PR When Managers Take Control
by Bob Kelly
Published on this site: December 20th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month

Things can change fast!
Tactics will probably no longer dominate the public relations
plan. Instead, when needed, they'll hopefully assume their
properly limited role as the primary means for moving a publicity message from one point to another.
But in their place, at the top of an organization's public
relations effort, professional business, non-profit, government
agency and association managers will instead marshall the
resources and action planning needed to alter individual perception
leading to changed behaviors among their most important outside
audiences. And then follow up by persuading those key folks
to his or her way of thinking, moving them to take actions that allow their
department, group, division or subsidiary to succeed.
What a difference that's going to make as managerial public
relations is at last applied. The reason why is really the
underlying premise of public relations: People act on 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
usually accomplished.
Implicit in that premise is yet another reality: public relations
planning really CAN alter individual perception and lead to
changed behaviors among key outside audiences. But you'll
only get there when your PR demands more than special events,
news releases, brochures and talk show tactics. Only then
will you receive the quality public relations results you
deserve.
What kind of results? Community leaders begin to seek you
out; welcome bounces in show room visits occur; capital givers
or specifying sources begin to look your way; membership applications
start to rise; new proposals for strategic alliances and joint
ventures start showing up; customers begin to make repeat
purchases; new prospects actually start to do business with
you, and politicians and legislators begin looking at you
as a key member of the business, non-profit or association
communities.
Look first to your public relations professionals for your
new opinion monitoring project because they're already in
the perception and behavior business. But be certain 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. Above all, be sure they believe that perceptions almost always
result in behaviors that can help or hurt your operation.
Take the time to review with them your plans 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?
Of course using professional survey firms to do the opinion
gathering work will cost considerably more than using those
PR folks of yours in that monitoring capacity. 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.
With that work under your belt, you must establish a goal
calling for action on the most serious problem areas you uncovered
during your key audience perception monitoring. You might
decide to straighten out that dangerous misconception? Or
correct that gross inaccuracy? Or, stop that potentially painful
rumor cold.
No one sets their PR goal and forgets to link it with an
equally specific strategy that tells you how to get there.
You have just three strategic options 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 sauteed mushrooms on your pumpkin 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.
In public relations, a central talent is good writing. And
sure enough, here, the best writer on your team will have
to 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 that 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.
Now we move to what some practitioners feel are the "fun"
part of PR action programming the communications tactics
most likely 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.
As you probably know, the "believability" of any
message is fragile and always suspect. The means by which
you communicate should always be a concern. Which is why you
may wish to unveil your corrective message before smaller
meetings through presentations rather than using higher-profile
news releases.
When chatter about a progress report surfaces, you might
take it as a cue to begin a second perception monitoring session
with members of your external audience. You'll want to use many of the same questions used
in the benchmark session. But now, you will be on strict alert
for signs that the bad news perception is being altered in
your direction.
Program momentum has been known to flag. In this event, you
can always speed things up by adding more communications tactics
as well as increasing their frequencies.
Once again, when managers take control of the public relations
being performed on their behalf, the more perceptive tend
to move away from dependence on communications tactics and on to a plan for doing something
about the behaviors of those important external audiences
of theirs that most affect their operation. That's when they
take steps to persuade those key outside folks to their way
of thinking, then help move them to take actions that allow
their department, division, group or subsidiary to succeed.

Bob Kelly counsels and writes for business, non-profit
and association managers about using the fundamental premise
of public relations to achieve their operating objectives.
He has published over 200 articles on the subject which are
listed at EzineArticles.com, click Expert Author, click Robert
A. Kelly. He has been DPR, Pepsi-Cola Co.; AGM-PR, Texaco
Inc.; VP-PR, Olin Corp.; VP-PR, Newport News Shipbuilding
& Drydock Co.; director of communications, 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:www.PRCommentary.com

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