You're really applying the hard sell to activists to use your posters. And they're good posters, but postering itself is a lot less effective than you probably believe. Even worse, many activists think of themselves as masters of postering, especially if they've been in art school and have so much as designed a single poster for thoir girl- or boyfriend's rock band. I've done a fair bit of political postering, too, in my day, from promoting the Democratic Party to an Esperanto group. (No rock bands, though. Most of my girlfriends have been tone-deaf.)
Sadly for posterists like you and me, they can not be the backbone of an educational campaign. People tune them out within 300 msec of seeing them; those who DO respond to the message account for fewer than one person in a thousand, and are often unfortunately idle (from unemployment, being young, etc.).
The real strength of a poster is to quickly "imprint" an image or a phrase, the way advertising is used -- or, more accurately, the way posters are used in advertising.
Here's an example of what I mean:
Peak Oil Is Here
What does it mean for YOU?
www.PeakOilWebsite.org
Bang! Instant imprint! The question sinks in, and the mind is primed -- without coercing the recipient in any way. And even if they don't take the URL, they will respond to the phrase in the press. The question is in their mind, so at some point, they will read more, and probably become an "early adopter" -- and possibly a community leader at the point things start to get unpleasant.
Here's a nastier one:
Superfamine 2017
Imagine a world without oil.
www.PeakOilWebsite.org
It's a "Mad Max" story delivered in a quarter of a second. It also uses the "imagine ..." trope with the late Mr. Lennon's connotations -- in reverse. Future dates are very dramatic and can be delivered in four characters.
People will automatically think of the future when presented with a future date, even completely context-free. When I was in college in 1979, as one of those undergrad psych "experiments", I put up a single 4"x6" (landscape) poster in one building that simply said "1995". A week later, I asked a number of students about it. Most had actually seen the poster, and a fair number asked me anxiously what would happen in 1995. (The Internets, as it turned out!)
The example also promotes the use of a buzzphrase that can widen the concern of the consequences of Peak Oil. Other single-word buzzes could be: Superdepression. Powerdown. Blackout. Supercrash. Hypercrash. Foodless.
Now for the Obligatory Crit Section:
Your "$300" poster (I read your bio, and I guess that's AU$300 for you) is catchy, but the text is unbelievable, and some people will quickly evaluate it to be incorrect, so you risk losing audience. IMO, using the text "Let It Rust" alone has more impact (and evokes Beatles and Stones songs). The "Final" poster is excellent, but way too didactic for quick impact, and would be better produced as a pamphlet for high-interest people.
But they're both well-designed and produced. Criticism aside, both are quite workable.
If you want to concentrate entirely on postering, you will probably have to stay away from education and focus on drama. But you'll also have to deal with a big helping of frustration, since posters have slow, hard-to-quantify effects. You may find relief from that helpless, crazy feeling by starting a local group, and/or writing more in your blog.
Peak oil blogs get read. Oh, yes, indeed, they get read.
--p!