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Digg it UP - Why PR Packs a Punch
Case Study; Staples VS Office Depot ce. It must layout the truth clearly and creditably, so consider it carefully. The features of a successful corrective message are clarity, believability, persuasiveness and a compelling presentation. Remember, the message aims to alter existing perception.Many people have shown done case studies on the Office Supply Industry and there has been literally an over kill of white papers, research and even books written on the issue. Currently in the market there are several such category killer businesses in that sectors such as Office Max, Office Depot and Staples. Indeed, we should also not forget Corporate Express either.Most people and consumers believe this sector to be a retail endeavor, yet that is not really so. In fact the biggest income generator is the catalog and Internet sales to Corporations and it is know that businesses wh Presumably, you will not follow the lead of the artillery commander who told his men, “Point your cannons in any direction and fire when you feel like it!” Rather your “beasts of burden,” you communications tactics, will carry your message directly to the right eyes and ears among members of your target audience. The list of such tactics is a long one. Everything from speeches, newspaper/radio interviews and press releases to op-eds, brochures, emails and many, many others. It won’t be long before you Investor Awareness Campaigns: A Look at the Other Side Done right, it delivers the key, target audience behaviors you know you must have to achieve your organizational objectives.So you've signed up for a newsletter which promises to give you great stocks picks. Trust their stock picks and you wont miss out on the latest stock market darling. You dont want to miss out on another company who's shares have moved up over 100%. Follow their advice and you will never have to do your own due diligence again!If only it were that simple!Stock promotion has been around for decades and when done for the right reasons, can provide potential investors with an opportunity to get in on the ground floor of an up and coming company. Unfortunately, like all good thing I refer to perceptions of your organization, and resulting behaviors such as:
Yes, public relations indeed packs a punch, but only when it’s based on a solid foundation. Namely, its fundamental premise. People act on their own perception of the facts before them, which leads to predictable behaviors about which something can be done. When we create, change or reinforce that opinion by reaching, persuading and moving-to-desired-action those people whose behaviors affect the organization, the public relations mission is accomplished And, notice, please, the implication is that when managers start looking for a return on their public relations investment these days, many will want to see the kind of key stakeholder behavior change that leads directly to achieving their objectives. Does your public relations program pack such a punch? It can if you commit to action steps like these: The list of key audiences shown above is a good one, but only you can create the ideal list of the most important external “publics” whose behaviors affect your organization the most. Then, prioritize them as to impacts on your enterprise, and let’s work on the target audience at the top of the list. By the way, the test for listing an audience is, does its behaviors affect my operation in any way? If it does, list it. Do you know for a fact how they perceive your organization? Why take chances? Interact with members of that audience and ask many questions. What do they think of your enterprise? Do you notice negativity in their responses? How about rumors, misconceptions, inaccuracies? With responses to such questions in hand, you’re ready to set down your public relations goal. In other words, the specific perception problem and, thus, behavior change you want. For instance, kill that rumor as soon as possible, straighten out that misconception or untruthful belief, or correct that inaccuracy. So, what do you do with that public relations goal? Not much without a strategy. But with the right one, you are quite likely to achieve your goal. Happily, when dealing with opinion and perception challenges, you have just three from which to choose: create perception/opinion where there may be none, change existing perception, or reinforce it. The strategy you choose will compliment your new public relations goal. Now comes the hard work, creating just the right message for transmittal to your target audience. It must layout the truth clearly and creditably, so consider it carefully. The features of a successful corrective message are clarity, believability, persuasiveness and a compelling presentation. Remember, the message aims to alter existing perception. Presumably, you will not follow the lead of the artillery commander who told his men, “Point your cannons in any direction and fire when you feel like it!” Rather your “beasts of burden,” you communications tactics, will carry your message directly to the right eyes and ears among members of your target audience. The list of such tactics is a long one. Everything from speeches, newspaper/radio interviews and press releases to op-eds, brochures, emails and many, many others. It won’t be long before you Communication for Most-Management only when it’s based on a solid foundation. Namely, its fundamental premise. People act on their own perception of the facts before them, which leads to predictable behaviors about which something can be done. When we create, change or reinforce that opinion by reaching, persuading and moving-to-desired-action those people whose behaviors affect the organization, the public relations mission is accomplishedThere is a class of management….equivalent, say, to 2nd and 1st lieutenants. They have no real management authority. They often cannot even recommend. They are almost always promoted from the ranks. If not, that is their genealogy. They receive no management training… Or, if they do, it has little or nothing to do with their jobs. I say this is so for most managers…and so I call this class of management ‘most-management’.Most-management has a distinct requirement to communicate. All management has that requirement (and all workers, too).There are accepted tokens of commu And, notice, please, the implication is that when managers start looking for a return on their public relations investment these days, many will want to see the kind of key stakeholder behavior change that leads directly to achieving their objectives. Does your public relations program pack such a punch? It can if you commit to action steps like these: The list of key audiences shown above is a good one, but only you can create the ideal list of the most important external “publics” whose behaviors affect your organization the most. Then, prioritize them as to impacts on your enterprise, and let’s work on the target audience at the top of the list. By the way, the test for listing an audience is, does its behaviors affect my operation in any way? If it does, list it. Do you know for a fact how they perceive your organization? Why take chances? Interact with members of that audience and ask many questions. What do they think of your enterprise? Do you notice negativity in their responses? How about rumors, misconceptions, inaccuracies? With responses to such questions in hand, you’re ready to set down your public relations goal. In other words, the specific perception problem and, thus, behavior change you want. For instance, kill that rumor as soon as possible, straighten out that misconception or untruthful belief, or correct that inaccuracy. So, what do you do with that public relations goal? Not much without a strategy. But with the right one, you are quite likely to achieve your goal. Happily, when dealing with opinion and perception challenges, you have just three from which to choose: create perception/opinion where there may be none, change existing perception, or reinforce it. The strategy you choose will compliment your new public relations goal. Now comes the hard work, creating just the right message for transmittal to your target audience. It must layout the truth clearly and creditably, so consider it carefully. The features of a successful corrective message are clarity, believability, persuasiveness and a compelling presentation. Remember, the message aims to alter existing perception. Presumably, you will not follow the lead of the artillery commander who told his men, “Point your cannons in any direction and fire when you feel like it!” Rather your “beasts of burden,” you communications tactics, will carry your message directly to the right eyes and ears among members of your target audience. The list of such tactics is a long one. Everything from speeches, newspaper/radio interviews and press releases to op-eds, brochures, emails and many, many others. It won’t be long before you Organizing Time Tracking e:When you work for a small IT company, you will have each tech invoice at the client's site when the job is completed. This may not have worked very well for you. Often jobs span many visits, the tech needs to run out for an emergency, etc., etc. As you may guess, you often run behind in invoicing. I personally believe that we should invoice on-site for small jobs (like one time clients), but invoice on a monthly basis for those clients that do not have a monthly service plan with you, but still require steady IT service throughout the year. Is this how most small IT companies do it, or is The list of key audiences shown above is a good one, but only you can create the ideal list of the most important external “publics” whose behaviors affect your organization the most. Then, prioritize them as to impacts on your enterprise, and let’s work on the target audience at the top of the list. By the way, the test for listing an audience is, does its behaviors affect my operation in any way? If it does, list it. Do you know for a fact how they perceive your organization? Why take chances? Interact with members of that audience and ask many questions. What do they think of your enterprise? Do you notice negativity in their responses? How about rumors, misconceptions, inaccuracies? With responses to such questions in hand, you’re ready to set down your public relations goal. In other words, the specific perception problem and, thus, behavior change you want. For instance, kill that rumor as soon as possible, straighten out that misconception or untruthful belief, or correct that inaccuracy. So, what do you do with that public relations goal? Not much without a strategy. But with the right one, you are quite likely to achieve your goal. Happily, when dealing with opinion and perception challenges, you have just three from which to choose: create perception/opinion where there may be none, change existing perception, or reinforce it. The strategy you choose will compliment your new public relations goal. Now comes the hard work, creating just the right message for transmittal to your target audience. It must layout the truth clearly and creditably, so consider it carefully. The features of a successful corrective message are clarity, believability, persuasiveness and a compelling presentation. Remember, the message aims to alter existing perception. Presumably, you will not follow the lead of the artillery commander who told his men, “Point your cannons in any direction and fire when you feel like it!” Rather your “beasts of burden,” you communications tactics, will carry your message directly to the right eyes and ears among members of your target audience. The list of such tactics is a long one. Everything from speeches, newspaper/radio interviews and press releases to op-eds, brochures, emails and many, many others. It won’t be long before you Why The Google Adsense And Adword Business Model Will Eventually Fail et down your public relations goal. In other words, the specific perception problem and, thus, behavior change you want. For instance, kill that rumor as soon as possible, straighten out that misconception or untruthful belief, or correct that inaccuracy.As Google Adwords and Google Adsense becomes more mainstream, the rate of fraud from self-clicking (commonly called Google-bation), and click-draining (clicking on competitors ads), will increase exponentially.The problem is that the electronic antichrist has an obvious conflict of interest in eliminating fraud. Like most web site owners running Google Adsense, you probably are tempted to just "test" ads to make sure all the html you have embedded on your site is working.In some markets these little "tests" can reward the web site owner over $20 per click. Drugs, bank loans So, what do you do with that public relations goal? Not much without a strategy. But with the right one, you are quite likely to achieve your goal. Happily, when dealing with opinion and perception challenges, you have just three from which to choose: create perception/opinion where there may be none, change existing perception, or reinforce it. The strategy you choose will compliment your new public relations goal. Now comes the hard work, creating just the right message for transmittal to your target audience. It must layout the truth clearly and creditably, so consider it carefully. The features of a successful corrective message are clarity, believability, persuasiveness and a compelling presentation. Remember, the message aims to alter existing perception. Presumably, you will not follow the lead of the artillery commander who told his men, “Point your cannons in any direction and fire when you feel like it!” Rather your “beasts of burden,” you communications tactics, will carry your message directly to the right eyes and ears among members of your target audience. The list of such tactics is a long one. Everything from speeches, newspaper/radio interviews and press releases to op-eds, brochures, emails and many, many others. It won’t be long before you How 'Hiring Now' Is A Hint You Have Problems ce. It must layout the truth clearly and creditably, so consider it carefully. The features of a successful corrective message are clarity, believability, persuasiveness and a compelling presentation. Remember, the message aims to alter existing perception.Advertising to those already sold on the McDonalds ethic is not a bad way to get free publicity for their recruitment needs. Indeed if you ever have the need to recruit, pitching adverts at where your customers can see them is a great way to get employees that fit your values and business niche.Why were they advertising at all? How is it that somewhere needs to ensure that they have a steady flow of employees inbound, with all the cost- penalties that entails, rather than people who stay?In the case of McDonalds, they probably have a higher turnover of employees because of th Presumably, you will not follow the lead of the artillery commander who told his men, “Point your cannons in any direction and fire when you feel like it!” Rather your “beasts of burden,” you communications tactics, will carry your message directly to the right eyes and ears among members of your target audience. The list of such tactics is a long one. Everything from speeches, newspaper/radio interviews and press releases to op-eds, brochures, emails and many, many others. It won’t be long before you are looking for signs that your public relations program is working. And this can best be achieved by a new round of perception monitoring out there among members of your key target audience. Same questions as the first go-around, but now you’re looking for responses indicating that perception has been altered in your direction. Things not moving fast enough? Broaden the variety of communications tactics you use, and their frequencies. And take a hard look at the facts undergirding your message. Together, these steps will create a public relations effort that packs the punch you really want. Please feel free to publish this article and resource box in your ezine, newsletter, offline publication or website. A copy would be appreciated at mailto:bobkelly@TNI.net. Robert A. Kelly © 2003.
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