If public relations
tactics like special events, brochures,
broadcast plugs and press releases dominate
your answer, you're missing the best
PR has to offer.
Such a budget would tell us that
you believe tactics ARE public relations.
And that would be too bad, because
it means you are not effectively planning
to alter individual perception among
your key outside audiences which then
would help you achieve your managerial
objectives.
It would also tell us that, even
as a business, non-profit or association
manager, you're not planning to do
anything positive about the behaviors
of those important external audiences
of yours that MOST affect your operation.
Nor are you preparing to persuade
those key outside folks to your way
of thinking by helping to move them
to take actions that allow your department,
division or subsidiary to succeed.
So, it takes more than good intentions
for you as a manager to alter individual,
key-audience perception leading to
changed behaviors. It takes a carefully
structured plan dedicated to getting
every member of the PR team working
towards the same external audience
behaviors insuring that the organization's
public relations effort stays sharply
focused.
The absence of such a plan is always
unfortunate because the right public
relations planning really CAN alter
individual perception and lead to
changed behaviors among key outside
audiences.
If this sounds vaguely familiar,
try to remember that your PR effort
must require more than special events,
news releases and talk show tactics
if you are to receive the quality
public relations results you deserve.
The payoff can materialize faster
than you may think in the form of
welcome bounces in show room visits;
customers beginning to make repeat
purchases; capital givers or specifying
sources beginning to look your way;
membership applications on the rise;
the appearance of new proposals for
strategic alliances and joint ventures;
politicians and legislators beginning
to look at you as a key member of
the business, non-profit or association
communities; prospects actually starting
to do business with you; and community
leaders begin to seek you out.
It's always nice to simply hire a
survey firm to handle the opinion
monitoring/data gathering phase of
your effort. But that can cost real
money. Luckily, your public relations
professionals can often fill that
bill because they are already in the
perception and behavior business.
But satisfy yourself that the PR staff
really accepts why it's SO important
to know how your most important outside
audiences perceive your operations,
products or services. And be doubly
certain they believe that perceptions
almost always result in behaviors
that can help or hurt your operation.
Share your plans with them for monitoring
and gathering perceptions by questioning
members of your most important outside
audiences. Ask questions like these:
how much do you know about our organization?
Have you had prior contact with us
and were you pleased with the interchange?
Are you familiar with our services
or products and employees? Have you
experienced problems with our people
or procedures?
But whether it's your people or a
survey firm asking the questions,
the objective remains the same: identify
untruths, false assumptions, unfounded
rumors, inaccuracies, misconceptions
and any other negative perception
that might translate into hurtful
behaviors.
It's goal-setting time during which
you will establish a goal calling
for action on the most serious problem
areas you uncovered during your key
audience perception monitoring. You'll
want to straighten out that dangerous
misconception? Correct that gross
inaccuracy? Or, stop that potentially
painful rumor cold?
Of course, setting your PR goal requires
an equally specific strategy that
tells you how to get there. Only three
strategic options are available to
you when it comes to doing something
about perception and opinion. Change
existing perception, create perception
where there may be none, or reinforce
it. The wrong strategy pick will taste
like onion gravy on your rhubarb pie.
So be sure your new strategy fits
well with your new public relations
goal. You certainly don't want to
select "change" when the facts dictate
a strategy of reinforcement.
It's always time for good writing,
but never as now. You must prepare
a persuasive message that will help
move your key audience to your way
of thinking. It must be a carefully-written
message targeted directly at your
key external audience. Select your
very best writer because s/he must
come up with really corrective language
that is not merely compelling, persuasive
and believable, but clear and factual
if they are to shift perception/opinion
towards your point of view and lead
to the behaviors you have in mind.
Here's where you need the communications
tactics certain to carry your message
to the attention of your target audience.
There are many available. >From
speeches, facility tours, emails and
brochures to consumer briefings, media
interviews, newsletters, personal
meetings and many others. But be certain
that the tactics you pick are known
to reach folks just like your audience
members.
How you communicate, however, is
always a major concern. The credibility
of any message is always fragile.
Which is why you'll probably want
to unveil your corrective message
before smaller meetings and presentations
rather than using higher-profile news
releases.
When the need for a progress report
appears, you'll want to begin a second
perception monitoring session with
members of your external audience.
You'll certainly use many of the same
questions used in the benchmark session.
But now, you will be watching closely
for signs that the bad news perception
is finally moving positively in your
direction.
Fortunately, if things slow down,
you can always speed things up by
adding more communications tactics
as well as increasing their frequencies.
Allow the tacticians a free hand
in selecting whether this tactic or
that tactic should be used as the
beast of burden needed to carry your
message to your target audience.
You take a broader view of public
relations and stress the strategic
approach because it requires you as
the manager to effectively plan to
alter individual perception among
your key outside audiences, thus helping
you achieve your managerial objectives.
end
Please feel free to publish this
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at
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Robert A. Kelly © 2005.