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> Get Articles > Publicity > Public Relations: Converting the Non-Believers

Public Relations: Converting the Non-Believers


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Robert A. Kelly
bobkellyTNI.net

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


What’s the real reason some managers shy away from public

relations? I believe it’s because they don’t understand, or

believe, the direct connection between what public relations

is capable of delivering and their need to achieve specific

business objectives.



It’s lost opportunity of the worst kind. And a shame, because

the reason we do public relations in the first place is to

change the behaviors of certain groups of people important

to the success of those very Doubting Thomas managers.



First, I would say to them, surely, it’s not that difficult a

concept to understand or accept. People act on their perception

of the facts; those perceptions lead to certain behaviors;

and something can be done about those perceptions and behaviors

that leads to achieving your organization’s objectives.



Better yet, you can establish the degree of behavior change

you want, up front, then insist on getting that result before

you pronounce the public relations effort a success.



That way, you KNOW you’re getting your money’s worth.



Here’s another approach. 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? 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.



But, as Doubting Thomases you might ask, are we

really qualified to do that job?



I think yes, because everything we do is based on the same

realities -- people act on their perception of the facts, and

we can do something about those perceptions. And 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.



It works this way in practice.



o you may wish to encourage a certain audience to sample

your soft drink brand’s great taste and refreshing flavor,

in the process creating perceptions of value, then new sales.



o or you may want people to perceive your organization

more positively, thus strengthening its reputation.



o it could be as simple as communicating a company’s

strengths to a target audience leading them to a positive

perception of the firm, in turn leading to new investments

in the company’s shares.



I know, Mr. or Ms. Manager, that you are not primarily

interested in our ability to communicate, paint images or

schmooz with the media. Nor are you especially fascinated

with our efforts to identify target audiences, set public

relations goals and strategies, write persuasive messages and

select communications tactics.



What I believe you DO want is a change in the behaviors

of certain key audiences leading directly to the

achievement of your business objectives.



Which is why we continually stress that quality planning,

and the degree of behavioral change it produces, defines

the success or failure of a public relations program.



Done correctly, when public relations results in modified

behaviors among groups of people important to an organization,

we could be talking about nothing less than its survival.



So, for your organization, Ms. Manager, that means

public relations professionals must modify somebody’s

behavior if they are to help hit your objective and earn a

paycheck – I believe everything else is a means to that end.



O.K., Mr. Manager, let’s look at how public relations might

work for you out on the ground. We’ll use the example of a

national marketer of furniture imported from the Far East.

First, we identify the key operating problem to be addressed.

Let’s say we receive news reports and other input, amplified

by competitive trouble-making out in the trade, about rumors

circulating to the effect that serious quality problems have

cropped up in the company’s factories in Southeast Asia.



Here, we verify whether the allegation is true or false.

So, because the company’s sales have leveled off and are

starting to decline, public relations counsel and staff, working

closely with the company’s manufacturing people here and

abroad, establish conclusively that rumors of declining quality

are without foundation, and simply untrue.



But, even though the rumors are not true, we still want to

verify the status of both consumer and trade PERCEPTIONS

of the company’s product quality.



But, surprise! Probing consumer opinion through personal

contact and informal polling out in the market place, counsel

and staff determine that, in fact, there really IS a

disturbing perception out there that the company’s furniture

line is “of low quality and overpriced.”



It’s useful to make the point here, Ms. Manager, that public

relations problems are nearly always defined by what people

think about the facts, as opposed to the actual truth of the

matter.



Moving on, we establish the public relations goal: alter the

public perception of the company’s furniture quality. This

will lead to positive consumer behavioral changes, in turn

resulting in furniture buyers returning to company showrooms

once again.



Now we determine the public relations strategy. We only have

three choices: CREATE opinion where none exists, CHANGE

existing opinion, or REINFORCE that existing opinion. Because

existing opinion has turned negative on the quality of the

company’s furniture, the public relations strategy will be to

begin the process of CHANGING that opinion from negative to

positive.



Here, we identify key audiences. In this case,

at the top of the list is the furniture-buying public –

customers and prospects – as well as the trade and business

communities, employees, local thought-leaders and media in

the company’s retail outlet locations, and a number of other

possible stakeholder groups.



Now, Ms. and Mr. Manager, we begin preparation of what we

hope will be persuasive messages for communication to our

target audiences.



It’s a challenge. The messages must disarm the rumors

circulating in the furniture community with clear evidence

of excellent design and construction quality, and seconded

by credible third-party endorsements such as satisfied

customers and top design consultants.



Regular assessments of how opinion is currently running

among target groups must be performed, constantly tweaking

the message and, finally, action-producing incentives for

individuals to take the desired actions must be identified

and built into each message.



Those incentives might include the very strength of the

company’s forthright position on the quality issue,

high-credibility designer endorsements, plans for expansion

that hold the promise of more jobs and taxes, or even the

sponsorship of a new cable TV furniture design show.



So, how will target audiences in the various company

locations actually be reached, Mr. Manager Thomas?

Among a wide variety of available communications tactics,

choices include 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 promotional contests.



Now, it’s time to monitor progress and look for

signs of improvement. Public relations staff and counsel 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.



At last, indicators that the messages are moving opinion

in your direction will start appearing. 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.



What is happening, is that the action program is beginning

to gain and hold the kind of public understanding and

acceptance that will lead to the desired shift in public

behavior.



And the end-game for this example of public relations in action?



When the changes in behaviors become truly apparent through

increased showroom traffic, media reports, thought-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 near-perfect public relations performance

measurement.



To assess behavior changes and, thus, the degree of success

the public relations program has achieved, we need evidence

of changes in behavior showing up as follows: Internet chatter

and in print and broadcast news coverage, letters-to-the-editor,

consumer and customer reactions, shareholder letters,

comments from community leaders, informal polls of employees,

retirees, industrial neighbors and local businesses, feedback

from suppliers as well as reaction from elected officials,

union leaders and government agencies.



But, we can’t let the Doubting Thomases off the hook without

reminders that some very basic but unattended perceptions may

be out there that could lead to very costly negative behaviors.

For example, Mr. Manager:



0 if sales prospects are unaware of your product or service, you will

not get them as customers.



0 if your customers don’t remain convinced of the value of your

product or service, you lose them.



0 and if employees believe you don’t care about them, productivity suffers.



And on and on when still more audiences like citizens, journalists, regulators, investors and legislators don’t believe you.



In the end, a sound strategy combined with effective

tactics leads directly to the bottom line – altered perceptions,

modified behaviors, a happy CEO and a public relations home

run.



So, Mr. and Ms. Manager Thomas, what do I believe you want

from us? I believe you want us to apply our special skills in

a way that helps you achieve your business objectives. But

no matter what strategic plan we create to solve a problem,

no matter what tactical program we put in place, at the end

of the day we must modify somebody’s behavior for you if we

are to earn our money.



Which is why I say that when you measure our real

effectiveness, you will be fully satisfied with those public

relations results only when our “reach, persuade

and move-to-action” efforts produce that visible modification

in the behaviors of those people you wish to influence. In my

view, this is the central, strategic function of public

relations – the basic context in which we must operate.



Doubting Thomases aside, I hope these remarks contain a

nugget or two that assists you in leading the non-believers in

your organizations to a better understanding of the function

of public relations. Especially how it can strengthen

relationships with those important groups of people – those

target audiences whose perceptions and behaviors can help or

hinder the achievement of their business objectives.



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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