Mr. Edward L. Bernays, Father of Modern PR & Spin PR Case Study
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Today I’m very happy to present 101st Blog
‘PR Case Study: Mr. Edward L. Bernays, Father of Modern PR & Spin.’
Friends
you would agree with me that PR today has become a well organized and recognized
vocation. Thanks to thousands of dependable and resourceful PR practitioners,
PR agencies and consultancies, and professional bodies e.g. IPRA, ICCO, IABC,
GAPRCM, ICA, AMEC, PRSA, CIPR, PRCA, APACD, ABCI, IPR, WCFA, PRCAI, PRCI, PRSI
and PRSD etc representing and advocating the profession of PR. PR has a growing sense of social
responsibility and that’s one of the main reasons of steady growth of conscious
PR activities globally by individuals and celebrities, profit and non - for -
profit organizations and the government today.
Friends, Today, Public relations
tools and tactics are creatively used to appeal to the desires of the target
audience, and make them feel like they need the product and or service on
offer. The concept of creating consumer appeal was non-existent until the
1920s. The man, who was closely related to Mr. Sigmund Freud - the founder of psycho-analysis, and who introduced the psycho-analytical approach to the
field of public relations, was none other than the great Edward L. Bernays, the
Father of modern PR and SPIN.
The
father of PR was born into a world that was changing, a world where people
were, for the first time, becoming the public i.e. a public whose thoughts,
attitudes and behaviors were identifiable, understandable and, as per Bernays
soon realized, malleable.
Public Relations as defined by Mr.
Edward L. Bernays, the father of modern PR:
Public Relation is the attempt by information, persuasion, and adjustment to engineer public support for an activity, cause, movement or institution.
Edward L. Bernays coined the term “Public Relations Counsel” in ‘Crystallizing Public Opinion’ the first ever book on public relations authored by him in which he had defined the principles and techniques of the field of PR. He also broke ground when he gave a course in public relations at New York University in 1923, the first course in that subject ever given at any university.
Edward L. Bernays, who was referred to in his New York Times obituary
as the “Father of Public Relations,” became famous for his promotional
campaigns for the U.S. Government and NGOs, as well as for commercial brands.
His methods drew heavily on the work of European psychologists and fueled trans-atlantics
debates about the vices and virtues of propaganda and the “Engineering of Consent” at the middle of the twentieth century.
His campaigns were influential in marketing to such a degree that even today
his ideas on PR remain omnipresent in the United States and in university
public relations curricula everywhere.
Bernays
applied the psycho-analytical approach and psychological insights of his uncle Sigmund
Freud to experiment, to shape public opinion and decision making through PR
campaigns. Psycho-analysis or psycho-analytical approach as a
system or school of Psychology was the brainchild of the Bernays. On the
theoretical side this approach presented a theory to conduct and explain the
human psyche and on the practical side it provided a method known as
‘Psycho-analysis’ for the study of human behavior.
Freud’s
psycho-analysis claims for itself the unique position of delving deep, beneath
and beyond into the real roots and springs of human action and of unraveling
for us the natural history of mental growth and thus placing within our
understanding, the means for its conscious direction and control.
PR is more effective than
advertising because the message about a product comes from an independent
source: the news media. Bernays discovered that it is even more effective to
put another layer of credibility between the product and the news media: an
outside authority. Bernays transformed what
had been an unsophisticated matter of attracting attention into sophisticated,
multi-level campaigns that could mold and manage public opinion.
Edward Bernays
had his first success as a theatrical publicist, making stars of the great
Italian tenor Enrico Caruso and the avant-garde Ballet Russe but World War-I
changed the course of Bernays’ career. During the war years, Bernays served on
the Committee on Public Information, an innovative government propaganda
service that whipped public opinion into supporting American intervention in
the European war through speeches, posters, newspapers, and film the then new
mass media.
After the war,
Bernays’ reading of the pre-eminent psychiatrist’s work and ongoing
correspondence with Sigmund Freud led Bernays to see an opportunity to
strengthen the effectiveness of publicity campaigns by appealing to both the
public’s conscious and unconscious desires. Bernays executed a number of
campaigns in the 1920s that played an important role in changing American
society. Bernays’ trademark strategies often involved roundabout ways of
meeting the client’s goals.
Let’s
take a look at some of landmark PR campaigns executed by Mr. Edward L. Bernays that
redefined PR.
Damaged Goods -
Bernays' First PR Campaign
Bernays
stumbled across his role as a press agent. After bumping into an old school
friend, he had become co-editor of a medical journal called the Medical Review
of Reviews. It was a distant second in the market, so he had to devise new
publicity techniques to keep it alive. Bernays organized symposia and signed
all letters “The Editors”. By writing in the plural, he felt it gave more
weight to his correspondence.
Bernays' PR
break came in New York in February 1913, when he came across a screenplay,
called Damaged Goods, about a man who contracts syphilis but goes right ahead
and gets married to another woman anyway. First, the problems: one was
money. The second and potentially fatal issue was whether the show would be
allowed to go on. Anthony Comstock, secretary of the New York Society for the
Suppression of Vice had closed other shows he thought too daring, such as Mrs.
Warrens Profession by George Bernard Shaw.
Bernays created a Sociological Fund Committee, contacted few distinguished men and women such as John D Rockefeller and Mrs. William K Vanderbilt, Senior, and appealed to their good natures. As “The Editors” of the Medical Review of Reviews he invited them to help prevent the spread of one of the scourges of that era, venereal disease. Bernays contacted the press while show rehearsals went on, with news of the Sociological Fund Committee, and many of its distinguished members made comments to the press when contacted. The show “Damaged Goods’ was staged with the funds raised through Sociological Fund Committee and became a cause célèbre before the curtain rose.
Lucky Strike Cigarettes
- Torches of Freedom
While many, if not most, men smoked
in the early 20th century, it was still taboo for women. The tobacco industry
hired Bernays to overcome this restriction of the market for their product.
Because of the suffrage movement
then underway, the inequality between men and women was already on the public’s
mind. Since smoking in public was taboo for women, breaking this stigma would
be making a statement about their desire to be treated equally, Bernays
surmised.
Lucky Strike cigarettes were having
a challenging time convincing women to buy Lucky’s because they were put off by
the pack’s forest green color. Lucky Strike hired Bernays to change women’s
opinion of the color.
In
1929, public relations were a new experimental field that Bernays had
effectively invented. Bernays’ market research suggested that Lucky Strike’s green
packaging had put women off buying them, as it wasn’t a desirable color.
Furthermore it was a taboo for women to smoke in public; Bernays’ well thought
PR campaign to encourage women to smoke Lucky Strike cigarettes that year was hugely successful and became
the stuff of legend.
Bernays applied his unique approach
to overcome the hurdle. As the green packaging was deemed too expensive to
replace, Bernays researched green and learned it is the symbol of “hope,
victory and plenty.” Using this information, he wrote to fashion designers and
department stores, urging them to promote the color. Soon, store windows and
galleries featured “Lucky Strike green.” Bernays also convinced fashion
designers to incorporate the color into their new season designs, and held a
‘Green Gala’ at the Waldorf Astoria hotel for some of society’s most prominent
trend-setters.
The audacious campaign went
further. To break the taboo of smoking in public, Bernays linked Lucky Strike
cigarettes to the women’s liberation movement. Bernays hired fashionable young
models to walk in the 1929 New York Easter Parade with a cigarette in their
hands, getting photographed flaunting their “Torches of Freedom” – Lucky Strike
cigarettes. He alerted the press in
advance about this scandalous display of feminine independence. It became a
national story, and women were soon seen in public openly smoking what Bernays’
parading smokers called “Torches of Freedom”. The Lucky Strike brand became the
symbol of gender equality in the U.S. during those years.
Beech-Nut Packing Company - Hearty Breakfast
We’ve all heard the saying
‘’breakfast is the most important meal of the day’’, and Bernays went someway
to creating that. The Beech-Nut Packing Company was struggling to sell one of its
largest meat products, Bacon, so employed the expertise of Bernays. Rather than
simply reduce the price, Bernays posed a more probing question - who tells the
public what to eat?
Bernays sought out an authoritative
outsider to make his client’s case though, as was the case with most
“outsiders” Bernays relied upon, it was actually someone in his employ, a
doctor he had on a retainer.
Bernays
asked him if a breakfast like bacon and eggs would be healthier than the
lighter fare i.e. piece of toast, orange
juice and a cup of coffee most Americans were consuming at the time to
remain slim. Not surprisingly, the doctor agreed. Bernays asked the doctor to
get other health professionals to concur. As a result of this effort, thousands
of other doctors agreed that a big breakfast of bacon and eggs was
“scientifically desirable.” Bernays got 5,000 physicians to sign a statement
that agreed a protein-rich, heavy breakfast of, say, bacon, and eggs, was
healthier than a light one and the all-American breakfast was born, with a huge
spike in sales of bacon. The results of the survey of bacon loving doctors were
also distributed to news media across the nation, who eagerly shared the
“news.” Six months after he publicized the
survey’s results, Beech Nut’s sales boomed, and a classic breakfast was reborn.
Betty Crocker Instant Cake Mix
Bernays
applied psycho-analytical methodology to improving the sales of Betty Crocker
Instant Cake Mix. Bernays’ appointed a focus group to conduct research on the
target market i.e. American housewives. Based on the research Bernays concluded
that the housewives felt an unconscious guilt for using a product that required
so little effort to make. Bernays communication gave the housewives a greater
sense of participation, by requiring them to add an egg to the mixture. Sales
soared as the symbolic egg tickled the depths of the subconscious, and removed
the barrier of guilt.
Bernays’ method of using
psycho-analytical techniques in shaping consumer demand is the foundation upon
which all modern marketing is built, and Bernays was the man behind it. Bernays
realized a fundamental truth of effective PR that people are more likely to
believe your story if it is told by someone else.
Venida
Hairnet
Bernays often used public figures of authority for
campaigns and publicity, also front organizations and third-party authorities
to gain attraction to the client’s interests and productions, but mask the
direct interest itself.
Bernays,
wherever hired to sell a product or service, instead sold whole new ways of
behaving. These varied from the small to the large. The hairnet manufacturing company
“Venida” was hit by new fashion trend for short hair. When Venida hired Bernays' services, he
started a campaign for women at work to wear nets both to stop it being caught
in machinery, and to keep it out of food products; on the other side, he paid
leading actresses to endorse the beauty of long hair.
The
campaign was launched by Bernays to convince women to grow their hair longer so
they would buy more hairnets. Although the campaign failed to influence many
women, but it convinced the government officials to require hairnets for
certain jobs. When working for Venida in the
1920s, Bernays was successful in changing the beginning trend for shorter
hairstyles. He persuaded important women to wear hair nets in public. He also
lobbied the government circles and authorities. Eventually legislation was
passed, that required women to wear hair nets during work.
P & G Ivory Soap
Bernays’
work with Procter & Gamble’s ‘Ivory Soap’ is another case of psycho-analytical technique in action. In the Bernays
line of thinking, he aimed to broaden the market by tackling children’s’ innate
distaste for soap and bathing, while distinguishing the brand from competitors.
Inspired by an artist he had met
who used soap instead of wax to carve miniature sculptures, Bernays created the
annual “National Soap Sculpture Competition” to inspire children, ‘’The Enemies
of Soap’’, to get creative with it. Within one year of the original
competition, 23 million school children were entering. Kids no longer feared
soap and houses were relieved of their adolescent stench. The competition ran
annually for 25 years and involved millions of children, and cast the name
‘Ivory Soap’ into the public consciousness.
Bernays
also started events such as a Soap Yacht Race in Central Park, to prove it
floated better than competitor brands, and employed a medical consultant to
survey American hospitals on their preference for white, non-perfumed soap such
as Ivory, rather than the colored, scented soaps most competitors used.
Luggage
Bag
In
the 1920s, US luggage industry was worried that Americans were buying less and
smaller luggage. They asked Bernays for help. Bernays
sent articles to magazines titled “What the Well Dressed Woman Wears on a
Weekend”. These stressed the need for women to travel with a varied wardrobe,
advised hostesses to stress in their invitations the different sorts of
activities their guests would be involved with and the need for different
clothes for each activity. Bernays suggested the US health officials to emphasize
the importance that a person should own their own luggage. He encouraged the stores
to put luggage in window displays, and to show the relationship between new
clothes styles and new luggage styles. Bernays wrote to colleges and
universities to send their new intakes lists of the clothes and luggage they
would need before arriving. He also created the Luggage Information Service, to
be an easy point of call for any journalist or salesperson who wanted to know
more about luggage. Bernays wrote to railway and steamship companies and urged
them to make sure their designers left plenty of room for luggage.
Russian Ballet US Tour
In 1915, Americans thought
masculine dancers were deviates, and that "dancing was not nice".
Bernays wrote an 81 page, easy to read informational guide that was written to
allow magazines and newspapers to tailor select pieces of his story to allow
their readers to find a relatable interest to dance. Bernays then convinced
manufacturers to make products and clothing relating to the sets and costumes
of the show. All of this hype led to an eager crowd waiting for the arrival of
the ballet artists at the New York docks and a sold out nationwide tour. This
led to every young girl wanting be a ballerina, which still stands today.
US World War I Campaign
Bernays and Walter Lippman, a
journalist, joined US forces to assist Woodrow Wilson with the World War I effort.
Their goal was to turn gun shy America into an anti-Germany force ready to
enter the trenches. The slogan, “Make the World Safe for Democracy”, was
emphatically embraced by Americans who in turn helped end World War I. His
ability to motivate the masses through propaganda inspired future leaders of
other countries to turn to these practices in the years that followed.
Thankfully, he did not forget about the soldiers that he helped recruit.
Following the war he led a successful campaign that promoted re-employment of
returning veterans.
Having seen how effective
propaganda could be during war, Bernays wondered whether it might prove equally
useful during peacetime. Yet Propaganda had acquired a somewhat pejorative
connotation so Bernays promoted the term “Public Relations.”
To sum up;
Bernays’ PR
campaigns were influenced by the psycho-analytic theories of his uncle Sigmund
Freud. Bernays argued that it was important to use mass psychology when
addressing irrational and misguided mass behavior. Bernays thought it necessary
not only to give information to the public for their consideration and to encourage
them to act accordingly but also to pursue what he termed an “Engineering of Consent,”
which he understood to mean the influencing of people’s opinion and therefore
their behavior. To that end, Bernays acted as the “Engineer of Consent” behind
the scenes, not always disclosing the clients, to promote the general product
they aimed to sell, but not necessarily a specific brand.
Thank you,
Dr. Suresh Gaur, P R
Guru
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