Understanding Role of a PR MANAGER in an Organization
Understanding Role of
a PR MANAGER in an Organization
PR
or Public Relations , as the name suggests, is all about managing an
organization's reputation with the public in general and clients in particular.
At
the helm of managing a organization's public image, is the PR Manager, who
oversees the efforts of his team in maintaining a favorable image of the
company in the world of business. With her/his expertise, a PR Manager, can
create a strong image of the organization which would get other organizations
interested in entering into business relationship with it.
Role
of a PR Manager
PR
Manager plays an important role in communicating the organization's policy. In
this effort she / he may use all forms of media and communications. She / He
researches, pitches stories to the
media, writes press releases and makes sure that they reach the target
audience. She / He is actively involved in preparing publicity brochures,
handouts, promotional videos and multimedia programs that serve to reach the
company's policies to the public.
PR
Manager forms an important bridge between the company, the media and other
organizations. She / He answers all questions related to the organization's
strategies. Besides managing the organization's publicity strategies, a PR Manager
also evaluates the advertising and promotional programs and ensures that it is
compatible with the target audience. Not only does she / he supervise the
efforts of her / his own team in maintaining the organization’s corporate image
and identity, a PR Manager may also require drafting speeches of the
organization's top executives for public meetings.
Besides
acting as a mode of communication with the organization and the public in
general, PR Manager also plays an important role of improving the relation
between the management and the employees.
PR
Manager may work in close coordination with the HR Manager of the organization to
prepare in-house newsletter and or house magazine that would carry important
announcements by the management and develop instructional or motivational
videos for the workers. She / He is responsible for arranging interviews too.
The
PR Manager supervises the PR activities of the organization and also evaluate
whether the activities are useful in maintaining working relationships with
both stakeholders and clients. Many times, she / he has to deal with both
government officials and media representatives. She / He has to manage
communications budget as well.
PR
Manager arranges launch parties and press conferences to introduce new
products. She / He is responsible for all arrangements at special events like
sponsorship, entertainment shows, sports tournaments, etc. Thus, the PR Manager
is responsible for the direct and indirect advertising that helps the
organization to gain public attention.
Since
the duties of a PR Manager is of great responsibility, an individual has to
show a good understanding of the organization’s objectives and pro-activeness
in generating new ideas, for effective communication of those objectives. She /
He should show strong leadership qualities and the ability to successfully complete
PR related projects.
It
is important for a PR Manager to have good managerial and communications skills
also. She / He should be a good listener and a good observer. She / He is
supposed to know, observe, study and report on social, economic and political
trends that might promote or boost or affect the progress of the organization. PR Manager should also understand how the
media works. She / He should maintain cordial relations with the journalists.
Maintaining
a positive image of an organization can be tricky, at times. In order to be
able to bail one's organization out of a situation of crisis, the PR manager
should be able to think out of the box and react quickly. As we adapt to an age
in which both, internal and external public have unprecedented access to
communication which wield new influence and power, I strongly feel it’s worth
re-inventing the role of PR Manager in this age of dialogue, as under;
a.
Defining Organizational Character:
If
reputation is an absolute measure of how others judge an organization, an
authentic and aspirational effort to define its ‘DNA’ or core character and
ways of doing things might be the organization’s way of influencing the factors
that build that reputation. PR Managers can play a critical role in defining, maintaining,
assessing and sustaining an organization’s DNA or core character.
b.
Creating a Culture of Listening and Engagement:
The
widespread use of digital networks makes communication a richer and yet riskier
process than ever before. But today’s tools are only a means to an end: that of
embedding a culture of listening and engagement not just in the communications
department, but across the organization. PR Managers must therefore develop and
deploy this culture for the benefit of both the organization and its
stakeholders.
c.
Understanding Personal, Organizational and Professional
Responsibility:
Individuals,
organizations and professions bear responsibilities to society – bringing
ethical and sustainability considerations into the decisions and actions we
undertake every day. Understanding responsibility is the first step to gaining
credibility. As PR Managers, they must consider the nature of a communicator’s
responsibility today.
These
redefined roles are critical to the elevation of organizational
communication
from the popular perception that it’s about ‘spin’ and ‘feel-good’ benefits
rather than a discipline that prizes transparency, authenticity and measurable
contributions of value to organizations and to society.
Communicating
ethically and responsibly, understanding and engaging stakeholders, defining an
organization’s character and building a listening culture are the greatest
contributions communicators can make to modern organizations, according to a survey
by the Global Alliance for Public Relations and Communication Management.
Survey
identifies five major roles for communicators;
1.
Applying ethics and responsibility to communication decisions;
2.Researching organization’s reputation and
stakeholder environment;
3.
Engaging stakeholders to define the organization’s character or
DNA;
4.
Developing a listening culture within the organization;
5.
Integrating mainstream and social media communication.
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Well written.
ReplyDeleteIt is so knowledgeable sir..
ReplyDeleteIts really very informative and knowledgable. Thank q suresh sir for your valuable information and thank q babji sir for introduce this blog to us. ...
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