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> Get Articles > Publicity > Could This Be The Best Way To Measure Public Relations Results?

Could This Be The Best Way To Measure Public Relations Results?


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Robert A. Kelly
bobkellyTNI.net

No Site Listed
http://www.marketing-seek.com


Could be. In fact, I believe it is. How can you measure the

results of an activity more accurately than when you clearly

achieve the goal you set at the beginning of that activity?



In my opinion, you can’t. It’s pure success when you meet

that goal.



Public relations is no different. The client/employer wants

our help in altering counterproductive perceptions among

key audiences which almost always change behaviors in a

way that helps him or her get to where they want to be.



And why are we uniquely qualified to do that job?



Because everything we do is based on the realities that people

act on their perception of the facts and that we can do

something about those perceptions. When public relations

activity successfully creates, changes or reinforces that

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

people whose behaviors affect the organization, the public

relations effort is a success.



But before we follow that client/employer on his or her

way to that kind of successful public relations end game, a

few words about the measurement challenge itself.



It’s a large challenge and one that stands between us and

the achievement of that conclusive indicator showing that

our public relations investment has been applied wisely.



Unfortunately, traditional public relations performance

measurement methods are subjective and open to varied

interpretation because we do not have viable and widely

accepted public relations measurement standards.



Instead, as we attempt to evaluate public relations

performance now, we must use highly subjective, very limited

and only partially applicable performance judgements. Among

them, inquiry generation, story content analysis, gross

impressions, and even equivalent advertising value.



It’s incredible when you think about it.



Here we are, part and parcel of America’s multi-trillion

dollar industrial, educational and organizational collossus

and, yet, we cannot demonstrate conclusively – that’s

CONCLUSIVELY – that we achieved our public relations

program’s behavioral goal.



Why? Because, as of today, it costs WAY too much public

opinion survey money to demonstrate conclusively that we

achieved the public relations perception and behavioral

goal set at the beginning of the program. In many cases, the

opinion research costs more than the entire underlying public

relations program. Thus, it’s almost always set aside in favor

of “winging it.”



What are we to do?



This article highlights what many professionals already know.

We need this final step in the public relations problem solving

sequence, and we need it badly.



What can be done? I like the NASA approach. When money is

especially short, these dedicated people repeatedly find a

way around the problem using an amazing mix of tech-

nology innovation, operational creativity and raw determination.



Here, in the year 2002, why cannot the best minds in the

fields of public relations, sociology, psychology and

opinion gathering attack the challenge of PROVING CONCLUSIVELY

that a given public relations campaign has – or has not –

changed target audience behaviors as planned at the beginning



of the program, and do so without bankrupting its participants?

Until an answer to that question presents itself, let us

follow our client/employer as s/he pursues that successful

public relations end game.



Take the client/employer bedeviled by activists who perceive

his or her organization as despoilers of the environment, or

whose newly introduced kitchen appliance is perceived as

unsafe, or who is perceived as profiting from the labors of

underage workers in its Far Eastern manufacturing plants.



Common to each are negative perceptions which invariably

lead to negative behaviors such as calls for more government

regulation, legal challenges, falling product sales, declining

share prices and boycotts, to name a few.



Secure in the knowledge that public relations problems are

nearly always defined by what people think about the facts

rather than the actual truth of the matter, the public

relations team faced with such challenges must now mount

its attack. In particular to alter counterproductive perceptions

and behaviors, and achieve the behavioral goal set at the

beginning of the activity.



First, it assesses the accuracy of each allegation. If there

is some truth to it, immediate remedial action is called

for. Even if it is patently untrue, the damaging perception

remains and must be confronted.



Now we identify our key audiences by starting with a

priority-ranking of those audiences with a clear interest

in the organization, often referred to as “stakeholders” or

“publics.” Here, among others, we might spotlight customers

and prospects, the trade and business communities, employees,

local thought-leaders and media in field locations, as well

as a number of other possible stakeholder groups.



Then, through industry and community contacts as well as

opinion sampling, we determine the level of individual concern,

i.e., the degree of awareness, personal feeling and emotion

about the allegations and where they are the strongest among

the organization’s key audiences.



Now, we establish the public relations goal. Namely, to change

public perception of the negative allegations from negative to

positive.



Within that overall public relations goal, we set down our

perception and behavior modification objectives which obviously

will require considerable communications firepower to achieve.

However, once the negative perceptions are truly understood, such a

progress marker can be set down, and agreed upon, thus

establishing the degree of behavioral change that can be

expected.



Here, we determine the public relations strategy. We only have

three choices: CREATE opinion where none exists, CHANGE

existing opinion, or REINFORCE that existing opinion. In

this case, it is clear that considerable existing opinion

has turned negative so the public relations strategy will

be to begin the process of changing that opinion – not creating or

reinforcing it -- from negative to positive.



At this point, we begin preparation of what we hope will

be persuasive messages for communication to our target

audiences. Bringing those important audiences around to

one’s way of thinking depends heavily on the quality of the

messages we prepare.



At the least, the messages must disarm rumors and correct

misstatements and inaccuracies thus providing a credible

basis upon which individuals may alter their perceptions.

Of course, pretesting a message for effectiveness with focus

groups is always recommended.



With this homework completed, “communications weaponry”

(how do we project our carefully prepared messages to our

key audiences?) must be brought to bear.



Among examples of the wide variety of communications tactics

available to us are face-to-face meetings, Internet ezines and

email, hand-placed newspaper and magazine feature articles

and broadcast appearances, special consumer briefings, news

releases, announcement luncheons, onsite media interviews,

facility tours, brochures and even promotional contests.



Especially effective in reaching target audiences with the

message are newsmaker special events. They are newsworthy by

definition and include activities such as financial roadshows,

awards ceremonies, trade conventions, celebrity appearances

and open houses.



The publicity, or communications effort can then be accelerated,

insuring that the GROUPS of tactics most likely to efficiently

reach our target audiences are chosen. Here we refer to major

tactical activities such as key Internet communications,

important podium presentations, top-level personal contacts

as well as prime-rated print and broadcast media interviews.

Because when such tools are used to communicate with each

target audience, we want them to hit home!



Here, I want to monitor progress and look for signs of

improvement. Public relations counsel and staff must speak

regularly with members of each target audience, monitor print

and broadcast media for evidence of the company’s messages

or viewpoints, and interact with key customers, prospects and

influentials. And, if resources allow, local market opinion

polling should be included.



Finally, indicators that the messages are clearly moving opinion

in your direction will start showing up. Indicators like

comments in community business meetings, mentions in research

analyst’s reports, local newspaper editorials, e-mails from

members of target audiences as well as public references by

political figures and local celebrities.



And that means we are approaching the end-game. When the

changes in behaviors become really obvious through increased

sales, print and broadcast reports, community-leader comment,

employee and community chatter and a variety of other

feedback – in other words, clearly meeting the original

behavior modification goal – two things have occurred. One,

the public relations program is a success and, two, by

achieving the behavioral goal you set at the beginning, you

are using a virtually perfect public relations performance

measurement.



The missing ingredient? Affordable public opinion research.



end



Bob Kelly, public relations consultant, was director of public

relations for Pepsi-Cola Co.; AGM-Public Relations, Texaco Inc.;

VP-Public Relations, Olin Corp.; VP-Public Relations, 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





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