PUBLIC RELATIONS AND MEDIA
Friends, Thank you for
reading my earlier blogs and sharing your views. I really feel encouraged after
reading your feedback in the comments column. Friends, presenting my 42nd blog
titled “PUBLIC RELATIONS AND MEDIA” to you.
PUBLIC RELATIONS AND MEDIA
Mr. Thomas Friedman, a
foreign affairs columnist, New York Times once said….. “This is the age of
globalization and the countries that succeed best at globalization are those
that are best at glocalization i.e. taking the best global innovations, styles and
practices and moulding them with their own culture”.
Friends, Public
Relations, as a practice in INDIA have come a long way into establishing its
needs and indispensable role with country’s corporate world. Compared to the
stimulating application of Public Relations in the global market, we still have
miles to go……
Where the Corporate
India is breaking all the barriers to adopt the most innovative strategies and
processes to chart out the most viable and effective communication plans, the
role of public relations is still largely a media relations game that can
potentially influence the key constituencies either by creating a perception,
or informing / educating through NEWS. Media is one indispensable channel /
mode towards achieving one or more public relation objectives of a business.
When public relations
agency goes for a pitch, generally the first question asked is….Can you get a
front-page story in a business newspaper or cover story in a business magazine
or plant stories against the competition? If the P R agency says NO then
the chances of its losing the business are very high. The competition is so
intense that some agencies succumb to such unreasonable demands as promising
editorial space in publications by the column centimetres.
Has the PR industry been
able to deliver? Is it growing fast? Is it still doing the same old stuff i.e.
wining and dining journalists, planting and spiking stories? Is it a mere tool
for corporate narcissism? The truth lies somewhere in between.
So what is Public
Relations?
For me, the best
definition of public relations comes from author Mr. Michael Levine in his book
“Selling Goodness”….. “When the circus comes to the town and you paint a sign
about it that’s ADVERTISING. Put the sign on the back of an elephant and march
him through Beverly Hills in Los Angeles that’s PROMOTION. If the elephant
walks through flower bed of Los Angeles Mayor’s residence, that’s PUBLICITY.
And, if you can get the Mayor to laugh or comment about it, that’s PUBLIC
RELATIONS.
As per Mr. Frank
Jefkins, a renowned PR expert – “Public Relations consists of all forms of
planned communication, outwards and inwards, between an organisation and its
target publics for the purpose of achieving specific objectives concerning
mutual understanding”. So, public relations effectively reach out to
investors through Investors Relations and Financial Communications, Employees
through Internal Communication, Government and Regulatory Bodies through
Corporate affairs and Lobbying. Public Relations also include Event
Management, Marketing Consultancy, and Brand Management. But it is largely
perceived as Media Management because it’s one of the
important components of public relations.
The job of Public
Relations is to facilitate a journalist to get the correct information in the
right perspective. Media management is the key attribute of public relations
worldwide. It is a single vehicle that has the mass reach. Media is the
quintessence of public relations. It is the last mile connectivity. After a whole
lot of research and strategy it has to end with media. All the strategy and
plans of the organisation finally must be translated into stories that appear
in the media. Only then would the stakeholders know what the organisation is up
to.
Media is very important
in the whole value chain. Media is part and parcel of the public relations
industry as it helps to effectively mould the public opinion and perception.
But the real trouble begins when publicity-hungry organisations turn media shy
at the first sign of trouble. There could be several reasons and at that time
organisations tend to calm up and ask their PR heads to keep the media at bay
or kill the negative stories. This is where they antagonize the media. When the
going was good, the journalists were CEO’s good friends but the moment the boat
rocks, the journalist(s) becomes persona non grata.
Many a times the media
is blamed for not being accountable and responsible, and it become a fashion to
say “It is a trial by the media”, but we must understand that the media
themselves face tough competition within the fraternity. With electronic media,
newspapers, news magazines and the internet fighting for an audience’s mind
space and a retailer’s shelf space, media are forced to chase issues that will
appeal to its viewers and readers.
Organisations for their
part use pressure tactics also to prevent a story from appearing. But forced
public relations do not work at all and failures cannot be camouflaged. It is
here that an organisation’s investment in reputation helps. If an organisation
has been historically known for its transparency and best trade practices and
where promises are matched with performance then it can be sure that media will
not go on overdrive. First deserve then desire is the name of the game. Media
management or relations is an ongoing cultivation process……..
Friends, during the
years 1996 – 2007 When I was handling the public relations portfolio of
erstwhile Oriental Bank of Commerce (OBC), most of my business journalist
friends, from print and electronic media, while doing a story on banking use to
contact me for being a reliable source for information and banking related
stories and that was one of the reasons our bank and its C&MD’s and ED’s
were always had a mention in news related to banking industry. And even after
quitting the bank in April’2008, knowing my expertise, many of my good friends
from media use to call me for banking related news.
Friends, being public
relations professional(s) you or your organisation’s strategy for media
coverage should go beyond trying for just one big story. You must perform in a
such a manner that the related media should know that you are THE PERSON or the
organisation to contact whenever they are doing a story on a subject that
relates to your organisation’s work, and that you are a reliable source for
information and stories. In short, you or your organisation should be quoted or
referenced in a variety of stories, not just one.
Therefore, don’t think
that every media release is going to result in media coverage – it’s not. But
sustaining regular press contacts will build recognition of your organisation
among journalists, and the result will be ongoing payoffs down the road. As
coverage for your organisation is generated, you won’t just be reaching new
audiences you will also be reaching your existing clients, reminding them of
what you or your organisation is doing and what they have chosen to be a part of.
Friends, please do share
your comments.
Thank you for reading
the blog.
Very effective article on PR, it's effective carriage and distinction between PR, publicity and promotion. Public relations Guru Suresh Gaur has quoted from known PR professionals to authenticate his views.
ReplyDeleteI feel for a good effective PR , you need to have a suitable product, project or message, in addition to choice of target audience, timing and then a channel. If you do a strong PR for a sub-standard product or idea, it will soon boomerang. Your selection of target audience, timing or season, when to convey a PR message to whom? Then, print media can't be effective channel in a desert, where camel back, elephant or track posts would be more effective... Subhash vatsain
Well written. Public Relations is a new science and a new art. It came into practice after Public Administration, though it was inherent in human culture. It evolved from rudimentary forms like Liaison, Lobbying, Press Agentry, Propaganda, Spin Doctoring etc etc after Industrial Revolution took place and prompted by reconstruction of economy post World Wars. Now it is more a refined practice than it was a hundred years ago. Public Relations looks to build the relationships between organizations and stakeholders. For this, PR pros will have to use a variety of communication channels right from traditional media to social media to communicate directly with those targeted individuals. While Media deals with Social Engineering, PR is into Human Engineering.
ReplyDelete- Y Babji, Blogger
http://pro-active-pro-active.blogspot.com/