How_Public_Relations_Can_Help_Your_Business
| How Public Relations Can Help Your Business
Do you worry about certain behaviors among your most important
audiences because those behaviors are crucial to achieving your
organization’s objectives? If your answer is yes, you need
public relations.
The payoff? When those audiences do what you want them to do,
achieving your organizational objectives gets a lot easier.
That’s why this article is all about how to make welcome,
key-audience behavior a regular occurrence.
We learned long ago that people act on their own perceptions of
the facts, leading to predictable behaviors about which
something can be done. We call their cumulative perceptions
opinion…public opinion.
Public relations tries to create, change or reinforce that
opinion by reaching, persuading and moving-to-action the very
people whose behaviors affect your organization.
That’s why it’s quality planning, and the degree of perception
and behavioral change it produces, that defines the success or
failure of a public relations program.
Those Painful Behaviors
Let’s look at some of those crucial perceptions (usually leading
to crucial behaviors) among target audiences that can make you
nervous. If you labor for an association, it might be strong
feedback that members perceive your communications organs as
devoid of informative material. Or, for the regional manager
with a motel chain, growing email traffic suggesting that guests
perceive rooms as dirty would be unsettling. And for a brand
manager, field reports that fast food taste tests result in less
than complimentary consumer reactions might ruin his day.
Those kind of perceptions almost always lead to unhappy
behaviors such as loud complaints about association
communicators, cancelled reservations due to a motel chain’s
housekeeping mismanagement, or to falling sales because of a
fast food product’s poor taste.
What to do About Them
How can any organization prepare itself to prevent and deal
effectively with such key-audience opinion challenges?
Let’s start by walking through a perception challenge facing a
typical organization. Because public relations problems are
usually defined by what people THINK about a set of facts, as
opposed to the actual truth of the matter, one would be
well-advised to focus on three public relations realities:
1. People act on their perception of the facts; 2. Those
perceptions lead to certain behaviors; 3. Something can be done
about those perceptions and behaviors that leads to achieving
the organization’s objectives.
Awareness is Key
Those responsible for public relations in any organization –
let’s say it’s you for purposes of this article -- must be
constantly aware of counterproductive behaviors among the
organization’s key audiences – customers, prospects, community
activists, union leaders, competitors and others.
Remaining alert to these potentially damaging perceptions and
behaviors requires special vigilance. Among intelligence
gathering techniques are regular monitoring of headquarters and
field location media, staff activity reports, employee and
community feedback, regulatory and other local, state and
federal government activities involving your organization and,
especially these days, the Internet with its emails, ezines,
chatrooms and search engines.
What’s the Problem?
First, identify the key operating problem. Is it declining sales
in a specific product line or location? Is it an allegation of
wrongdoing? Is it a quality or performance issue? Has an elected
official spoken negatively about your industry? Have you learned
that a national activist group may target a unit of your
organization? Or, is there clear evidence of negative behaviors
among your key audiences?
Verify, Verify, Verify
Yes, determine through field staff, key customers, media
monitoring and, if resources allow, even opinion sampling, just
how serious the problem is. If an allegation, is it true or
false? If a drop-off in sales, gather and carefully evaluate the
possible causes. If a quality issue, probe deeply for its
probable or likely cause.
How Bad is it? After an exhaustive review of all evidence
surrounding the behavioral problem you have identified,
establish conclusively the size and shape of the problem rating
its damage potential on a scale between an irritation and an
immediate emergency. Does it threaten employee or public safety,
financial stability, reputation, the organization’s mission, or
sales? The answers to such assessments help determine the
resources to be marshalled.
Worst Case?
Let’s assume that probing opinion through personal contact and
informal polling out in the market place, you determine that, in
fact, there IS a negative perception among a key audience that
the company’s largest customer is about to switch suppliers
which would seriously damage your company’s operations. (In a
non-profit, an equivalent perception and behavioral problem
might involve allegations that its
administrative costs far exceed the normally accepted level, or
that executive compensation is excessive).
Is it True?
Management quickly determines that, in fact, there is no truth
whatsoever to the rumor of a loss of the company’s largest
customer.
The Public Relations Goal
Therefore, because the PERCEPTION of a key customer loss is now
causing hiring problems (behavioral) within the company, and,
outside via concerns among suppliers and the greater community
and its leaders, you establish the public relations goal as
follows:
Change negative public perception of the company’s largest
account longevity from negative to positive, thus correcting
hiring and retention problems and calming supplier and community
concerns.
The Public Relations Strategy
Now, you must select one of three choices available to you when
you determine the public relations strategy. In this example,
you chose to CHANGE existing opinion rather than CREATE opinion
where none exists, or REINFORCE an existing opinion, both of
which not applicable to this case.
With your perception and behavior modification goals, and now
the strategy, established, progress will be measured in terms of
altered behaviors – namely, a satisfactory reduction in employee
departures, an equally satisfactory increase in the company’s
overall employee retention rate as well as reassured suppliers
and communities-at-large. Such progress markers can be set down,
and agreed upon, once the negative perceptions are truly
understood, thus establishing the degree of behavioral change
that realistically can be expected.
Who do we Talk to?
Identifying key audiences and prioritizing them – a crucial step
in any public relations action planning – were identified early
on in this example as employees, suppliers and the
community-at-large and its leaders, in that priority order.
What do we Say?
Well, we prepare persuasive messages designed to disarm the
rumor of a ”large customer loss.” Bringing important target
audiences around to one’s way of thinking depends heavily on the
quality of the message prepared for each of them.
The messages must disarm the rumor with clear evidence such as a
forthright pronouncement by the chief executive officer, and
even a town meeting, should the discord reach high levels. It
might be necessary to seek a credible third-party, public
endorsement such as reassurance by the “large customer” himself,
or herself, that “we have no intention of switching suppliers as
long as the company continues to provide the same superior
quality, service and pricing it now does.” Regular assessments
of how opinion is currently running among employees, suppliers
and community leaders should be performed. Finally,
action-producing incentives for individuals to feel reassured
should be identified and built into each message.
Those incentives might include the very strength of the “large
customer’s” forthright position on the issue, possible plans for
expansion that hold the promise of more jobs and taxes, or even
sponsorship of new employee sporting events coverage on local
cable channels.
It’s Tactics Time
Now, you select the most effective communications tactics
available to you, and commence action.
How will your three target audiences – especially in various
locations -- actually be reached? Choices include face-to-face
meetings, email, hand-placed feature articles and broadcast
appearances, special employee, supplier or community briefings,
news releases, announcement luncheons, onsite media interviews,
facility tours, promotional contests, brochures and a host of
other carefully targeted communications tactics.
Special events are especially effective in reaching such
audiences with the message. They are newsworthy by definition
and, if sufficient locations are involved, include activities
such as financial roadshows, awards ceremonies, trade
conventions, celebrity appearances and open houses.
A Communications Bullseye
Your public relations effort effort can be accelerated, even
amplified by carefully selecting the most efficient tactics
among print or broadcast media, key podium presentations,
special events or top-level personal contacts because, when
these tools communicate with each target audience, they must
score direct bullseyes.
Especially important to the success of any action program is the
selection and perceived credibility of the actual spokespeople
who deliver the messages. They must speak with authority and
conviction if they are to be believed, and if meaningful media
coverage is to be achieved.
How are we Doing?
Obviously, you’ll want to monitor progress, seeking signs of
improvement in not only employee hiring and retention levels,
but in overall employee morale levels as well as those of the
company’s suppliers and communities-at-large.
You should speak regularly with members of each target audience,
monitor print and broadcast media for clear evidence of the
company’s messages or viewpoints, and conduct a variety of
ongoing interactions with key customers, prospects and plant
location influentials.
Indicators that the messages are moving employee, supplier and
community opinion in your organization’s direction will start
appearing. Indicators like comments in community meetings, local
newspaper editorials, e-mails from suppliers as well as public
references by political figures and local celebrities. The End
Game
By this time, your action program should begin to gain and hold
the kind of employee, supplier and community understanding that
leads to the desired shifts in behavior – namely, the unsettling
rumor has been disarmed and operations return to a normal pace.
You know you’ve arrived at the public relations end game when
the changes in behaviors become truly apparent through the
increased pace of positive media reports, encouraging supplier
and thought-leader comment, and increasingly upbeat employee and
community chatter.
When you clearly meet the original behavior modification goal
set when it all began, the public relations program can be
deemed a success. Executed correctly – compared to doing little
or nothing about the rumor -- we’re talking about nothing less
than the organization’s ongoing health and, possibly, its
survival.
In the end, a sound strategy combined with effective tactics
leads directly to the bottom line – altered perceptions,
modified behaviors, and a public relations homerun.
end
About the author:
Bob Kelly, public relations consultant, was director of public
relations for Pepsi-Cola Co.; AGM-Public Relations, Texaco Inc.;
VP-Public Relations, Olin Corp.; VP-Public Relations, 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
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