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> Get Articles > Publicity > Ignore PR at Your Peril!

Ignore PR at Your Peril!


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Robert A. Kelly
bobkellyTNI.net

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


If you do, it means:



1. you don’t value tracking the perceptions of important

outside audiences whose behaviors could sink your ship:



2. you don’t care about setting a public relations goal

designed to correct misconceptions, inaccuracies or rumors

that can hurt you;



3. you care even less about strategies to get you from here to

that PR goal you already don’t care about;



4. and you certainly don’t value the persuasive messages you

need to convince your key outside audiences that their

damaging perceptions of your enterprise are dead wrong.



Man, that’s risky and an awful lot not to care about!



Actually, I don’t believe you don’t care, and I don’t believe

you’re really ignoring public relations. If you were, by now

your organization would be on its last legs, Kaput!, Morto!



In fact, you may be a closet PR person who knows better. Why

you may even buy the fundamental premise of public relations:



“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.”





I’ll bet you’re also pretty darn good at monitoring what that

#1 external audience thinks about you and your organization.

And that you regularly interact with them asking questions

like What do you think of us? Why? while watching for

negative undertones, wrong-headed beliefs or misconceptions.



And that means you’ll be anxious to create a public relations

goal that corrects such misconceptions because they can lead

directly to negative behaviors that will hurt you.



In practice, your goal may be focused on pacifying an

activist group, reinforcing prospect interest in your

product or service, or even countering a painful rumor.



You’re probably ahead of me in forming the strategy

you need to reach that goal. For better or worse, there are

only three ways to deal with opinion or perception

problems. Create some all-new opinion where none

exists, change existing opinion, or reinforce it.



With goal and strategy both in hand, you now have some

real work to do. What will you need to say to your key

audience members to persuade them to your way of thinking?

You must be clear about what should be corrected or

clarified. You must also be persuasive, and your facts and

figures believable. And if appropriate, try to be compelling,

perhaps with a certain sense of urgency.



Your “foot soldiers” – communications tactics – can now

carry that hard-won message to the attention of your #1 target

audience, and there are scads of them just waiting for you to

send them into action. For example, speeches, news releases,

brochures, special events, radio interviews and one-on-one

meetings.



One question remains. How do you tell whether or not you

are making any headway with your public relations effort?



You again interact with members of that key audience of

yours. And yes, with questions very similar to those you

asked during your original information gathering exercise

at the start of the program. Only this time, you are more

interested in whether your communications tactics have

moved perceptions in your direction.



Do the new responses show signs that your were successful

in changing that inaccurate belief? Or correcting that

misconception? Or killing that dangerous rumor for good?



Not enough movement? Take another look at your message

to see if it is really compelling. Is it honestly persuasive?

Are your facts supportive of your goal and strategy? Is it

written clearly enough?



I want to reemphasize that what you are looking for at this

stage is a strong indication that your efforts have clearly

moved perceptions and target audience behaviors in the

desired direction.



When this second monitoring drill allows that conclusion,

you will have good reason to value highly your public

relations goal, strategy, message and communications tactics.



Together, they will have made it possible for you to say,

as promised in the fundamental premise,“My public

relations mission is accomplished.”



end



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:bobkellyTNI.net

Visit: http://www.prcommentary.com





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