakeholder reactions and suggestions. Stakeholders are likely to have knowledge, wisdom, and insight that can help an agency in its decision process. Stakeholder interviews provide a broad overview of the interviewees’ opinions about a specific topic that may reveal hidden concerns or ideas that would not be expressed in response to a set number of specific questions.
Advantages
- Helps identify issues, concerns, and desired agendas
- Helps target potential participants
- Elicits ideas for designing a public participation process
- Provides a good way to introduce agency staff to the community
- Enhances an agency’s credibility because it demonstrates agency interest in the community and in understanding the community’s concerns
- Can help defuse potentially confrontational situations
- Useful for targeting key stakeholders who have specific knowledge about an issue
- Provides opportunities to obtain an understanding of concerns and issues of key stakeholders
- Can be used to determine how best to communicate with the public
- Can be used to determine the best members of consultative committees
Challenges to Consider
- Can be expensive
- Can be time consuming
- Interviewers must engender trust or risk negative responses to the interview format or undermining the credibility of the public participation process
- Requires skilled interviewers
Principles for Successful Planning
- Select interviewees according to designated criteria (areas of expertise, representation of groups, geographic location)
- Arrange times and places for interviewing; better quality information will be forthcoming if the interviewee is in a familiar setting, so it may be easier for the interviewer to go to them
- Considering providing information to the interviewees prior to the interview (e.g., the general topics that you’ll be talking about with them)
- Ensure uninterrupted time for at least one hour
- Check all equipment and take spare tapes, batteries, pens, etc. to avoid any interruptions during the interview
- Try to transcribe interview notes as soon as possible after the interview, while nuances, body language and asides are still in the interviewer’s memory
- Prepare a report, including the verbatim interviews, and offer copies to the interviewees
Resources Needed
Staffing
- Trained interviewers
Materials
- Note-taking equipment (tape-recorder, notebook, computer).
Planning Time
- Time needed to identify stakeholders to be interviewed, develop interview guide, and train interviewers
Implementation Time
- Competently conducting interviews requires time and concentration. A single person can conduct up to four one-hour interviews per day, but that does not include the time required to transcribe interview notes and analyze the findings
Group Size
- The only limit to the number of persons who can be interviewed is the number of stakeholders
Cost
- Will range depending on the number of interviewees and interviewers
Most relevant participation levels:
- Involve, Consult, Collaborate
Explore the full Public Participation Guide.
Contacts
Melissa Dimas
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Office of International and Tribal Affairs (2650R)
1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW
Washington, DC 20460
E-mail: dimas.melissa@epa.gov