::Business::
Automotive
Automotive-1
Automotive-2
Business and Finance
Business and Finance 01
Business and Finance 02
Business and Finance 03
Business and Finance 04
Business and Finance 05
Business and Finance 06
Business and Finance 07
Business and Finance 08
Business and Finance 09
Business and Finance 10
Business and Finance 11
Business and Finance 12
Business and Finance 13
Business and Finance 14
Business and Finance 15
Business and Finance 16
Business and Finance 17
Business and Finance 18
Business and Finance 19
Debts and Credit
Debts and Credit 01
Debts and Credit 02
Debts and Credit 03
Employment and Hiring
General 01
General 02
General 03
General 04
General 05
General 06
General 07
General 08
General 09
General 10
General 11
General 12
General 13
General 14
General 15
General 16
General 17
General 18
General 19
General 20
General 21
General 22
General 23
General 24
General 25
General 26
General 27
General 28
General 29
General 30
General 31
General 32
General 33
Home Business
Home Business 01
Home Business 02
Legal Matter 01
Legal Matter 02
Legal Matter 03
Legal Matter 04
Legal Matter 05
Legal Matters
Real Estate
 
::Computers and Internet::
Computers and Internet
Computers and Internet 01
Computers and Internet 02
Computers and Internet 03
Computers and Internet 04
Computers and Internet 05
Computers and Internet 06
Computers and Internet 07
Computers and Internet 08
Computers and Internet 09
Computers and Internet 10
Computers and Internet 11
Computers and Internet 12
Computers and Internet 13
Computers and Internet 14
Computers and Internet 15
Computers and Internet 16
Computers and Internet 17
Computers and Internet 18
Computers and Internet 19
Computers and Internet 20
Computers and Internet 21
Computers and Internet 22
 
::Family::
Child Care
General
General 01
General 02
General 03
General 04
General 05
General 06
Parenting
Parenting 01
Parenting 02
Parenting 03
Parenting 04
 
::Food and Drink::
Food and Drink
Food and Drink 01
Food and Drink 02
Food and Drink 03
Kitchen
 
::Health and Fitness::
Arthritis
Cancer Related
Depression
Diabetes
Exercise
General 01
General 02
General 03
General 04
General 05
General 06
General 07
General 08
General 09
General 10
General 11
General 12
General 13
General 14
General 15
General 16
General 17
General 18
General 19
General 20
General 21
General 22
General 23
General 24
General 25
General 26
General 27
General 28
General 29
General 30
General 31
General 32
General 33
Hair Loss
Weight Loss
Weight Loss 01
Weight Loss 02
 
::Home Improvement::
Home Improvement
Home Improvement 01
Home Improvement 02
Home Improvement 03
Home Improvement 04
Home Improvement 05
Home Improvement 06
 
::Internet Marketing::
Advertising and PR
Advertising and PR 01
Advertising and PR 02
Affiliate Marketing
Blogs
Copywriting
Email Marketing
Opt-In
Pay Per Click
RSS
Search Engines
Search Engines 01
Search Engines 02
Sitemap
Web Development
Web Development 01
Web Development 02
Web Development 03
Website Promotion
Website Promotion 01
Website Promotion 02
Website Promotion 03
Website Promotion 04
Website Promotion 05
Website Promotion 06
Website Promotion 07
Website Promotion 08
Website Promotion 09
Website Promotion 10
Website Traffic
Website Traffic 01
Website Traffic 02
Website Traffic 03
 
::Marketing and Sales::
Marketing and Sales
Marketing and Sales 01
Marketing and Sales 02
Marketing and Sales 03
Marketing and Sales 04
Marketing and Sales 05
Marketing and Sales 06
Marketing and Sales 07
Marketing and Sales 08
Marketing and Sales 09
Marketing and Sales 10
Marketing and Sales 11
Marketing and Sales 12
Marketing and Sales 13
Marketing and Sales 14
Marketing and Sales 15
Marketing and Sales 16
Marketing and Sales 17
Marketing and Sales 18
Marketing and Sales 19
Marketing and Sales 20
Marketing and Sales 21
Marketing and Sales 22
Marketing and Sales 23
Marketing and Sales 24
Marketing and Sales 25
Marketing and Sales 26
Marketing and Sales 27
Marketing and Sales 28
Marketing and Sales 29
Marketing and Sales 30
Marketing and Sales 31
Marketing and Sales 32
Marketing and Sales 33
Marketing and Sales 34
Marketing and Sales 35
 
::Online Business::
Online Business
Online Business 01
Online Business 02
Online Business 03
Online Business 04
Online Business 05
Online Business 06
Online Business 07
Online Business 08
Online Business 09
Online Business 10
Online Business 11
Online Business 12
Online Business 13
Online Business 14
Online Business 15
Online Business 16
Online Business 17
Online Business 18
Online Business 19
Online Business 20
Online Business 21
Online Business 22
Online Business 23
Online Business 24
Online Business 25
Online Business 26
Online Business 27
Online Business 28
Online Business 29
Online Business 30
Online Business 31
Online Business 32
Online Business 33
Online Business 34
Online Business 35
Online Business 36
Online Business 37
Online Business 38
 
::Pets::
Aquarium
Dog Training
Dogs
 
::Self Improvement and Motivation::
General
General 01
General 02
General 03
General 04
General 05
General 06
General 07
General 08
General 09
General 10
General 11
General 12
General 13
General 14
General 15
General 16
General 17
General 18
General 19
General 20
General 21
General 22
General 23
General 24
General 25
General 26
General 27
General 28
General 29
General 30
General 31
General 32
General 33
General 34
General 35
General 36
General 37
General 38
General 39
 
::Sports and Recreation::
General
General 01
General 02
General 03
 
::Travel and Leisure::
Gardening
Travel and Leisure
Travel and Leisure 1
Travel and Leisure 2
Travel and Leisure 3
 
::Women::
Women
Women 1
Women 2
Women 3
 
::Writing and Publishing::
Writing and Publishing
Writing and Publishing 1
Writing and Publishing 2
Writing and Publishing 3

 

content :: Business :: General 20

Public Relations Mixup?

Important Info on what you're looking for. Based on popular searches.

Please feel free to publish this article and resource box in your ezine, newsletter, offline publication or website. A copy would be appreciated at bobkelly@TNI.net. Word count is 885 including guidelines and resource box. Robert A. Kelly © 2003.



Public Relations Mixup?

When you pay good money for public relations services, you have a right to expect its primary focus to be on your most important outside audiences, those people whose behaviors have the greatest impact on your operation.

Often, however, that primary focus is limited to a communi- cations tactics debate about the relative merits of brochures versus press releases versus newsletters instead of planning how to achieve those key audience behaviors that directly support your business objectives and make the difference between success and failure.

Nothing wrong with communications tactics. They fit in just fine later in the effort, as you will see. Only point here? Use them for what they are, tactics, not a substitute for your primary public relations effort.



To insure that you’re not wasting that PR budget, you really need to stay in touch with your most important external audiences. Then carefully monitor their perceptions about your organization, their feelings and beliefs about hot topics at issue, both of which lead to predictable, follow-on behaviors.

First, you need to list those external audiences that have the most serious impacts on your organization. Rank them as to those impacts and let’s work on the one at the top of the list.

Now, you and your colleagues must interact with members of that outside audience and pose a lot of questions in order to gather the information you need.



Listen carefully to what they say about your organization, its products or services, and its management. Ask questions like “What do you think of us? and Are you pleased with what you know about us? Have you heard anything that you want explained?” It’s important to watch for negativity in attitudes and responses while staying alert to misconceptions, inaccuracies, dangerous rumors and unfounded beliefs and opinions.

The good news is the body of knowledge you will gather. Here are the facts you need to establish your public relations goal. That is, the actual perception change followed by the behavior change you want. Specifically, you may decide to spend your resources on clearing up a serious misconception, turning around that unfounded belief or killing that dangerous rumor once and for all.

What to DO with that completed goal comes next. Luckily, there are just three strategies to choose from when you deal with perception and opinion. You can create perception/opinion when there isn’t any, you can change existing opinion, or you can reinforce it. It will be obvious which one to choose once you’ve set your public relations goal.

It’s been real easy to this point, now you must prepare the message that will hopefully alter the perception and behavior of your target audience. It’s not easy. But it must be done in a believable, persuasive and compelling manner. The message must be clear and to the point with regard to exactly what is incorrect or untruthful. Remember this about the message: its only function is to alter existing perception on the part of members of the target audience. So, the guidelines are clarity, persuasiveness and credibility.

Your Ad Here

Here we are at the “public relations stable” housing our “beasts of burden” – your communications tactics whose job it is to carry your message to the attention of those key target audience members.

There is a really long list of tactics from which you can choose. Letters-to-the-editor, news releases, speeches, briefings, personal meetings, emails, newspaper and radio interviews and dozens more. Main requirement? Do they have a proven record of reaching the members of your target audience?

Are you making progress? Short of spending some real money on professional surveys (the cost of which often exceeds the entire public relations budget!), the best way to find out is to interact again with members of that target audience. In addition to being among the very people with whom you should regularly interact anyway, you and your colleagues can now personally assess attitudes, responses and degrees of awareness of your organization as well as particular misconceptions, untruths, inaccuracies or rumors.

Now, after six or eight weeks of your communications blitz, the difference between these perceptions and those gathered during the earlier interaction is that you are looking for signs that perceptions are now moving in your direction.

Should you decide to speed up the process, you might add a few more communication tactics to the mix, and increase their frequencies. Another look at your message would also be in order to reassure yourself that its factual base, clarity and impact measure up.

Once your perception monitoring shows that you have persuaded many target audience stakeholders towards your way of thinking, you may be sure that instead of wasting your PR budget, you are moving those stakeholders to behaviors that will produce the public relations success you want.

end



About The Author

Bob Kelly counsels, writes and speaks about the fundamental premise of public relations. He has been DPR, Pepsi-Cola Co.; AGM-PR, Texaco Inc.; VP-PR, Olin Corp.; VP-PR, Newport News Shipbuilding & Drydock Co.; director of communications, U.S. Department of the Interior, and deputy assistant press secretary, The White House. mailto:bobkelly@TNI.net. Visit: http://www.prcommentary.com.

This article was posted on August 19, 2003some content courtesy ArticleCity.com




If you didn't find what you're looking for above. Check the navigation menu on the left. We're sure to have the information that you require. Thanks.