1 / 13

What is public relations?

What is public relations?. Public relations is something that everyone has. Public relations fosters the improvement of public relationships through specific activities and policies. Public relations is the cornerstone of a democratic society. What is public relations?.

nami
Download Presentation

What is public relations?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What is public relations? • Public relations is something that everyone has. • Public relations fosters the improvement of public relationships through specific activities and policies. • Public relations is the cornerstone of a democratic society.

  2. What is public relations? • Every person and organization has a reputation • Good, bad or neutral • People form opinions without even thinking about how or why

  3. What is public relations? • Public relations techniques can be applied to any social, cultural or political situation. • Publics can be big or small • The principles are the same • The scale changes the appropriate tactics

  4. Press Agentry & Publicity • The “hacks” • Propaganda • Truth not essential • One-way • Sports, theatre, product promotion

  5. Public Information • The “pros” • Information dissemination • Truth is important • Reputation Management

  6. Ethics • Public Relations as a profession • Applies generally accepted techniques, strategies, structures and tactics • Similar to “law,” “medicine,” etc. • What it yields are desirable public relationships and positive reputations JPG, PUB475, Spring 2008

  7. PR as a profession • Standardized educational preparation • Unique knowledge and skills • Based on a body of theory developed through research • Recognition by the community of a unique and essential service • Autonomy in practice and acceptance of personal responsibility by practitioners • Codes of ethics and standards of performance enforced by a self-governing association of colleagues JPG, PUB475, Spring 2008

  8. Why are ethics important? • Self-policing protects the profession • Defines PR practitioners as a group • Protects the professional franchise • Serves our clients • Maintains public trust • Provides basis and support for professional privilege. JPG, PUB475, Spring 2008

  9. Foundations of ethical practice • Professional ethics • Doing the right thing • Imperative of trust • Placing your client’s interests above your own • Professional privileges • Access to information, strategy, financials, etc. JPG, PUB475, Spring 2008

  10. Applied ethics • Formal codes of ethics and professional conduct. • Guide professional practice • Provide the basis for enforcement and sanctions. • Professional conduct • Generally accepted virtuous motives • Monitored and assessed against established codes of conduct • Enforced through concrete interpretation for those who deviate from accepted standards of performance JPG, PUB475, Spring 2008

  11. Negative impact of PR? • Gains advantages for and promotes special interests, sometimes at the cost of the public well-being. • Clutters already choked channels of communication with pseudoevents and phony phrases that confuse rather than clarify. • Corrodes our channels of communication with cynicism and credibility gaps. JPG, PUB475, Spring 2008

  12. The practitioner-journalist relationship • Adversarial in nature, but… • Mutually dependent and mutually beneficial. • Reporters and editors play a crucial gatekeeping role in all media. • Practitioners must earn and keep the respect of journalists in the news media. JPG, PUB475, Spring 2008

  13. Building good media relations • Some basic rules: • Shoot squarely -- Honesty is the best policy. • Give service by respecting media deadlines and by being available to the media. • Don’t beg or carp, especially by asking for special treatment. (Hint: You won’t get any.) • Don’t ask media to kill a story. • Don’t flood the media with information with no news value. JPG, PUB475, Spring 2008

More Related