Title: Marketing Communications Public Relations
1Marketing Communications - Public Relations
2Public Relations
- The management of communications and
relationships to establish goodwill and mutual
understanding between an organisation and its
public (Jobber, 1995 437) - ...concerns building good relations with the
companys various publics by obtaining favourable
publicity, building up a good corporate image,
and handling or heading off unfavourable rumours,
stories and events (Kotler et al, 1996 751) - The process by which we create a positive image
and customer preference through third-party
endorsement - (Jobber, 1995 437)
3Public Relations
Media TV Press Radio
Public local communities pressure groups opinion
leaders general public
Finance shareholders stockbrokers fund
managers banks
Organisation
Government parliament civil service local
authorities
Employees staff trade unions representatives
Commercial customers distribution suppliers
Source Jobber, 1995 437
4Public Relations
- Different tools
- press relations
- placing information in news media to attract
attention to a person, product or service - believable by consumers and creates more impact
than ads written by company managers - product publicity
- publicising specific products
- securing editorial space rather than paid space
- e.g. new products, special events, redesigned
products
5Public Relations
- corporate communications
- creating internal and external communications
- promoting understanding of the company, eg
communications with employees - lobbying
- activities with government officials and
parliament - to promote or defeat legislation and regulation
- counselling
- advising management about public issues and
company positions and images
6Public Relations
- Product-related Publicity
- assists in launching new products
- assists in repositioning a mature product
- builds up consumer interest in a product category
7Public Relations
- Corporate Communication
- influence specific target groups (e.g. sponsoring
special events) - defend products having public problems (with such
problems it all depends on damage extent, the
efficiency with which managers can get the
product back on-line and an effective marketing
message that the company is open for business)
8Public Relations
- Eurostar and the Channel Tunnel Fire
- have a crisis plan and instruct and train
employees in crisis management - take immediate steps, appointing a spokesperson
to whom all media are referred and who is
immediately available - ensure effective co-ordination and install an
information hot line - contact companys PR agency if it has one
- process information quickly - notify press and
keep them updated (the media will hear about the
event anyway, so best to find out from your
company) - be consistent and flexible but initiate action
communications - show others the actual recovery
9Public Relations
- Build the Corporate Image
- build awareness and brand knowledge
- more credible and often more cost effective than
advertising - but must be jointly planned with advertising
within a sufficient budget - you need staff to develop and circulate stories
and manage certain events
10Public Relations
- characteristics of publicity
- message has high credibility because it appears
to be written independently by a media person
rather than an advertiser (may therefore, be more
persuasive) - no direct media costs (although it is not cost
free) - loss of control of publication (no guarantee news
item will be published) - loss of control of content
- loss of control of timing
11environmental scanning - issues trends
identification
- establish specific marketing objectives
- build awareness
- build credibility
- stimulate sales force
- distribution channels
- promotion costs
Define the target audience identify important
issues
research to understand the companys mission,
culture, products communications targets
choose the PR message and vehicles event creation
- identify and develop interesting stories the
challenge - to create news
The PR Process
- Implement the Marketing PR Plan
- how to get media attention
- who talks to the media and who doesnt
the companys marketing plan
- Evaluating PR results
- difficult to measure as used with other
promotion tools - exposures
- awareness/comprehension/attitude change
- sales and profit contribution
12Public Relations
- major tools of public relations
- publications companies can reach and influence
their target market by annual reports,
brochures, cards, articles, company
newsletters and magazines, audio-visual media - events draw attention to new products or other
company activities - news cultivating the press to increase better
coverage - speeches create company and product publicity,
accompanied by printed copies for
distribution to press and other publics
13Public Relations
- public service activities improve public goodwill
by giving money and time to good causes - identity media ( visual identity - company logos,
stationery, signs, uniforms, buildings, dress
code, etc
14Public Relations
- can build PR around the owner or operator (e.g.
Nico Ledonis and Rick Stein) - dangerous but
benefits can exceed risks (e.g. Dyson) - can build PR around location
- can build PR around a product or service (e.g.
the Raffles Hotel, Singapore - the Singapore
Sling)
15Public Relations
- potentially newsworthy topics
- doing something first
- marketing issues (new products, research
breakthrough, future new products, large
contracts/orders, sponsorships, price changes,
service changes, new logos, export success - production issues (productivity achievements,
employment changes, capital investments) - financial issues (financial statements,
acquisitions, sales and profit achievements) - personnel issues (training awards, winners of
company contests, promotions/new appointments,
success stories, visits by famous people, reports
of interviews - general issues (conferences, seminars,
exhibitions, anniversaries of significant events)
16Public Relations
- press releases
- the headline (factual, avoid flowery and
flamboyant language) - opening paragraph (brief summary of whole release
- if you get this published you have succeeded in
getting across your essential message) - organising the copy (less important messages at
end) - copy content (factual not fanciful back
statements up with facts) - length (short as possible - one page maximum
make editors job easy as possible) - layout (short paragraphs, plenty of white space,
good margins, double-spaced)
17Public Relations
- References
- Lesly, P., 1991, The Handbook of Public Relations
and Communications, Maidenhead McGraw-Hill - White, J., 1991, How to Understand and Manage
Public Relations, London Business Books - Miller, J., 1993, Marketing Communications,
Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration
Quarterly, Vol. 34 No. 5, October, p49 - Durocher, J., 1994, Recovery Marketing What to
Do After a Natural Disaster, Cornell Hotel and
Restaurant Administration Quarterly, Vol. 35 No.
2, April, p66
18Public Relations
- References
- Kotler, P., Bowen, J. and J. Makens, 1996,
Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, Upper
Saddle River, NJ Prentice Hall, Ch 18 Promoting
Products Public Relations and Ch 17 Promoting
Products Advertising, Direct Marketing and Sales
Promotion - Kotler, P., Armstrong, G., Saunders, J. and V.
Wong, 1996, Principles of Marketing, Upper Saddle
River, NJ Prentice Hall, Ch 19 - Jobber, D., 1995, Principles and Practice of
Marketing, London McGraw-Hill, Ch 13 Other
Promotional Mix Methods