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> Get Articles > Publicity > Is PR All About Image? NO!!

Is PR All About Image? NO!!


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Robert A. Kelly
bobkellyTNI.net

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


That’s like asking if advertising is all about type faces and

photography. The answer to both questions is a teeth-clenched

“of course not!”



What public relations IS all about, rather than hollow images,

is the very real business of dealing effectively with target

audience perceptions and behaviors that have a major effect on

an organization.



For example, sales prospects who perceive your product as

overpriced and are busy taking their buying power elsewhere;

or employees who believe you don’t give a tinker’s damn

about them and have dangerously reduced your productivity;

or local citizens who believe, true or not, that you dump bad

stuff into the river, thus keeping a negative media spotlight

trained on your organization.



To answer the headline one more time, public relations is all

about insuring that such results don’t happen in the first place.



First, if those involved in the examples above had been

regularly monitoring those target audiences, they would

have had ample warning and the time needed to take corrective

action.



So regularly monitoring those key external audiences is a must.

What are they thinking about your business, if anything? Are

perception problems looming? Are follow-on behaviors

developing as a result?



The answers to those questions allow you to set a public

relations goal, generally corrective in nature. Examples:

you determine that your prices are not only fair, but below

several competitors and you plan to publicize and promote

that fact; or you plan to meet regularly with employees,

listen to them and do something about their complaints,

if you can; or you meet with the activist group and share with

them the State Environmental Agency’s finding that you

are in complete compliance with disposal regulations.



With the public relations goal set, we obviously need a

strategy designed to reach that goal. And this could be the

least complex step in the problem solving sequence

because there are only three possible strategies available to

us – create opinion where there is none, change existing

opinion, or reinforce it. That’s it! It must be one of those.



In the three cases outlined above, you clearly would be

aiming to change existing opinions.



Next on the public relations agenda are the persuasive

messages needed to change that existing opinion. You must

design them carefully and creditably to counter the

misconceptions you uncover, such as those above. Run

them by folks outside your organization so that you get an

idea of just HOW persuasive they are (or are not!).



Now, we need to assign a few “beasts of burden”

communications tactics to actually carry our persuasive

messages directly to the eyes and ears of our key target

audiences. Fortunately, we have available to us scores of

tactics. Everything from newspaper interviews, on-camera

appearances, live radio interviews and in-person meetings

to brochures, speeches, op-eds, special events and editorial

board meetings.



Which suggests that you consider working with a professional

public relations advisor because you probably have neither

the time nor expertise to handle this work.



Now, it’s back to the monitoring chore to measure how many

individuals received the message (and through what medium),

and how many are aware of the message content. Monitoring

at this point also let’s us make mid-course corrections by

adjusting both message content and the mix of communications

tactics.



As time passes, and your monitoring of target audience opinion

progresses, you will begin to notice growing signs of awareness

of your business, of yourself as its proprietor, and of its role

in the marketplace and the community.



It is now that you will become a believer in public relations’s

ability to strengthen your business relationships with those

important, external audiences. People who hold in their hands

not a hollow image of your business, but through their patronage

and support, the actual success of your enterprise.



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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