Full PR
Full PR
Full PR
Learning Objective 1
To define the practice of public
relations
and
underscore
its
importance as a valuable and
powerful societal force in the 21st
century.
Crifasis R-O-S-I-E
Research-Objectives-StrategiesImplementation-Evaluation
R-P-I-E
Research-Planning-ImplementationEvaluation
What do the models have in
common? How do they differ?
Public
Relations
Interpreter
as
Every
organization
relations
Management
has
public
Learning Objective 2
To explore the various publics of
public relations, as well as the fields
most prominent functions.
The Publics of Public Relations
Public relations should be publics
relations
Internal and external
Primary, secondary and marginal
Traditional and future
Proponents,
opponents
and
uncommitted
The Functions of Public Relations
Writing
Media relations
Social media interface
Planning
Counseling
Researching
Publicity
Marketing communications
Community relations
Consumer relations
Employee relations
Government affairs
Investor relations
Special publics relations
Public affairs and issues
Crisis communications
Learning Objective 3
To underscore the ethical nature of
the field and to reject the notion that
public relations practitioners are
employed in the practice of spin.
The Sin of Spin
Learning Objective 4
To examine the requisites - both
technical and attitudinal that
constitute
an
effective
public
relations professional.
Seven Areas Successful PR Career
Diversity of experience
Performance
Communications skills
Relationship building
Proactivity and passion
Teamliness
Intangibles, such as personality,
likeability, and chemistry
Pro communications.
Advocacy.
Counseling orientation.
Ethics.
Willingness to take risks.
Positive outlook.
Loose
Lips
Sink
Page 18
TOPIC 2
Part II: Preparation/Process
Chapter 4: Public Opinion
Learning Objective 1
To discuss the phenomenon of public
opinion, contemporary examples of
it, the areas that impact it, and how
it is formed.
You cant pour perfume on a skunk
You cannot build trust if reality is
destroying it
Public opinion is a combustible and
changing commodity
It is hard to move people toward a
strong opinion on anything
What is Public Opinion?
unknown god to which moderns
burn incense
an
ill-defined,
mercurial,
and
changeable group of individual
judgments
A group of people who share a
common interest in a specific subject
and their expressions of strong
attitudes on a particular topic
Attitudes Opinions Actions
Public opinion is the aggregate of
many individual opinions on a
particular issue that affects a group
of people
Consensus
Discussion Question
Public
relations
program
can
crystallize attitudes, reinforce beliefs,
change public opinion
Opinions to be changed or modified
must be identified and understood
Target publics must be clear
Sharp focus on the laws that
govern public opinion
Laws of Public Opinion
Opinion is highly sensitive to
important events
Opinions is generally determined
more by events than by words
unless those words are themselves
interpreted as an event
At critical times, people become
more sensitive to the adequacy of
their leadership
Confident more responsibility
to it
Lack confidence less tolerant
than usual
Once
self-interest
is
involved,
opinions are slow to change
People have more opinions and are
able to form opinions more easily on
goals than on methods to reach
goals
People
in
democracies
with
educational
opportunities/information
access
display hardheaded common sense
PR Ethics Mini-Case: Occupy: Si,
Changing Public Opinion: Not Exactly
Page 73
How successful do you believe
Occupy Wall Street was?
Had
you
been
running
the
movements
public
relations
initiative, how would you have
improved its approach?
Learning Objective 4
To examine reputation, particularly
corporate
image,
and
how
companies might enhance their
reputation.
Polishing the Corporate Image
Organizations have little choice but
to go public
Examples
ExxonMobile
2008
climate
change
GM, Chrysler, Ford in 2009
Ponzi schemes in 2010 and
2011
JP Morgan Chase $2 billion
trading loss in 2012
Credibility is fragile
Winning favorable public opinion is a
necessity for long-term success
Managing Reputation
Reputation is gained by what one
does not by what one says
Reputation
management
is
a
buzzword
Relationship
management
aligns
communications
with
an
organizations character and action
Creates recognition, credibility
and
trust
among
key
constituents
Stays sensitive to its conduct
in public with customers and
in private with employees
Understands responsibilities to
broader
society
and
is
empathetic to societys needs
Value of reputation is indisputable
Case Study: The Rise and Fall and Rise
of Queen Martha
Page 78
How would you characterize Martha
Stewarts initial public relations
response to the charges against her?
What key public relations principle
did Martha Stewart violate?
regarding
appropriate
business
behavior.
The understanding of the various
protocols encourages the ability for
individuals,
companies,
and
organizations to learn the skills that
once achieved will transcend any
culture, pocketbook size, or age, and
build the bridge of trust necessary in
any negotiation.
Acquiring and implementing business
etiquette and protocol skills is not
about making your life difficult.
Move with ease and confidence in
any situation, then only you will have
the freedom to now focus on the
business at hand.
Style of Address
CORRECT FORMS OF
MALAYSIAN PROTOCOL
1. PRIME MINISTER
PRIME MINISTER
Definition of Protocol
Definition:
unwritten rules or guidelines that are
peculiar to every culture or organization,
and are supposed to be observed by
all parties in the conduct of business,
entertaining, negotiating, politics, etc.
Our shrinking globe places a greater
emphasis on the need for awareness
ADDRESS
AND
IN
DEPUTY
Berhormat
Timbalan
Perdana
Menteri Malaysia
The letter (salutation) should begin
with:
Yang Amat Berhormat (preferably
hand-written by the signatory of the
letter)
However, if it is a personal letter, the
envelope should be addressed as:
Yang Amat Berhormat Dato Seri
Najib Tun Razak
And the letter (salutation) should
begin with:
Yang Amat Berhormat Dato Seri
(preferably hand-written)
Both the Prime Minister and Deputy
Prime Minister should be addressed
in full "Yang Amat Berhormat
Dato Seri for the first time in the
letter and subsequently just "Dato
Seri" or whatever title that he has
been awarded.
When signing off the letter, it is
recommended to leave some space
above the name of the signatory for
him to write 'Yang ikhlas' or 'Yours
faithfully' before signing.
The hand-written salutation and
signing off by the signatory add a
personalized touch to the letter, as
can be seen in the examples below:
Yang
Berhormat
Datuk
Seri
Mohamed
Khalid
Nordin
Menteri Pendidikan Tinggi
4. ROYALTY
In correspondence or conversation,
the Ministers and Deputy Ministers
should be addressed with the
honorific "Yang Berhormat". When
writing to a Minister, the envelope
should
be
addressed:
Yang
Berhormat
Menteri
Pendidikan (his office, in this
example,
is
the
Ministry
of
Education)
or, if you wish to use his name:
5. INVITATION
Tips
On
Correct
Form
of
to
event
tripping or
incident.
any
other
untoward
6. Dress Code
Learning Objective 1
To discuss the reasons that the public
relations professional must be the
best writer in the organization.
Public Relations and Writing
Public relations professionals should
write and speak better than their
colleagues
No substitute for clear, precise
language in informing, motivating
and persuading
Public
relations
professionals
expected to have mastery over the
written word
Public relations people, by and large,
are horrible writers
Writing for the Eye and the Ear
TOPIC 2
Part IV: Execution
Chapter 15: Public Relations Writing
Use
language
understands
the
reader
Learning Objective 3
To discuss, in detail, the rationale for
and elements of the news release,
the most practical and ubiquitous of
public relations writing vehicles.
The News Release
First news release Ivy Lee, 1906
explanation
from
Pennsylvania
Railroad about crash that killed 50
people published verbatim in The
New York Times
11
unusual
occurrence,
milestone
Conflict significant dispute or
controversy
Known principal greater title of
individual making announcement,
greater the chance it will be used
Proximity how localized the release
is or how timely it is, relative to the
news of the day
Human interest stories, which touch
on an emotional experience, are
regularly considered newsworthy
News Release News Value
Have a well-defined reason for
sending the release
Focus on one central subject in each
release
Make
certain
the
subject
is
newsworthy in the context of the
organization,
industry
and
community
Include facts about the product,
service or issue being discussed
Provide the facts factually with no
puff, no bluff, no hyperbole
Rid the release of unnecessary
jargon
Include appropriate quotes from
principals
(without
inflated
superlatives)
Include product specifications and
other pertinent information
Include a brief description of the
company/boilerplate
Write clearly, concisely, forcefully
Learning Objective 4
To examine the requisites of writing
for the Internet and social media.
Social Media Releases (SMRs)
Designed to reach non-traditional
journalists (bloggers and podcasters)
A release only needs a photo to
qualify for an SMR but may link to
audio, video, links, etc.
Include
contact
information,
boilerplate, and quotes
Embed head shots and logos; include
video, audio and photos; link to
additional material that might be
relevant
Include tags to social bookmarking
services
Advertising
guarantees
content, size, location, reach
and frequency while publicity
does not
Publicity appears as news so it
carries
a
third-party
endorsement while advertising
viewed as sponsoring the
organizations
self-serving
view
Value of Publicity
Announcing a new product or service
Reenergizing an old product
Explaining a complicated product
Little or no budget
Enhancing
the
organizations
reputation
Crisis response
Pitching Publicity
Be time sensitive
Write first, then call
Direct release to specific person or
editor
Determine how the reporter wants to
be contacted
Dont badger
Use exclusives but be careful
Do your own calling
Dont send clips of other stories
about your client
Develop a relationship
Never lie
Online Publicity
Online publicity still a relationship
business
Journalists moving toward social
media
Paid wires guarantee use of material
Paid wires reach newsrooms and
have enhanced web use options
Staging online events can draw
reporters and publics
Bar for web events has been raised
Learning Objective 4
To examine the proper way of dealing
with
journalists
vis--vis
organizational publicity.
Handling Media Interviews
Coordinate
interviews
for
organizations executives with media
Executives are generally unfamiliar
and uncomfortable in interview
situations
Reporters may ask impertinent
questions
15
shareholder
returns 19% higher than
average
Firms with low engagement
levels shareholder returns
44% lower than average
Management Questions lift employee
morale, commitment and engagement
Is your leadership rolling out a new
strategy or initiative that will require
more engagement than ever from
your employees?
Do you need to activate or reengage
your employees as advocates or
ambassadors?
How well is the urgency for change
understood and acted on within your
organization?
Should leadership communication be
a critical component of delivering on
your
companys
strategy
or
organizational performance goals?
Are you searching for novel ways to
renew or reinvent the employee
experience? Are leaders looking for
better ways of engaging their teams?
Does your employee engagement
research provide sufficient insights
for leaders to build trust, cultivate
two-way dialogue, and engage
employees on critical priorities?
Do your current drivers of employee
engagement support the business
you need to become?
If employee engagement remains at
its current level or decreases within
your company, is there a downside
risk?
Lessons from Google
Free food is important so is candor
Management communications with
employees must be candid, clear and
credible
Critical Internal Communications
Employee relations matters
60% of corporate CEOs reported
spending more time communicating
with employees
Employee loyalty is low no such
thing as lifetime employment
Gulf in pay between senior officers
and common workers
16
Learning Objective 3
To discuss the various tacticsprint,
online,
and
broadcastof
communicating with the internal
public.
Employee Communication Tactics
Internal Communications Audits
In-depth
interviews
with
management
and
communicators
what
management
wants
from
communications team; what
communicators
think
management wants
How
do
internal
communications support the
mission of the organization?
Do internal communications
have managements support?
Do internal communications
justify the expense?
How responsive to employee
needs
and
concerns
are
internal communications?
Online communications
Blogs
Podcasts
Wikis
Employee Communication: Tactics
Intranet guidelines
Consider the culture
Set clear objectives and let it
evolve
Treat it as a journalistic
enterprise
Market, market, market
Link to outside lives
Senior
management
must
commit
Print publications
Newsletters
Integrate
with
online
publications
Bulletin boards
Suggestion Boxes and Town Hall
Meetings
Internal Video
Face-to-Face Communications
Learning Objective 4
To examine the ways that social
media have complicated and made
more challenging the function of
communicating with employees.
Internal Social Media
Social media policies should be
based on common sense
Moderating and identification
Social media effectiveness depends
on
It must have a business
purpose
It must be entertaining as well
as informative
It must be composed of
riveting content
The Grapevine
Rumor mill can be treacherous
Identifying source of rumor difficult
and not work the time
Do not overlook the value of
explaining how you reached a
decision
Grapevine may be valuable because
it is believed
Discussion Question
What are the primary considerations
in adopting internal social media?
Case Study: Consultant Drops F-Bomb,
Chrysler Drops Consultant
Page 246
How do you feel Chrysler handled the
tweet controversy?
What new internal client rules would
you enforce were you the CEO of
NMS?
Should social media report to
marketing or public relations? Why?
18
High
income
Asian
population
fastest-growing racial/ethnic group in
the U.S.
Discussion Question
How
important
is
it
for
an
organization to focus on dealing with
minorities?
Learning Objective 2
To review the tradition of corporate
social responsibility that has uniquely
characterized U.S. institutions.
CSR Corporate Social Responsibility
Social responsibility source of pride
in the 1980s
Give back to society through
participation in (voluntarism) and
contributions to (financial support)
not-for-profit organizations
Financial support was cut with the
recession
Organizations are becoming more
diverse
Trends in Corporate Giving
Corporate giving is becoming more
focused
Matching gifts are a high priority
International giving is on the rise
Corporate leaders taking active
stance
in
confronting
societal
challenges
Corporate contributions depend on
profits
Gen X is aware of and concerned
about contributions to society (the
firms and their own)
Community Relations Expectations
Determine what the community
knows
and
thinks
about
the
organization
Inform the community of the
organizations point of view
Negotiate or mediate between the
organization and the community and
its constituents if there is a
discrepancy
Community relations are critical
What the Community Expects
Positive
contributions
to
the
communitys Appearance
Participation
in
civic
functions,
activities, and education
Stability so the company can help
grown with the area
Pride that they are residents
What the Organization Expects
Municipal services
Fair taxation
Good living conditions for employees
19
20
Attitudes
toward
LGBT
community
and
same-sex
marriage changing
Senior citizens
Over-50 crowd controls more
than
50%
of
Americas
discretionary income
35 million members of AARP;
half still work
Discussion Question
Why do companies need to reach the
Hispanic community?
Learning Objective 4
To examine the role of public
relations
in
orchestrating
the
activities of nonprofit organizations.
Nonprofit Public Relations
Nonprofits serve social, educational,
religious, and cultural needs of
community around them
Primary source of employment for
public relations graduates
Media advocacy = public relations
without resources
Protests
Marches
Demonstrations
Media photo opportunities
Stealth Internet campaigns
Master of All Trades
Positioning the Organization break
a few eggs to achieve a clear and
differentiable identity
Developing a Marketing/Promotional
Plan raise non-profits profile,
respect and levels of support
Media Relations free media is
critical; media advocates champion
mission and cause
Support Fundraising depend on
donors for support
Identify campaign plans and
objectives set financial goal
Organize fact-finding
Recruit leaders
Plan and implement strong
communications activities
Periodically
review
and
evaluate
Discussion Question
What are the primary responsibilities
of a non-profit public relations
professional?
Case Study: The Silence of the Lions
Page 290
What would you have advised
Second Mile to do when apprised of
the charges against its founder?
Face-to-face
best;
email
viable
alternative
Email newsletters replaced print
newsletters
More
immediate
and
interactive than print
Allow for feedback
Internal or external use
One
page,
relevant
information,
link
content,
disseminate regularly
Instant Messaging (IM) and Texting
IM is closely related to conversation
Texting is sending 160 characters or
fewer messages from cell phones
using Short Message Service (SMS)
Person-to-person messaging most
common
Blogs and CEO Blogs
Bloggers recognized as bona fide
news source
Embraced
by
professional
communicators, print and broadcast
media; encourage dialogue
Corporate blogs are 8% of the
blogosphere
People turn to blogs for information
Blogs
gain
respect
through
sneezers early adopters in a
social group
Some blogs are required reading for
journalists
CEO blogs have gotten mixed
reviews
CEO blogs should not read like
warmed-over press releases
PR Ethics Mini-Case: Blogger Backlash
Crushes ConAgra Conclave
Page 209
Had you been Ketchum, what would
you have advised client ConAgra
relative to its idea?
How would you have structured the
invitation to bloggers?
Discussion Question
How has email changed the way
people
and
organizations
communicate?
Learning Objective 3
To discuss the four primary social
media vehicles of Facebook, Twitter,
LinkedIn, and YouTube and how
public relations professionals use
them.
Social Networks
Social networks attract a variety of
age groups and interests
22
Intranets
Extranets
Wikis
Podcasting
RSS
QR Codes and LBS
Side of Online Communications
Internet sabotage: no organization is
immune
Monitoring the Internet is important
Easy for customers to complain on
blogs, start rogue websites, spread
urban legends
Public relations professionals adopt
inoculation strategies
Clear
communications
channels
Relay
concerns
privately
before frustrations mount
Monitor and beware of the web
Discussion Question
How should organizations protect
themselves from online attack?
Case Study: Ronald McDonalds Brush
with Antisocial Media
Page 222
What do you think of McDonalds
social media strategy in general?
How
would
you
characterize
McDonalds handling of the racist
tweet?
What
would
you
have
done
differently
relative
to
the
#McDStories controversy?
Dark
Topic
Seven
(7):
Ethical
Public
Relations
Learning Perspectives
The practice of public relations is all
about earning credibility.
Credibility begins with telling the
truth.
Public relations must be based on
doing the right thing, or acting
ethically.
What exactly are ethics?
Great thinkers have struggled for years to
answer this question. Here is one definition:
Ethics are standards of conduct that
indicate how one should behave based on
moral duties and virtues.
Ethical Quadrants
Quadrant I: Ethical and Legal
Act according to the law - the land &
practiced customs
e.g. paying taxes to the government,
asset declaration, customs/immigration
practices.
Quadrant II: Ethical but Illegal
Act according to practiced customs
but not according to the law of the
land.
e.g. organizing events to collect
money for the poor without any legal
permits from respective bodies.
Quadrant III: Unethical but Legal
Act according to the law of the land
but against practiced customs.
e.g eating lunch at kenduri kahwin
in a village, by using a pair of fork and
spoon.
strike
an
independent tone
5. Loyalty loyalties must remain
constant
6. Fairness treat even obnoxious
reporters with fairness
The essence of the code is
that honesty and fairness lie at the
heart of the public relations practice.
For details, see Figure 6-2 of your
text.
Business
Insider trading
Bernie Madoff, Allen Stanford,
Raj Rajaratnam, Rajat Gupta
Sports
Steroids
scandal
(Mark
McGwire,
Roger
Clemens,
Sammy Sosa)
Lance Armstrong
Education (Penn State)
Catholic Church
PRSA Member Code of Ethics 2000
Advocacy
Honesty
Expertise
Independence
Loyalty
Fairness
Do the Right Thing
Josephson Institute:
ethics are
standards of conduct that indicate
how one should behave based on
moral duties and virtues
Right vs. wrong
Fairness vs. unfairness
Honesty vs. dishonesty
Ethics depend on culture, religion,
education
Perspectives on Ethics
Utilitarianism greater good
Golden mean of moral virtue
between two extremes
Categorical imperative act on
maxim you will to become universal
law
Principle
of
utility
greatest
happiness for greatest number
Judeo-Christian ethic love neighbor
as thyself
Applied Ethics
Professional ethics
Public relations people must always
tell the truth
Honesty and fairness are at the heart
of public relations
Are we doing the right thing?
Ethics in Business
Why do people think business ethics
is an oxymoron?
Investments
in
ethics
and
compliance programs
Corporate Codes of Conduct
Increase public confidence
Stem tide of regulation
Improve internal operations
Respond to transgressions
Discussion Questions
How important
is the ethical
component of the practice of public
relations?
Why have corporations adopted
corporate codes of conduct?
Learning Objective 3
To discuss the concept of corporate
social responsibility.
Corporate Social Responsibility
How companies manage business
processes for a positive societal
impact
Product lines
Marketing practices
Corporate philanthropy
Environmental activities
External relations
Employment diversity in retaining
and promoting minorities and women
Employee safety and health
Ethics in Government
24-hour
cable
news,
24/7
blogosphere increase scrutiny
Sleaze factor poisons politics
Elliott Spitzer
Mark Sanford
Anthony Weiner
Herman Cain
John Edwards
PR Ethics Mini-Case: The Sad Memoir
of Scott McClellan
Page 115
How would
you
assess
Scott
McClellans ethical responsibility to
be loyal to his boss versus his ethical
responsibility
to
reveal
what
happened at the White House?
What are the public relations ethical
considerations revealed by the
McClellan case?
Ethics in Journalism
Respect dignity, privacy, rights and
well-being of people when gathering
and presenting news
Do not communicate
unofficial
charges affecting reputation or moral
character without giving accused
chance to reply
Guard against invading a persons
right to privacy
Do not pander to morbid curiosity
about details of vice and crime
Judgments against ethical standards
Plagiarism in The New York
Times,
Washington
Post,
Boston Globe
27
Refusal
to
reveal
sources/suppressing news
Get stories at any cost/pay for
stories
Screamers
Discussion Question
What
is
corporate
social
responsibility?
Learning Objective 4
To
underscore
the
bedrock
importance
of
public
relations
professionals doing the right thing.
Ethics in Public Relations
Differentiates public relations from
other professions
Relevant ethical theories
Attorney/adversary model
Lawyers
and
public
relations are advocates
in
an
adversarial
climate
Both
assume
counterbalancing
messages
will
be
provided by adversaries
Two-way
communication
model
Collaborate, work jointly
with people, listen and
give-and-take
Balance
role
as
advocate with one as
social conscience
Responsible advocacy model
Professional
responsibility:
first
loyalty to clients
Responsibility to voice
opinions
of
organizational
stakeholders
Six Core Values
Advocacy act as responsible
advocates; never reveal confidential
or private client information
Honesty dont exaggerate or lie
Expertise guide client decisionmaking
Independence
strike
an
independent tone
Loyalty loyalties must remain
constant
Fairness treat even obnoxious
reporters with fairness
Defending a Dictator
Middle East dictators sought help
from U.S. PR firms and scholars
28