1 / 19

PR 3310 Principles of Public Relations

PR 3310 Principles of Public Relations. Tuesday, 6/23/09. Class Objectives. Optional: Hand in re-do of Paper 1 Guest Presenter: Dr. Coy Callison Presentation: S. Baroody and J. Jones Lecture Ch. 17, Corporate PR Homework assignments Presentations on Wednesday: H. Walsh and L. Baroody

Download Presentation

PR 3310 Principles of 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. PR 3310Principles of Public Relations Tuesday, 6/23/09

  2. Class Objectives • Optional: Hand in re-do of Paper 1 • Guest Presenter: Dr. Coy Callison • Presentation: S. Baroody and J. Jones • Lecture • Ch. 17, Corporate PR • Homework assignments • Presentations on Wednesday: H. Walsh and L. Baroody • Read chapter 17 in book • Ex. 5 due Thursday (6/25) at 12:05 pm

  3. 4 things to consider when making a corporate pr decision/csr (corporate social responsibility) • What are the political ramifications? • How do gov’t regulations affect our actions? • Can we avoid the creation of new laws? • What are our social responsibilities to society? • What economic benefits (in terms of profit) will we make? • What do we need to consider regarding our technologies? • Do we have the engineering/technical know how to perform?

  4. Corporate PR Customer Relations Media Relations Future Customers or General Public Corporate Public Relations Employee Relations Investor Relations

  5. Corporate PR and the General Public • Public’s perception is that larger corporations.. • … are less connected to the public and to the local community • … have outrageously high salaried employees • Think about severance packages in the news

  6. Corporate PR and Customer Relations • Customer service is the front line of PR • Is like a barometer of public opinion • Customer satisfaction is most important because of word-of-mouth ability to spread the news • On average, a person shares their bad experience with 17 other people /11 if good • The Internet has increased this considerably! • Consumer boycotts and consumer activism

  7. How to react to activists (e.g. PETA) • Work with the Reasonable Groups as opposed to the extremists • Be Open • Act • Don’t • Get Emotional • Yield to Threats • Expect Immediate Results

  8. Corporate PR and Media Relations • Gatekeepers (editors, producers) can, and will, reject public relations efforts if they are not • Well written • Honest, truthful • and not blatantly selling a product (this is why use of objective terminology is important) • Approachable and open to being interviewed

  9. Switching sides: corporate criticism of media • That they report inaccurate information, that is incomplete, or biased • Sensationalism in some types of reporting (celebrities) • That they provoke actions • (celebrities) • Media Response is slow

  10. Corporate PR and Employee Relations • Concerns of employees related to their work environment • Does it follow the law? • In terms of sexual harassment, physical safety (related to what you do and what others do- e.g. smoking), discrimination

  11. Corporate PR and Employee Relations • Concerns of employees related to their job • Layoffs and outsourcing of jobs • Changing of jobs responsibilities • Industry changes • Related to their benefits • What does my insurance cover? Who does it cover? What are the costs? • Related to the services that the corporation may provide • Childcare • Legal advising

  12. Corporate PR and Employee Relations • What will PR do in this type of job? • Dealing with unions • Spokesperson, organize meetings, etc. • If international, may provide intranet or newsletter services

  13. Corporate PR and Employee Relations • What to do with employees • Treat your as best you can (although this is a moving target) • Turnover is very expensive • Create a safe workplace • If there is a layoff • Inform employees first (don’t let the read about it in a newspaper) • Meet with them one on one • Cushion layoff so that it’s not a dramatic “you’re fired, get your belongings now and we’ll escort you out” • Is there a possibility of severence pay? Can the layoff be stepped down?

  14. Fortune 100’s Best Practices • Flextime • Can a job become a work-at-home? • Especially helpful if your job deals with international customers/employees/etc. • Compressed Work Weeks • 4 days a week with 10 hour days • Actually benefits many companies because they can “turn off” the building for 3 days • Job Sharing • Can 2 part-timers do the job of 1 (save on not paying them benefits)

  15. Fortune 100’s Best Practices • Elder AND Child Care • Sandwich generation has both children that they are taking care of AND their parents • Employee Assistance Programs • Can be both proactive and reactive • To help with substance abuse, emotional distress, health care concerns, issues with aging parents

  16. Corporate PR and Investor Relations • Stakeholders are anyone who has some type of interest in your company • Investors have time or $$ invested in your company • Stockholders • Now, U.S. citizens

  17. Corporate Social Responsibility Adopt Ethical Principles Transparency / Disclosure Trust Ward Off Government Regulation Employee Morale

  18. Corporate PR and Marketing • Product promotion and publicity • Working with marketing communications • Cause-related marketing or collaboration with a Non-Profit • Advance Cause = Increased Sales • Dannon – National Wildlife Federation • American Ex – Statue of Liberty • Bristol-Myers – Cancer Research • Corporate sponsorship of events • Enhanced Image • Give Product Brands High Visibility • Focal Point for Marketing • Media Coverage / Publicity

  19. Corporate Philanthropy • Help People • Not for Publicity • Not always just for good • Huge tax write-offs • 2002 - $12 Billion • Cash – Food – Clothing • Loan of Employees • Matching Funds

More Related