Do You See PR's Real Value?
by Bob Kelly
Published on this site: May 28th , 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

As a business, non-profit or association manager, do you see the
value in doing something positive about the behaviors of those important
external audiences of yours that most affect your operation?
Do you see the value in persuading those key outside folks to your
way of thinking?
Do you see the value in moving them to take actions that allow
your department, division or subsidiary to succeed?
Then you must see the value in good public relations that alters
individual perception leading to changed behaviors among those key
outside people. And further, that helps managers like you achieve
your managerial objectives.
If you see those values, you also see PR's REAL value.And you are
a lucky manager!
Truth is, you probably should expand your view of public relations
to emphasize the behaviors of your unit's key outside audiences
rather than publicity placements, special events, brochures and
press releases.
Why should you go to that trouble? Because the people with whom
you interact every day behave like everyone else they act
upon their perceptions of the facts they hear about you and your
operation. Which means you should deal effectively with those perceptions
(and their follow-on behaviors) by doing what is necessary to reach
and move those key external audiences to action.
Luckily, your own carefully tailored PR plan can make the job a
lot easier. I'm talking about a plan like this. People act on their
own their own perception of the facts before them, which leads to
predictable behaviors about which something can be done. When we
create, change or reinforce that opinion by reaching, persuading
and moving-to-desired-action the very people whose behaviors affect
the organization the most, the public relations mission is accomplished.
Take a few minutes to consider what might result from such activity.
Community leaders beginning to seek you out; prospects starting
to do business with you; customers making repeat purchases; rising
membership applications; fresh proposals for strategic alliances
and joint ventures; welcome bounces in show room visits; and new
approaches by capital givers and specifying sources not to mention
politicians and legislators viewing you as a key member of the business,
non-profit or association communities.
Who will do this specialized kind of work? Your own public relations
people? Folks assigned to your operation? An outside PR agency team?
But regardless where they come from, they need to be committed to
you and your PR plan beginning with key audience perception monitoring.
Be certain that the PR people assigned to you are serious about
knowing how your most important outside audiences perceive your
operations, products or services. They must accept the reality that
perceptions almost always lead to behaviors that can help or hurt
your operation.
Go over your PR plan with them, especially how you will monitor
and gather perceptions by questioning members of your most important
outside audiences. For instance, how much do you know about our
chief executive? Have you had prior contact with us and were you
pleased with the interchange? How much do you know about our services
or products and employees? Have you experienced problems with our
people or procedures?
If the budget is available, don't hesitate to use professional
survey firms in the perception monitoring phases of your program.
But remember that your PR people are also in the perception and
behavior business and can pursue the same objective: identify untruths,
false assumptions, unfounded rumors, inaccuracies, misconceptions
and any other negative perception that might translate into hurtful
behaviors.
With the right PR goal, you should be able to deal handily with
the most serious distortions you discovered during your key audience
perception monitoring. Your new goal could call for straightening
out that dangerous misconception, or correcting that gross inaccuracy,
or stopping that potentially fatal rumor dead in its tracks.
Now you must take pains to select the right strategy, one that
tells you how to move forward. Keep in mind that there are justthree
strategic options available to you when it comes to handling a perception
and opinion challenge. Change existing perception, create perception
where there may be none, or reinforce it. Since the wrong strategy
pick will taste like onion gravy on your key lime pie, be certain
the new strategy fits comfortably with your new public relations
goal. You don't want to select "change" when the facts
dictate a "reinforce" strategy.
While it's tough to write tight and strong, you must write such
a strong message and aim it at members of your target audience.
Because crafting action-forcing language to persuade an audience
to your way of thinking is tough work, you need your first-string
varsity writer because s/he must create some very special, corrective
language. Words that are not only compelling, persuasive and believable,
but clear and factual if they are to correct something and shift
perception/opinion towards your point of view leading to the behaviors
you are targeting.
Now it's time to select the communications tactics most likely
to carry your message to the attention of your target audience.
You can do this after you run the draft by your PR people for impact
and persuasiveness. There are dozens available to you. From speeches,
facility tours, emails and brochures to consumer briefings, media
interviews, newsletters, personal meetings and many others. But
be sure that the tactics you pick are known to reach folks just
like your audience members.
As you may be aware, a message's believability can depend on the
credibility of the means used to deliver it. So you may decide to
unveil it before smaller meetings and presentations rather than
using higher-profile news releases.
Requests for progress reports signal you and your PR team to begin
a second perception monitoring session with members of your external
audience. Many of the same questions used in the first benchmark
session can be used again. But this time, you will be watching carefully
for signs that the problem perception is being altered in your
direction.
Occasionally, momentum will slow, but you can always speed up matters
by adding more communications tactics as well as increasing their
frequencies.
Thus, what you really want PR's value to accomplish is to persuade
your most important outside stakeholders to your way of thinking,
then move them to behave in a way that leads to the success of your
unit.

Bob Kelly counsels, writes and speaks to business, non-profit
and
association managers about using the fundamental premise of public
relations to achieve their operating objectives. He has been DPR,
Pepsi-Cola Co.; AGM-PR, Texaco Inc.; VP-PR, Olin Corp.; VP-PR, Newport
News Shipbuilding & Drydock Co.; director of communi-cations,
U.S. Department of the Interior, and deputy assistant press secretary,
The White House. He holds a bachelor of science degree from Columbia
University, major in public relations. mailto:[email protected]
Visit:http://www.prcommentary.com

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