Most PR Efforts Are a Waste of Time…Money…Energy




It’s too bad that so many firms waste so much money on public relations activities that have little or no impact on the press or, more importantly, on their prospective customers.

One of the key reasons these activities fail is that management lets their in-house staff or an outside agency handle the company’s PR without management’s direct involvement.

Another reason most efforts are a wasteful is that too often, the people doing the writing of the releases and/or articles would have a hard time writing a ransom note, let alone something an editor and/or his or her readers would want to spend any time reading.

Most heads of companies feel that they can “assign” their public relations activities to someone. Then, when they are completed, the managers wonder why the PR activities don’t reflect their views and directions.

Public relations starts with management, and it ends with management. The people who “do things in between” merely facilitate management’s messages. The PR person’s job is to take a few statements and thoughts and put them into a form that makes the corporate managers sound knowledgeable and professional. As far as the company’s public is concerned, the visible activities are all a direct reflection on management.

We once told a company president that we would be happy to help him carry out his public relations program, but that since he was responsible for directing, guiding and projecting the company to the outside world, the success or failure of the program was really up to him. No public relations staff or agency can assume that Responsibility. They can only make it easier for management to communicate internally and externally – which aids in achieving the company’s goals.

Today’s Images
Lee Iacocca did something in the automotive industry that hasn’t been done since Henry Ford. He humanized Chrysler Corporation. Very few people can put a name and face with General Motors, Ford, Toyota or Honda. But you could put a name and face with Chrysler.

Bill Gates (despite current problems) knows one of his key jobs is the proper projection, internally and externally, at Microsoft. Lou Gerstner at IBMtakes a very active role in the company’s PR activities.

Al Shugart was Seagate to the world, but today can you visualize Seagate?

These key executives realized the importance of their roles as spokespersons for their companies and industries. Putting themselves in the public eye isn’t a matter of ego. These people know that they have a responsibility to their shareholders, suppliers, employees and customers. They must present a strong, consistent image of the company – in good times and in bad.

If they didn’t take their jobs seriously, their companies would blend into the background along with the hundreds of other firms you have difficulty recalling. These people make a PR person’s job 150 percent easier.

PR Person’s Job
It’s not that management doesn’t need an internal, external or combination PR team. Professionals are needed to present the company to editors/reporters; write technical and user articles; develop corporate, technical, product and applications backgrounders; set up press meetings, hospitality suites and other activities; as well as handle routine queries from the press. It’s their job to help humanize the company to both the press and prospective customers.

Communication is generally carried out with the written word, so it is important that the individual doing the PR is able to string words and sentences together into a clear, concise and intelligent concept.

Liking people is not a main prerequisite for the job. But being able to interpret what people say is important. People outside the organization determine how the company, its products and its image are perceived. People inside the organization determine the quality of the projected image of the company and its products.

PR people have to interpret the messages of both groups.

Pivotal Person
Even though the PR person is interpreting the messages of many groups, it is the management team that the PR person is reflecting and presenting.

The president of a company can equate himself to a precious gem. The PR person’s job is to bring the gem out of the vault and present it in the proper light and setting.

It’s his or her job to prepare the audience for the president, properly present him or her, and then carry out the nuts and bolts of the job by providing editors with the material they need for their article and/or interview.

Without that precious gem (or president), no PR person is going to sell the company and/or its products to the media. If the boss is only paste, then it follows that the company and products are also paste. No amount of PR effort or rhetoric is going to make a difference.

As a result, PR people have to spend much of their time properly preparing management for their meetings with the press. And they have to know how to support both management and the press.

Anyone who says that they do it differently and that they can completely remove management’s responsibilities is only blowing smoke. And any president who believes that a solid communications program can work without his or her involvement is wasting precious time, money and opportunity.

andym
About the author:
Andy has worked in front of and behind the TV camera and radio mike. Unlike most PR people he listens to and understands the consumer’s perspective on the actual use of products. He has written more than 100 articles in the business and trade press. During this time he has also addressed industry issues and technologies not as corporate wishlists but how they can be used by normal people. Unable to hold a regular 9-5 job, he has been a marketing and communications consultant for more than ...


  

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