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> Get Articles > Publicity > PR: Let's Talk Fundamentals

PR: Let's Talk Fundamentals


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Robert A. Kelly
bobkellyTNI.net

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


How much more fundamental can you get than this? As a

business, non-profit or association manager, if you don’t

get your most important outside audiences on your side,

you will fail.



To me, failure means key target audiences that don’t

behave as you want them to. For example, capital donors

or specifying sources who look the other way, customers

who fail to make repeat purchases, community leaders

working closely with your competitors, prospects still

doing business with others, organizations looking

elsewhere to propose new strategic alliances and joint

ventures, and even legislators and political leaders

overlooking you as a key member of the non-profit,

association or business communities.



All that can change in a New York minute when you

base a public relations effort on this simple premise:

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.



The primary benefit of that premise to you as a business,

non-profit or association manager is the kind of key

stakeholder behavior change that leads directly to

achieving your objectives.



And that’s very doable. Especially when you take the

time to list your most important external audiences,

then prioritize them according to the impacts they have

on your organization.



The real key to success using this premise is actually

gathering information as to how members of your key,

external audience perceive your organization.



If you have the resources available and can afford

professional survey help, fine. If, however, like most

of us you don’t, the best alternative is for you or your

colleagues to begin interacting with audience members.

Ask many questions starting with, “Have you heard of

us? What do you think of us, if at all? Have you ever

done business with us? Why do you feel the way you do?”



Listen carefully for signs of negativity, and watch for

untruths, false assumptions, inaccuracies, misconceptions

or flagrant rumors.



Obviously, the data you gather from this monitoring

activity form the basis of your public relations goal.

For example, correct that untruth or inaccuracy, clear up

that misconception, or spike that rumor.



Now here, you encounter three forks in the road.



You need a strategy to show you how to get where you

need to go. But only three choices are available to you

when dealing with matters of perception and opinion:

create perception where there may be none, change

existing perception, or reinforce it. And make certain the

strategy option you choose flows naturally from your

new public relations goal.



It’s writing time – hard work preparing the actual message

designed to alter people’s perceptions leading, hopefully,

to the behaviors you need to help achieve your objectives.



The corrective message is crucial. It must be clear about

just what perception needs clarifying, and why. Your facts,

of course, must be truthful, logical and believable in order

to be persuasive. And the tone of the message should be

compelling if it is to command attention and alter perception.



Next step is easy. Pick your ”beasts of burden,” the

communications tactics you will use to carry that brand

new, corrective message to members of your target audience.



You have a very long list of such tactics at your disposal.

The only caveat is, make sure each one shows a proven

record for reaching people like those who make up your

specific target audience.



Tactics range from electronic magazines (called eZines!),

speeches, brochures and emails to radio/newspaper

interviews, press releases, newsletters, facility tours and

so many more.



Shortly, you will start to wonder if you are making any

progress. And that means a second round of Q&A with

members of your target audience. Same questions as before,

by the way, only now your focus is on signs that their

perception has been altered to reflect that described in your

carefully prepared message.



You can always speed up the effort by introducing new

communications tactics, and by increasing their frequencies.

Also, not a bad idea to check that message of yours one

more time for both factual accuracy, and for how successful

it was at actually impacting opinion.



Clearly, as a business, non-profit or association manager,

you benefit most when your public relations program

succeeds in creating the kind of key stakeholder behavior

change that leads directly to achieving your objectives.



end



Bob Kelly counsels, writes and speaks to business, non-profit

and association managers 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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