Public Relation Chapter 1
Public Relation Chapter 1
Objectives
Be able to define PR.
Varied definition.
Practiced in various organizations.
A Working Definition of PR
Public relations is a leadership and management function
that helps achieve organizational objectives, define philosophy, and facilitate organizational change. Practitioners communicate with all relevant internal and external publics to develop positive relationships and to create consistency between organizational goals and societal expectations.
Other Definitions
Grunig (1992): PR is the organizations effort to build and manage long term relationships with its strategic publics and minimize conflicts with them. Institute of Public Relations Malaysia (IPRM): Public relations is the deliberate, planned and sustained effort to establish and maintain mutual understanding between an organization and its publics.
PR
Key Concepts
Researching the needs of the publics Reputation management of the organization
PUBLIC RELATIONS
PR Activities
Research Media relations Public affairs Community relations Employee relations Publicity Marketing communication
Counseling/Advising
Government affairs Investor relations Development/fundraising Multicultural affairs Issues/crisis management
Promotion
The Publics in PR
A group of individuals/organizations who recognize their
connection with a common problem, cause or goal. Six major groupings of publics:
Employees Media
Community
Consumers Financial Markets Government Agencies
the publics.
PR and Propaganda
Propaganda: means of gaining support for an opinion,
creed and belief. Distinguished by its concentration of matters of the heart and mind emotional, intellectual or spiritual topics e.g. causes, politics, religion. Similar to advertising, but more prejudiced in favor of its topic. Good PR should be factual, unbiased and free of selfpraise.
Communication Tasks
PR practitioner often produce the following
communication materials:
Press releases Annual reports Employee magazines
Electronic newsletters
PR campaign creations and management
Two-way Communication in PR
Good communication starts with supplying accurate
your publics. Actively interpret the publics needs and concerns to the organization.
behavior. The needs of publics cannot be determined in isolation. Allow the publics to express their own needs. Make sure the publics are hearing the organizations messages accurately.
Nature of PR as a Practice
PR people are: Boundary spanners: connected to both the organization and its publics. Problem solvers: problems provide an opportunity for you to make a difference.
PR Practitioners at Work
Programming
Relationships
Writing and Editing Information Production Special Events Speaking Research and Evaluation
CLASS ACTIVITY: Get into a group of 3. Discuss one job scope each. Explain to your classmates.
PR vs. Advertising
PR is concerned with publicity/stories that run without
charge in the news columns of the media. ADV refers to paid space and time in the media.
PR vs. Marketing
PR involves many publics, whose interests sometimes
collide with customer interests. Marketing is a sales and distribution function whose principal publics are customers, retailers and distributors.
PR vs. Journalism
PR represents the organization about which they write for. Influences objectivity in the way they frame ideas and present facts. Journalists do not represent the organizations about
Others
Government agencies Known as public information/public affairs officers. Relationship between organizations and government. Corporate relations/marketing communication Assigned to various departments.
interest. Suggest ways the organization can adjust its behavior to meet social, political and economic responsibilities. Accurately monitor community needs and integrating it into management planning to represent public interest.
Managing Changes
Technological developments.
New Challenges in PR
With increases in technology and globalization, the need
for effective communications has also increased. Two new areas for PR practitioners are Crisis Communication and Social Media.
Crisis Communication
Preserving and managing a business reputation when
something unexpected occurs. Integrating two-way communication with the media and publics when a crisis occurs. 4 main causes:
1.
2. 3. 4.
Acts of God storms, earthquakes, etc. Mechanical problems something breaks. Human errors when an employee does something wrong. Management decisions/indecisions.
Social Media
Internet has changed the way businesses and journalists
operate. Handling rumors spread on the internet and maintaining communications through SNS i.e. Facebook, YouTube, etc.
In Summary
PR is a diverse and exciting area found in almost every
industry. Requires a broad base of communication skills and the ability to build bridges between organizations and their publics. The Internet and globalization require different approaches to communicating with audiences.