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> Get Articles > Publicity > Public Relations: Get Started Right

Public Relations: Get Started Right


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Robert A. Kelly
bobkellyTNI.net

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


For young people who have decided that a career in public

relations will be their Latte Grande in life, here are four

situations in which you do not want to find yourself:



1. You confuse the basic function of public relations with

sub-parts that make up the whole like publicity,

crisis management or employee communications.



2. You feel unsure in approaching public relations problems,

then uncertain about what counsel to give your

employer/client.



3. As the years pass, you rely on career-long misconceptions

about public relations but forge ahead anyway advising

the employer/client ineffectively sometimes with damaging,

if not dangerous counsel.



4. You realize too late that you have gone through your entire

career without a firm grasp of what public relations is

all about.



You can avoid those pitfalls by grasping early-on The Rosetta

Stone of public relations, i.e., a guide to understanding the

discipline and its core strength. Namely, 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 lead to achieving an

organization’s objectives.



Which is why, when public relations goes on to successfully

create, change or reinforce public opinion by reaching,

persuading and moving-to-action those people whose behaviors

affect the organization, it accomplishes its mission.



The fact is that NO organization – business, non-profit or

public sector – can succeed today unless the behaviors of

its most important audiences are in-sync with the

organization’s objectives. And that means public relations

professionals must modify somebody’s behavior if they are

to help hit the employer/client’s objective and earn a

paycheck. All else are but means to that end.



Once that foundation of understanding is firmly set, an

action pathway begins to appear:



-- identify the problem or challenge

-- set the public relations goal

-- set the public relations strategy

-- identify target audiences

-- prepare persuasive messages

-- select/implement key communications tactics

-- monitor progress

-- and the end game? Meet the behavior

modification goal.



A bonus: you are using a near-perfect public relations

performance measurement. I mean 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



So, as a beginner, can you expect to avoid the four pitfalls

listed above? Yes, and here’s why:



-- With proper preparation, you will not confuse action

tactics with the basic mission of public relations because

you will know precisely what each is and just what fits

where in the public relations problem solving sequence.



-- You will feel more confident about providing counsel to

the employer/client because the public relations problem at

hand can be clearly identified allowing you to select

solutions that obviously fit into the action sequence

outlined above. You will identify your target audiences

because you will know exactly who your employer/client

wants to reach, and the necessary action tactics will

then be self-evident.



-- You realize that you have gone through your entire career

WITH a firm, successful grasp of what public relations

is all about.



Of course, on the way you will also nurture the relationships

between your target audiences and your employer/client’s

business by burnishing the reputation of the organization,

its service and products. You will do your best to persuade

those target audiences to do what your employer/client wants

them to do. And while seeking public understanding and

acceptance of that employer/client, you’ll insure that your

joint activities not only comply with the law, but clearly

serve the public interest. Then, you will pull out all tactical

stops to actually move those individuals to action. And your

employer/client will be pleased that you have brought matters

along to this point.



But when will that employer/client of yours be fully satisfied

with the public relations results you have produced? Only

when your “reach, persuade and move-to-action efforts have

produced that visible modification in the behaviors of those

target audiences you, and they wish to influence.



In my view, this is the central, strategic function of public

relations – the basic context in which you must operate in

your pursuit of a successful and satisfying public relations

career.



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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