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Debating PR: Reactive or Proactive?

04/04/2011 By Jayme Soulati

It was a blog post like this that started it all – that fateful day on the New York Times Small Business Blog when a Long Island haughty restaurateur accused the entire public relations profession of being crazy (no more link love from me). That’s when my guest author Jenn Whinnem responded, and a series was born – What is PR?

A colleague of mine, @DawnComber, who is also a featured Momaraderie, pointed out Adam Singer’s blog post of March 31 and asked my reaction. You see, she’s been watching in the wings and reading quietly without comment as I attempt to corral the Mustangs with a single definition of public relations with consensus. (The grand finale happens this week, after a series of more than 13 blog posts on this topic.)

And, so, to my chagrin, I read Mr. Singer’s blog (link above) post “PR Needs to Shift From Reactive to Proactive”  however I did it in fits and starts.  My blood began to boil in the first graph where I’m told PR practitioners need to “become truly proactive in their approach to the practice; simply, from reactive to proactive.”

I read this to suggest everyone in PR is reactive; we don’t plan, we’re not proactive, and basically we’re tactical and useless.

Next graph written by Mr. Singer: “Media companies are far more proactive than reactive. They plan their content through editorial calendars. Their leadership teams have the executive perspective on content and have a long-term vision with the goal of influencing an industry. They react to news and happenings, but they plan for it.”

STOP.

  • Is Mr. Singer suggesting PR leaders do not have a long-term vision with the goal of influencing an industry? I beg to differ; influencers are our bread and butter; strategic/long-term planning that aligns directly with an organization’s business goals is how we execute against a PLAN.
  • By the way, Mr. Singer, the use of ed cals is a highly tactical and only somewhat strategic approach to planning; you’re suggesting media companies (do you mean magazines?) that use a content calendar should be labeled strategic?
  • How can someone plan to react? PR is often prepared to react, and that’s called crisis communications. Good media relations professionals are always prepared to react to national news so they can tie in their story and pitch media with an associated angle and a hot influencer to help tell the story.

The PR practitioners I know are always prepared for tomorrow’s news, especially those who work in publicity and media relations. That’s why we consume news from “media companies (?)” and social platforms, etc. to anticipate and be prepared for the future.

Next up on Mr. Singer’s blog:

“I’m convinced that public relations practitioners need to flip their thinking. Simply: from reactive to proactive. But only if they can become truly proactive in their approach to the practice. And the 30% of proactive PR most companies and agencies spend in proactive mode? It’s probably wasted.”

STOP ME FROM BEING STRANGLED.

So, finally, I think I understand. Mr. Singer believes there are only 30 percent of companies and agencies (not PR practitioners) that are proactive. I’m not certain a firm or company can take credit for being proactive without a visionary public relations and integrated marketing team leading the way.

“Most PR professionals flirt from opportunity to opportunity.” (Is Mr. Singer implying we flit from or flirt with opportunities?) I’ve not flitted from client to client in years; yet I’m always on the lookout for the next slice of my pie to fill my business development pipeline. Incidentally, “most?” PR people do this? That’s an amazing generality without proof.

We all know that PUBLIC RELATIONS IS NOT JUST PUBLICITY. Perhaps this is where the confusion in this post lies? The breadth of the public relations profession is being boiled and simmered into this singular blog post. The Public Relations profession has been taking a global beating in the last several months, and there are several of us trying to flip that around to prove our value, credibility and status as professional influencers within our respective vertical markets.

I do agree most people need to be more strategic in how they approach business; but, I’m hard pressed to imply an entire profession is tactical and without influence.

It’s blog posts like this that become choke holds on our collective efforts, and it’s so unsettling to me that this post comes from someone within the profession who should know better than to make generalities for thousands of PR practitioners many of them indeed strategic who do influence brand by aligning communications strategy with business goals .

Before I go any further, let me give Mr. Singer the kudos he deserves. Adam Singer works in public relations; he’s a peer although we’ve never interacted before today as far as I know. Here are his credentials I’ve taken from his blog; you can see for yourself:

  • The Future Buzz is the digital marketing and PR blog of Adam Singer, social media practice director for Lewis PR.
  • His blog, The Future Buzz, receives from 30,000 to more than 200,000 unique visitors per month, depending on the type of content he creates (extracted from his blog).
  • More than 7,000 web professionals, marketers, PR people and bloggers/social media users subscribe to Adam Singer’s content via  RSS and email (data from his blog site).

I’m impressed with Mr. Singer’s analytics and blog subscribers; not sure my little one-year-old blog will ever reach those admirable numbers.

Mr. Singer’s blog post rankled me; I’m sensitive after having adopted this journey for more than a month to define public relations and facilitate discussion within the profession. There are so many generalities in this content targeting public relations as a whole that are just false; yet they are stated on an influential blog with 7,000+ subscribers.

Credibility in public relations has always been something we strive for as professionals. None of us need a thorn like this from someone working in our very own profession.

(Image: SEOConsultants)

Filed Under: Public Relations Tagged With: Public Relations

She Says No Need To Define PR for Grandma

03/31/2011 By Jayme Soulati

Davina Brewer of 3 Hats Communications writes a snappy blog chock full of opinion and pizazz. Here, in her comment (with permission) I extracted from my blog post “Should We Define PR for Fifth Graders?” Davina shares her thoughts on this debatable exercise. Thanks, Davina!

Davina Brewer, 3 Hats Communications

Davina Brewer of 3 Hats Communications Says:

1) No we should not define PR or public relations for a 5th grader or grandparent. Not at the expense of oversimplifying or limiting the scope of PR. Yes I spend most of my days in front of a computer; so do lawyers and accountants and therapists and lots of other folks; that doesn’t define what we do, merely illustrates a little of the mechanics of how we do it.

Maybe for this group, we ask “when was the last time a brand or company impressed you and why?” Maybe the company comped a deal, maybe a brand offers extraordinary service, maybe the answer may have to do with an overall branding strategy that includes good PR and then we can reply, “that’s what we do.” But I don’t know many 5th graders, so not sweating it. ;-)

2) We do need to make the meaning of PR more transparent, less oblique. It’s not a bad thing, because the barrier to me is the talent and ability to do it right, to do it well. Not everyone can be a copywriter, design ads, plan commercials, or orchestrate complicated media buys; those concepts aren’t clear but they aren’t vague to the layperson who at least ‘gets’ a little about advertising.

Public relations practitioners can write well, research and identify stories that others can’t; just met with some reporters a couple weeks ago, one mentioned that in a general interview w/ a biz exec it wasn’t until the END of the meeting that he let slip something good, something really newsworthy. Now it was a deal that maybe needed to be under wraps for a while but it also hinted at me that maybe this company needed some media and PR training per so many of these definitions that cover ‘story telling’ and how PR uses that to communicate.

We can identify the different audiences important to a company, how to communicate effectively with employees and investors, how to manage a crisis, how the HR team needs to work with sales, with support, with customer service, which brings me to:

3) We do need to play nice with the other kids in the sandbox. Integration is one of my schticks so while I don’t like defining PR against other aspects of the marketing mix, I don’t mind putting it in context that strategically integrated PR works to support branding, advertising, social media and other promotional activities to help companies communicate with their target audiences. In terms of publicity, it’s earned vs. paid for media; maybe it’s data mining the R&D or customer support departments, figuring out how high the referral rates are, what a great story that is to tell and how it’s best to tell it: ads, social media, events, etc.

I’ve written one post on this, kinda come back to making it relatable. I asked for examples – something in context that yes friends and family can ‘get’ and that clients can understand and appreciate, per their business goals and objectives – but at the end of the day what matters most to me is that:

I know what GOOD PR is.

I k now how to do my job well.

I can effectively educate my clients on what PR is and is not.

I know when the definition of PR is obfuscated or trivialized in the media, it is important to address the error, correct it.

FWIW

Filed Under: Public Relations Tagged With: Public Relations

She’s In New PR; Are You?

03/30/2011 By Jayme Soulati

Jenn Whinnem brings wonderful style and insight to my blog; I’m happy to have her today fitting nicely into my series on defining PR. Thanks, Jenn, for letting the public relations profession win you over; welcome aboard!

Jenn Whinnem Says:

A few weeks ago, I blogged about the restaurant blogger who slammed the PR industry in the New York Times (no more link love from us). You can read that here if you’re so inclined.

What followed from that post I could not have predicted. While I merely wanted to point out the contradictions in the guy’s post, it was a seemingly throwaway comment that captured everyone’s imagination: I said I was not a PR person. This led to quite a few people discussing “what is public relations, anyway?” which led to Jayme spearheading the charge of redefining PR with her first of 11 blog posts in the series to date launching with “What Is PR?”

Many tweets and comments followed – and thank you to everyone who has contributed to this quest. My participation was minimal, because I felt I was here to learn. I read everything and said little.

Then, this past Friday, I went to lunch with my co-worker, M, who is a seasoned PR pro, to talk about how we will work together (I’m new, you see). I asked her straight up, please tell me what you do! As she started to describe her media strategy, the plans that resulted, her various tactics…well what do you know, Jayme was right.

I could see how she considered me a PR person. While I had yet to provide an executive with talking points for a radio interview, I had provided an executive with talking points for a meeting with stakeholders. I had strategized on messaging, selecting the appropriate channels for those messages, etc., etc.

While I was considering all of this, I read Elizabeth Sosnow’s fantastic and thought-provoking “5 Ways that PR is Evolving In Spite of Itself.” Elizabeth discusses the impact of digital on PR, and asks “Why are PR folks so happy to embrace social media, but so shortsighted that they can’t recognize the larger opportunity and threat of digital?” (Fellow PR pros, you owe it to yourself to read her post and consider what you’re offering your clients).

This got me thinking – perhaps the reason I didn’t recognize myself as PR is because I’m new PR. My communications career has been solidly focused on the digital, and much less on the print side of things. I’ve never worked on a campaign that didn’t include email or a website. I know about ten different content management systems and some HTML, have a grasp of SEO principles, and am a big-time web-based tool geek. Print, television, radio – that was PR. Not what I did.

But Jayme and Elizabeth are right: PR has expanded into the web and now includes me. As it continues to expand, the rules of the game continue to evolve. And this leaves me with questions: PR veterans, how has the game changed for you? How are you bringing your clients along for the ride? Are they understanding the importance of social? Recent PR grads, how are you finding that the world differs from what your professors taught you?

Nevertheless, I’m happy to join all of you in PR.

(image credit: TopRank.com)

Filed Under: Public Relations Tagged With: digital

Should We Define PR For Fifth Graders?

03/28/2011 By Jayme Soulati

Before late last week I truly was seeing the dim light at the end of the tunnel; now I’m not so sure. My journey to define PR with the most recent post “” now has me off on a tangent. At the end of that post, I tossed out a written-in-three-seconds  definition of public relations, but it was this descriptor that prompted many comments.

And, so, we’re here today to try this from yet another angle — should we define PR for a fifth grader, grandma, and anyone else who just doesn’t get what we do?

I just have to say — I’ve always liked it when the rest of the marketing mix didn’t know what it was I did; that way they knew they needed me yet couldn’t do it themselves. It was sort of like a protective barrier, you know?  (But, that was back in the silo days; now we’re all playing happily in the sandbox — well, once we stop fighting over ownership of social media and who !)

And, so, I will provide credit where credit is due and see if the school of thought that says we need a simpler definition for the masses can agree upon nonjargonesque wording to define public relations:

I help my employer build authentic relationships with all of the people who help them either succeed or fail in business. ~,

I tell stories about people; I make people look good. ~,

Public relations builds goodwill among businesses, customers and community using an approach that makes people feel actions and opinions are valued. at

Public Relations is the practice of communicating to the public and other audiences. ~

Public Relations helps people say the right things to the right audiences at the right time. ~ (that’s me)

Public relations (uses technology to) creates relationships with everyone, everywhere. ~Jayme and “like” by of

So, who’d like to start…? (IMHO, this does NOT replace the need to define PR for PR; right Patty?)

Filed Under: Public Relations Tagged With: Public Relations

She’s A Copywriter; Is That PR?

03/24/2011 By Jayme Soulati

After yesterday’s post, I must have more thought provocation (kidding), and I turn to (and thank profusely) my new tweep Taqiyyah Shakirah Dawud (you can address her as Shakirah because I asked), for this guest post on her talents as a copywriter. Is that PR?

Shakirah Dawud says:

I’m a copywriter. That’s my story and I’m sticking with it. My elevator speech: “Hi, I’m a freelance copywriter.” (I know it needs work, thank you.) My byline: “Shakirah Dawud, copywriter.” I’ve been happy that way for nearly 10 years. And then Jayme started giving me ideas. Illusions of grandeur. I may be something more. Or something less, as Gini Dietrich found some believe. Depends on your experience, I guess.

Anyway, I know what I do: I write copy. But what does copy do, exactly? Well, let’s take for example a brochure. It briefly takes the reader on a tour of a business’s offerings, lists facts, adds stars to the special bits, and makes an offer, leaving the reader wanting more. It does this for all who care to read, but weeds them out line by line until only the interested and qualified customers are left at the end, looking for the phone number or website.

How about copy on the back of a package? It’s even more brief, sandwiched between prerequisites like ingredient and component lists, instructions, and those mystifying recycling codes. It specifically explains what it is, what it isn’t, and all but snuggles into the reader’s arms, getting as comfortable and unforgettable as possible.

And then there’s the press release. Done right, everyone is talking about its subject, seeking the related brochure and reading the package copy right through to the end. They’re forming opinions, debating the outcome, and causing a money-making stir.

I thought for a while that this third piece was the only real “PR” in my line of work. But when you think about it…

  • All three types of copy face outward, get in the faces of prospects, and offer further means of developing a relationship.
  • All three constitute variations of what could be the first impression of any company.
  • All three should be current or at least avoid being dated.
  • And all three must be planned, strategized, fact-checked, and choreographed into the right places to elicit the right reactions.

I tentatively decided after reading Jayme’s post about the definition of public relations that I, marketing copywriter, probably fit in there somewhere. What I’m certain of is that neither PR nor marketing could possibly live a happy life without the other.

What do you think the relationship is?

(Image Credit: ConversationMarketing.com)

Filed Under: Public Relations

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