Title: Jobs in public relations (conclusion); PR and the media
1Jobs in public relations (conclusion) PR and the
media
2PR employment settings
- Corporations
- Nonprofit organizations
- Government---------------
- Public relations agencies
- Independent consulting
3Review of corporate PR functions
- Consumer relations (marketing PR)
- Employee relations
- Media relations
- Government relations
- Community relations
- Business-to-business relations
- Investor relations
- Which of these would you expect to be part of
non-profit organizations PR functions?
4PR in non-profit organizations
5Examples of non-profit organizations that
generate PR communications
- Hospitals
- Universities (and their alumni organizations)
- Charitable organizations
- Churches
6Do non-profits use these?
- Consumer relations (marketing PR) maybe
- Employee relations yes
- Media relations yes
- Community relations yes
- Business-to-business relations not really
- But there are suppliers, sort of
- Investor relations no
7Non-profits PR efforts also include
- Donor relations
- Communicating with donors (producing and
distributing letters, pamphlets, videos) - Fundraising
- Which includes writing and producing direct-mail
solicitations - Member relations
8PR in government
9Where youll find PR used in government
- Legislative bodies (US and state Senate, House)
- Judicial system (courts)
- White House
- Executive departments (Labor, State, Education,
Transportation, HHS, etc.) - State governors offices
- Government agencies (FDA, SEC, FTC, Postal
System, FEMA, Homeland Security)
10Who are the publics for government PR?
- Voters (the general public)
- News media
- Employees
- Other government officials (e.g., legislatures)
11What is government PR called?
- Not public relations!
- Often, one of these
- Public information
- Public affairs
12Typical public information duties
- Writing press releases
- Writing speeches for politicians (and preparing
politicians for public appearances) - Writing brochures, pamphlets, etc. on policy
- Meeting with constituents (voters)
- Speaking (in role of official spokesperson)
13From a PR standpoint, whats true of the 3
categories we just looked at?
- Corporations
- Non-profit organizations
- Government
14- They generate their own PR materials
15But who else produces PR?
- Public relations agencies
- Independent PR consultants
16And who do they produce PR for?
- In other words, who are their clients?
- Corporations
- Non-profit organizations
- Government
- The work they do
- May either be in addition to what the clients do
themselves - Or may be the only PR done
17PR agencies
- Range from 2 people to over 1000
- Larger agencies divide employees into account
teams - Each team works on one or more accounts
(clients) - Team may consist of account executives, writers,
designers, producers - Or, one person on a team might do everything
18Independent PR consultants
- Some PR work is done by individuals
- Hired on a project-by-project basis
- Some consultants specialize in one PR function
- Crisis management, Event planning, Speechwriting
- Many are capable of doing whatevers needed
- Consultant might sub-contract work to others
19What skills do you need?
- Writing
- Writing
- Writing
- Writing
- Writing
- Writing
- Writing
- Writing
20What other skills do you need?
- Oral communication
- Public speaking, phone calls, one-on-one
meetings, group meetings - Organization
- Planning, details, logistics
- Research
- Know how to look for and information, ask the
right questions - Multi-tasking
21What qualities do you need?
- Enthusiasm and energy (the hours are LONG)
- Intellectual curiosity
- About the world, news, current events, history
- About your clients business (category)
- About business more generally
- About media, journalism
- About popular culture and entertainment
22Lets look at media relations in more depth
- All PR-involved organizations use it
- Corporations, not-for-profits, consultants,
agencies, governments - Central to all PR functioning
- More important now than ever
- Why?
23The power of media (from a PR perspective)
- Relatively cheapand effectivemethod of
communicating - with large, diverse, geographically dispersed
publics - When media publish information in news or feature
stories (as opposed to ads) - Conveys sense of legitimacy (its news!)
- Implies a third-party endorsement
24Problems of media (from PR perspective)
- Media are uncontrolled
- PR pros can send news and information
- But have no control on how its used
- Or even if its used
25What would be examples of controlled
information sources?
- Company publications
- Newsletters
- E-mail
- Closed-circuit TV
- Paid advertising
- Company web site
26Importance of each medium to PR pros
- Internet
- pushes information (from organization to
publics) - But also lets consumersand journalists!pull
desired information from web site - So PR pros must always keep their organizations
web sites up to date and on message
27Newspaper
- Despite recent declines in circulation
- Still powerful in shaping public agenda
- Still seen as most credible of media
- Especially for political news, world events
- Still engender loyalty from readers
28Magazines
- Consumer mags may not be as valuable to PR pros
as are trade and professional journals - Which are read by business leaders
- Which are focused on an industry or organization
category
29Radio
- Value a personal medium
- Enters peoples lives
- Feels one-to-one
- Radio stations open to promotional events
- Listeners develop strong parasocial relationships
with favorite hosts
30TV
- Most powerful mass medium
- Primary entertainment source
- Primary news/information source
- So best for reaching large (not targeted)
audiences - Still the primary medium for product publicity
- Which programming, specifically?
31Relationships between journalists and PR
professionals
- To explore this, we need to consider how each
side sees itself - And its roles and responsibilities
32How journalists see their jobs
- Important
- See themselves as serving democratic society
- They are the publics watchdogtheir eyes and
ears - They are the publics interpreters
- They not only report on whats going on
- They explain it, make sense of it, place it in
context
33Journalists priorities
- News coverage must be fair, accurate, balanced
- Not concerned with whether an organization (or
candidate or cause) is seen in positive or
negative light - More important is that its a balanced light
34Of course, it doesnt always work that way
- Why not?
- Media can be (and are) biased
- More important, choices are made agenda-setting
- Only certain issues are covered
- Only certain issues are emphasized
- In other words, journalists are gate-keepers,
allowing some stuff in, keeping other stuff out
35How PR pros see journalists
- To a PR professional, a journalist is
- An audience (explain?)
- A medium (explain?)
- A gatekeeper
- Thus, from PR perspective, a journalist can be a
help or a hindrance
36So what does this mean?
- If youre a PR practitioner, you NEED journalists
to work with you so you accomplish your goals - And you recognize that journalists need you
- You can be a source of information that they
might not be able to otherwise get
37Mutual dependency
- Journalists like to think theyre independent
- And they would probably like to be independent
- Todays reality
- They cant afford to be
- They need the information that PR pros provide
them - Even though theyre skeptical about it and its
intentions
38What makes a PR pro effective?
- Positive relationships with media
- Writing PR materials in a way that journalists
can use them and want to - Recognize whats truly newsworthy
- Be accurate and honest in your press releases
- Provide timely information, news, photos,
background information - Write like a news writer
39Perhaps most important
- Recognize that journalists want to cover what
truly is news and newsworthy - Dont provide information that serves ONLY your
organization - Show how the information is of public interest
- Problem not all PR does this
- Video Truth Merchants