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PR buyers beware!
It can bite you and waste your public relations budget
when the program emphasizes communications tactics instead of how to make
certain your key outside audiences understand who and what you are.
Especially sad when tactics are placed in motion before you really know
how your key target audience views your organization, and exactly at whom
those tactics should be directed. Things can really fall apart if you
then fail to decide up front what changes in perceptions, and thus behaviors
you desire at the end of the program.
That’s no way to structure a public relations program.
Instead, before pulling any triggers, ask one big question. Who is my
#1 public relations target? Focus on that certain outside audience that
you know affects your organization more than any other. It makes sense
because that particular external “public” probably will have
a big say about the survival of your organization.
Keep in mind that your other external audiences will need similar care
and feeding as you move forward.
So, with your target in sight, you need to interact with members of that
key audience and get inside their heads. What, if anything, do they think
about you and your organization? As you talk to them, do negative feelings
or observations come to the surface? Why? What appears to need correction?
Are there inaccuracies? Misconceptions? For that matter, is there a dangerous
rumor loose out there that badly needs neutralizing?
The answers are solid gold because they let you form a public relations
goal which, when achieved, corrects what’s wrong. Your goal could
be to knock down that rumor, clarify that misconception, or correct that
inaccuracy.
In setting your goal, stay alert to the fact that altering the perceptions
of that target audience recognizes that perceptions almost always lead
to predictable behaviors that can either hurt or help you achieve your
objectives.
Now you need a roadmap that tells you how to get to that goal. In other
words, a strategy. In dealing with personal opinion, we only have three
strategic choices. Create, change or reinforce that perception, i.e.,
that opinion.
Which of the three strategies you employ is dictated by, and flows naturally
from your public relations goal.
Now, the toughest part of the public relations problem solving sequence
is formulating what you are going to say to your #1 target audience.
Your message must be very clear as to what needs clarifying, correcting
or rebuttal. It should, no, MUST be persuasive and believable as well
as direct and candid as possible. Make it as compelling as can be. And
to help prevent further misunder- standing, give your message draft a
trial run before two or three members of your target audience, and adjust
as needed.
Here comes the fun part – deciding which communications tactics
will best carry that super message of yours to the right eyes and ears
among your target audience.
There are scores of such tactics available to you including, for example,
newspaper interviews, face-to-face meetings, press releases, special events,
speeches and many, many more. This is where we hear groans when we point
out that you must once again monitor what members of your key target audience
are perceiving about your organization. The reason, of course, is to determine
if your public relations program is making any progress.
Same questions the second time around. But now, you want to see if all
those communications tactics succeeded in moving key audience perception
in your direction.
If not far enough, you may have to increase the frequency and mix of
your tactics. And you may need to take another look at your message reassessing
its content for believability and impact.
The test for public relations success will turn on whether you actually
altered enough perceptions, and their follow on behaviors, in your direction.
In which case, you will have insured that your most important outside
audiences understand who and what you are. And that strongly suggests
that your organization is well on its way to achieving its operating objectives.
About the author
Bob Kelly counsels, writes and speaks about the fundamental premise
of public relations. 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. mailto:bobkelly@TNI.net.
Visit: http://www.prcommentary.com
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