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> Get Articles > Publicity > Are You a PR Chowderhead?

Are You a PR Chowderhead?


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Robert A. Kelly
bobkellyTNI.net

PRCommentary.com LLC
http://www.prcommentary.com


You are if you stand by while your public relations people

futz around with communications tactics instead of nailing

down those outside audience behaviors that help you reach

your objectives.



No slap at communications tactics. They come in real handy

at the right time, as noted later in this piece.



But the real public relations opportunity lies with this reality:

People act on their own perception of the facts before them,

which leads to predictable behaviors about which something

can be done. When we create, change or reinforce that opinion

by reaching, persuading and moving-to-desired-action those

people whose behaviors affect the organization, the public

relations mission is accomplished.



What it does for you, is put the spotlight where it belongs by

delivering the key external audience behaviors you need to

help achieve your mission objectives. So look at tactics for

what they are -- no substitute for a primary public relations

effort.



For example, change perceptions and, thus, behaviors among

those important outside audiences of yours, then watch for

activity like customers making repeat purchases, capital

givers or specifying sources looking your way, prospects

starting to do business with you, community leaders seeking

you out, organizations proposing strategic alliances and joint

ventures, and legislators and political leaders viewing you as

a key member of the business, non-profit or association

communities.



It just isn’t that hard to do it right.



Check out the PR work underway in your unit for activities

like these. Has anyone listed those outside audiences with the

greatest impact on your specific operation? Has that list been

prioritized according to the severity of those impacts?



Do you have any real idea of how those key target audiences

at the top of the list perceive your organization? That’s really

important because, as the fundamental premise cited earlier

notes, those perceptions inevitably morph into behaviors that

can help or hurt achieving your unit objectives.



Of course there’s work involved in pulling this off. You, your

colleagues or somebody, must get out there and interact with

members of that key target audience.



And ask a lot of questions like “Have you heard of us? Have

you had contact with us? Was it satisfactory in all regards?”

Of course, all this time you are listening carefully for any

negativity while staying alert for evasive or hesitant responses,

and especially for untruths, inaccuracies, rumors or

misconceptions.



The data you collect, you will use to establish your public

relations goal, i.e., the specific perception to be altered,

followed by the desired behavior change. In other words,

your objective here is to correct those untruths, inaccuracies,

misconceptions and rumors.



But goals are worthless without strategies. Happily you have

three of them to choose from: create perception/opinion where

there isn’t any, change existing perception, or reinforce it.

Let your public relations goal point to the obvious choice.



Now you put on your writer’s hat and write a really persuasive

bit of prose – the corrective message you will use to create,

change or reinforce individual opinion among members of

that target audience. Clarity is really important, as is accuracy

and believability. The more compelling the message is, the

more it helps alter what a lot of people believe, so try hard to

“compel” the reader.



Luckily, you have a herd of “beasts of burden” – the

communications tactics mentioned earlier – that will carry

your “message of inspiration” to the eyes and ears of your

target audience.



The tactics range from newsworthy surveys, all kinds of

speeches and letters-to-the-editor to press releases, brochures,

radio and newspaper interviews and just about everything

in between. One caveat: make sure the tactics you select have

a proven record of reaching people like those in your target

audience.



Pretty soon you will ask yourself, “Are we making any

progress in altering the offending perception?” Assuming you

don’t want to spend a lot of money on professional opinion

surveys, (any more than you did earlier in this drill), you’ll

have to remonitor that target audience’s perceptions.



Big difference this time is, you’ll be watching carefully to see,

while asking the same questions again, to what degree the

offending perception has now been altered. In other words, how

much that perception is actually moving in your direction,

AND how likely it is to deliver the behaviors you really want.



That is to say, you have no chance of becoming a chowderhead

when you use the fundmental realities of public relations to

safely nail down the outside audience behaviors that help you

reach your objectives.



end



Bob Kelly counsels, writes and speaks to general management

personnel 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:bobkellyTNI.net Visit:http://www.prcommentary.com





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