1. Project Introduction — Background & Problem Statement

1.1 Background

Road construction projects in Liberia and across the Mano River Union sub-region create significant temporary safety risks for road users, workers, and adjacent communities. Construction and work zones — characterized by lane restrictions, detours, heavy machinery, loose materials, poor visibility, and changed road conditions — are among the most dangerous environments on the road network. Yet communication to road users, communities, and the public about these risks is often inadequate, inconsistent, and delivered in forms and languages that do not reach the people most at risk.

Work Zone Safety Signage Road Construction Africa
Community Road Safety Awareness Radio Campaign
Community Engagement Dialogue Road Project Liberia

Beyond physical safety, road construction projects often face challenges of low public trust, weak community ownership, and resistance — stemming from poor communication about project purpose, timeline, disruption, and local benefits. When communities do not understand why a road is being built, how long disruption will last, and what safety measures are in place, they disengage, resist, and sometimes actively obstruct construction activities.

The Visibility Project (PT-RVB) is RSAI's integrated communication and community engagement intervention — designed to run alongside road construction projects and deliver work-zone safety visibility, multi-platform community communication, and sustained dialogue that reduce crash risks during construction, build public trust, and create lasting community ownership of road infrastructure investments.

1.2 Problem Statement

Current visibility and communication practice around road construction projects in Liberia presents the following critical gaps:

Work-Zone Safety & Communication Gaps
  • Inadequate work-zone safety signage — insufficient warning signs, poorly positioned barriers, and absent local-language notices that road users cannot read or understand
  • No structured multi-platform communication strategy linking construction site visibility to community awareness — leaving road users and residents uninformed about hazards, detours, and construction timelines
  • Communication materials produced in English only — failing to reach communities who speak Liberian languages including Kpelle, Bassa, Grebo, Mandingo, and others
  • Limited use of community-accessible channels — radio, town criers, community dialogues, and peer-to-peer networks — in project communication strategies
  • Absent or superficial community engagement — no structured dialogue, community feedback mechanisms, or intergenerational consultation processes
  • No monitoring of communication effectiveness — leaving project teams unable to assess whether messages are reaching and influencing the intended audiences
  • Poor project branding and visibility — communities do not know who is building the road, why it is being built, or how to raise concerns
  • Limited use of social media, digital platforms, and analytics in communication — missing significant reach among younger and urban audiences
A construction project that the community does not understand, trust, or feel ownership over is a project at permanent risk — of resistance, delay, vandalism, and wasted investment. Visibility is not a luxury. It is a project requirement.
Strategic Role in 2026

The PT-RVB Visibility Project reduces crash risks during road construction by ensuring road users and communities have timely, clear, and accessible safety information about work-zone hazards and conditions. Simultaneously, it strengthens public acceptance and community ownership of road projects — reducing resistance, building trust, and creating the social conditions for road investments to succeed and be maintained. In 2026, PT-RVB positions RSAI as the communication and community engagement partner of choice for road construction projects in Liberia.

2. Project Objectives

  1. Reduce crash risks and injuries in construction and work zones through systematic deployment of safety signage, road markings, warning systems, and visibility measures adapted to weather and environmental conditions.
  2. Develop and implement a multi-platform communication strategy — covering radio, social media, community dialogues, town criers, posters, banners, newsletters, and digital channels — to reach all road users and community members with accurate, timely safety and project information.
  3. Produce and disseminate local-language messaging in Liberian dialects and languages — ensuring road safety communication is accessible to all communities along project corridors, regardless of literacy or language.
  4. Conduct structured community engagement and dialogue — including town hall meetings, focus groups, intergenerational dialogues, peer-to-peer communication networks, and community feedback mechanisms — building trust, ownership, and participation around road construction projects.
  5. Strengthen project visibility and branding — ensuring communities know who is building the road, why it is being built, what safety measures are in place, and how to engage with the project team.
  6. Monitor and evaluate communication effectiveness using analytics, community feedback, reach data, and behavioral indicators — adapting messaging and channels based on evidence of what is and is not working.
  7. Promote behavior change among road users passing through construction zones — shifting from unsafe practices (speeding through work zones, ignoring warning signs) to compliant and cautious behavior.
  8. Ensure inclusion, equity, and accessibility in project communication — reaching women, youth, elderly persons, persons with disabilities, market traders, and other potentially excluded groups through targeted and adaptive communication strategies.

3. Project Approach & Methodology

The PT-RVB Visibility Project adopts a community-centred, multi-platform communication approach — combining physical work-zone safety infrastructure, creative communication production, community engagement, and digital analytics. The approach is adaptive — using feedback and reach data to continuously refine messaging, channels, and community engagement tactics throughout the project lifecycle.

Work-Zone Safety Signage & Visibility Infrastructure RSAI designs and deploys a comprehensive work-zone safety signage and visibility system — including advance warning signs, speed reduction notices, directional markers, lane closure indicators, reflective barriers, road markings, and local-language safety notices — adapted to weather conditions, road type, and community context along the project corridor.
Multi-Platform Communication Strategy A structured multi-platform communication strategy is developed and implemented — selecting and combining the most effective channels for each community segment, including radio talk shows, social media reels, posters, flyers, banners, newsletters, press releases, influencer partnerships, and digital broadcasts — with consistent branding and messaging across all platforms.
Local Language & Dialect Messaging All safety and project communication is produced in relevant Liberian languages and dialects — working with local translators, community leaders, and dialect speakers to ensure messaging is culturally appropriate, linguistically accurate, and accessible to all community members including those with limited literacy through visual and audio formats.
Community Engagement & Dialogue Structured community engagement processes are conducted throughout the project — including town hall meetings, market dialogues, town crier networks, peer-to-peer communication, intergenerational dialogues, and community feedback mechanisms — building trust, gathering community input, addressing concerns, and creating the social foundation for project acceptance and ownership.
Communication Monitoring & Analytics All communication activities are tracked using reach analytics, community feedback surveys, social media engagement data, and behavioral observation — monitoring whether messages are reaching intended audiences, whether knowledge and behavior are changing, and what adaptive adjustments are needed. Regular monitoring reports are produced and shared with project teams.
Creative Production & Storytelling RSAI invests in high-quality creative production — jingles, short video reels, photo stories, community narratives, and visual campaigns — that communicate road safety and project messages in engaging, memorable, and community-friendly formats. Storytelling draws on local contexts, community voices, and project milestones to create emotional connection and sustained attention.

Communication Channels & Platforms

The PT-RVB multi-platform strategy deploys the following communication channels, selected and combined based on community context and audience reach:

Radio Talk Shows
Social Media Reels
Town Criers
Posters & Flyers
Banners & Branding
Newsletters
Town Hall Meetings
Safety Jingles
Broadcast Media
Influencer Partnerships
Peer-to-Peer Networks
Local Language Signs
Visual Campaigns
Press Releases
Town Hut Awareness
Panel Discussions

Key Interventions

Work-Zone Safety Signage & Visibility Measures

Comprehensive work-zone safety signage systems — advance warning signs, speed reduction notices, lane closure markers, reflective barriers, road markings, and local-language safety notices — adapted to weather conditions, environmental factors, and community literacy levels along all project corridors.

Multi-Platform Communication & Local Language Messaging

An integrated multi-platform communication strategy delivering safety and project messages through radio, social media, town criers, posters, banners, jingles, and digital channels — in Liberian languages and dialects — ensuring every community member along the project corridor receives timely, accessible, and culturally relevant information.

Community Engagement & Dialogue

Structured community engagement — town hall meetings, market dialogues, intergenerational dialogues, peer-to-peer communication, and community feedback mechanisms — building trust, gathering input, addressing community concerns, and creating the social foundation for public acceptance and long-term ownership of road infrastructure investments.

Monitoring of Communication Effectiveness

Analytics-driven monitoring of all communication activities — tracking message reach, audience engagement, knowledge change, behavioral indicators, and community trust levels — with regular monitoring reports and adaptive management to ensure communication is achieving its intended safety and community impact outcomes.

The Multi-Platform Approach in Action

The PT-RVB Visibility Project deploys communication through three integrated tiers — ensuring no community is left behind:

Physical Visibility

Work-zone signage, road markings, banners, posters, local-language warning signs, and reflective visibility infrastructure at and around construction sites.

Community Engagement

Town halls, market dialogues, town crier networks, intergenerational dialogues, peer networks, and community feedback channels — reaching people through trusted community institutions and relationships.

Digital & Broadcast Media

Social media reels, radio talk shows, safety jingles, influencer partnerships, press releases, newsletters, and broadcast media — extending reach to urban, youth, and wider regional audiences.

4. Project Organization & Staffing

Implementing Organization: Road Safety Action International (RSAI)

Role / Institution Function in PT-RVB
RSAI Programme Director Strategic oversight, stakeholder engagement, donor reporting, and project team coordination
Communications Lead Design and manage the multi-platform communication strategy; oversee content production, channel management, and messaging consistency
Road Safety Signage Specialist Design and deploy work-zone safety signage systems; ensure compliance with road safety standards; adapt signage to weather and environmental conditions
Community Engagement Officers Lead town hall meetings, market dialogues, community consultations, intergenerational dialogue sessions, and feedback mechanism management at project sites
Local Language & Translation Specialists Translate all communication materials into relevant Liberian languages and dialects; ensure cultural appropriateness and accessibility of all messaging
Creative Production Team Produce jingles, social media reels, visual campaigns, posters, flyers, and storytelling content — ensuring high quality, cultural relevance, and message consistency
Digital & Social Media Officer Manage social media platforms, track digital reach analytics, coordinate influencer partnerships, and produce digital content and press releases
M&E & Analytics Officer Monitor communication reach, engagement, and behavioral indicators; conduct community feedback surveys; produce analytics reports and adaptive recommendations
Road Construction Project Teams Provide project timeline, safety requirements, and site access information; coordinate with RSAI on work-zone signage deployment and community notification timing
Community Leaders & Town Criers Trusted local partners for peer-to-peer communication, town crier networks, and community mobilization — ensuring messages reach all community members

5. Project Schedule

PT-RVB runs parallel to the road construction project it is assigned to support — from pre-construction community preparation through to post-completion visibility and evaluation:

1
Community Mapping & Communication Baseline (Pre-Construction) Map communities along the project corridor — identifying languages spoken, trusted communication channels, community leaders, market days, town hall structures, and literacy levels. Conduct a communication baseline survey measuring current road safety awareness, project knowledge, and community attitudes. Develop the tailored multi-platform communication strategy and produce initial materials.
2
Work-Zone Signage Deployment & Launch Communication (Construction Start) Deploy comprehensive work-zone safety signage and visibility infrastructure at all construction zone entry and transition points. Launch the multi-platform communication campaign — radio talk shows, town hall meetings, social media reels, jingles, and community dialogues — announcing the project, its timeline, safety measures, and community benefits. Brief town criers and community liaison officers on key messages.
3
Continuous Communication & Community Engagement (Throughout Construction) Maintain continuous multi-platform communication throughout the construction period — updating communities on progress, hazard changes, timeline adjustments, and safety requirements. Conduct regular community dialogues, market-based engagement, peer-to-peer sessions, and intergenerational discussions. Update signage as construction zones move. Collect and respond to community feedback. Track communication reach and adapt strategy based on analytics.
4
Mid-Construction Review & Communication Adaptation (Project Midpoint) Conduct a structured review of communication effectiveness — assessing reach, message retention, behavioral change indicators, community trust levels, and emerging concerns. Adapt communication channels, messages, and engagement approaches based on review findings. Produce mid-point communication effectiveness report for project owners and development bank partners.
5
Completion Visibility Campaign & Final Evaluation (Post-Construction) Launch a project completion visibility campaign — celebrating the completed road, communicating its benefits to communities, and reinforcing safe use behaviors on the new infrastructure. Conduct final community feedback surveys and communication effectiveness evaluation. Produce final PT-RVB report documenting reach, community impact, lessons learned, and recommendations for future project communication strategies.

6. Indicative Budget

Budget Category Description Indicative Share
Personnel & Communication Staff Communications lead, community engagement officers, language specialists, creative team, digital officer, M&E officer 30%
Work-Zone Signage & Visibility Infrastructure Warning signs, road markings, reflective barriers, local-language notices, banners, and site branding materials 20%
Creative Production & Content Jingles, social media reels, video content, posters, flyers, newsletters, storytelling materials, and visual campaigns 20%
Community Engagement Activities Town halls, market dialogues, community meetings, peer-to-peer sessions, town crier networks, and feedback mechanisms 15%
Media & Digital Channels Radio airtime, social media advertising, influencer partnerships, press releases, and digital platform management 10%
M&E, Analytics & Administration Communication baseline and evaluation surveys, analytics tools, monitoring reports, and programme administration 5%
Total 100%

7. Project Log Frame — Outputs, Outcomes & Impact

Level Statement Indicators Means of Verification
Impact Reduced crash risks and injuries during road construction; strengthened public trust and community ownership of road infrastructure investment; lasting behavior change among road users in construction zones % reduction in crashes and near-misses in construction zones; community trust and ownership scores at project completion; % of road users demonstrating safe behavior in work zones Crash data from construction zone areas; community satisfaction surveys; behavioral observation reports; project owner assessments
Outcome 1 Improved road user awareness of work-zone hazards and safe behavior in construction zones along project corridors % of road users demonstrating knowledge of work-zone safety rules; % compliance with work-zone speed limits and warning signs Road user knowledge surveys; behavioral observation data; enforcement records
Outcome 2 Increased community trust, acceptance, and ownership of road construction projects Community trust scores before and after engagement activities; % of community members reporting positive perception of project; reduction in community complaints and resistance incidents Community feedback surveys; community dialogue reports; project team feedback logs
Outcome 3 Communication messages reaching intended audiences across all community segments — including women, youth, and non-literate groups — in accessible formats and local languages % of target communities reached per channel; reach disaggregated by gender, age, and literacy level; local-language message comprehension rate Analytics reports; community feedback surveys; reach monitoring data
Output 1 Work-zone safety signage system deployed and maintained throughout construction Number of signage elements installed per zone; % of zones with complete and compliant signage; signage maintenance compliance rate Signage installation records; field inspection reports; photographic documentation
Output 2 Multi-platform communication strategy developed and implemented Communication strategy documented and launched; number of platforms active; reach data per channel Strategy document; platform analytics; media records
Output 3 Local-language communication materials produced and disseminated Number of languages covered; materials produced per format; distribution records Material production records; distribution logs; community receipt confirmation
Output 4 Community engagement activities conducted throughout project lifecycle Number of town halls, dialogues, and engagement events held; people reached; feedback collected Event reports; attendance records; feedback documentation
Output 5 Communication effectiveness monitoring reports produced and disseminated Monitoring reports produced on schedule; adaptive adjustments documented and implemented Monitoring reports; analytics data; adaptive management records
Activity 1 Conduct community mapping and communication baseline survey Mapping and baseline completed before construction start Community map; baseline survey report
Activity 2 Deploy work-zone safety signage and launch communication campaign Signage deployed; campaign launched at construction start Installation records; campaign launch reports; media records
Activity 3 Maintain continuous multi-platform communication and community engagement Communication active throughout construction; engagement events held regularly Platform analytics; event reports; community feedback logs
Activity 4 Conduct mid-construction communication review and adapt strategy Review conducted; adaptive recommendations implemented Mid-review report; adaptive management documentation
Activity 5 Launch completion visibility campaign and conduct final evaluation Completion campaign launched; final evaluation completed Campaign records; final PT-RVB report; evaluation documentation

8. Conclusion

Every warning sign a driver reads and obeys is a crash that does not happen in a work zone.

Every community dialogue that builds trust is a road project that will be protected, not resisted.

Every message delivered in a language a community understands is a barrier to exclusion removed.


The Visibility Project is not a communications add-on to road construction —
it is a fundamental safety and social accountability intervention that protects lives during construction
and builds the community trust that makes road investments last, matter, and belong to the people they serve.

Partner With Us

We welcome partnerships with institutions committed to safer, more inclusive, and community-trusted road construction projects:

Road Construction Companies Ministry of Public Works Community Leaders Radio Stations Development Partners Civil Society Organizations Digital Media Partners Local Government Authorities

Together, we can ensure that every road project in Liberia is seen, understood, trusted, and owned — by every community it passes through.