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Public Relations Impact On Today’s Practice of The Law

Public Relations Impact On Today’s Practice of The Law. The End of the “No Comment” Era. We don’t comment on ongoing personnel/litigation matters. Publicity has little to no effect on litigation/verdict.

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Public Relations Impact On Today’s Practice of The Law

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  1. Public Relations Impact On Today’s Practice of The Law

  2. The End of the “No Comment” Era • We don’t comment on ongoing personnel/litigation matters. • Publicity has little to no effect on litigation/verdict. • Limited exposure unless it’s NYT, WSJ or other national publications and/or national interest. • Short news cycle will turn its attention elsewhere.

  3. “Use The Media” Era • Announcement of Something Important- Press Release. • Press Conferences –To Make A Really Big Impression. • Speaking To Reporters You Know To Get Your Story OUT. • Litigation Requires Getting Info Out Quickly - To Widest ible Target Audience.

  4. Evolution of The 24-Hour News Cycle • Web-Blogging of facts, details and messages. • Internet and Repetition of Stories- Whether True or False. • 500-Channel Cable Box. • Online Research And Immediate Access. • Computerized Document Management/Electronic Filing of Public Info.

  5. PR’s Impact On Modern Day Law Practice (Some Examples) • IBM Antitrust Case (1970s)- 15 years, 500 news stories in NYT. • Polaroid v. Kodak Patent Litigation (early 1990s)- 104 NYT stories. • Microsoft Antitrust Case (1998-2001)- 1,000 stories in 3 years. • Top 200 Law Departments- 50% use PR in litigation Strategy; 22.9% use PR “often” or “always” for any public issue.

  6. Planning—Do it Right • I. The Evolving Nature of A Crisis • The Evolution from Concern to Crisis • The Advent of the “all-encompassing” Economic resolution or event • Both real and imagined (or rumored) • Impacts corporate reputation • Undercuts public trust • Occurs in real-time, globally • Requires a culture of preparedness

  7. Planning—Do it Right • II. The Changing Operating Environment • All business is public business • New media channels (cable, digital, social, personal) • New regulations for reporting and disclosure (SOX, SEC, ex parte rules) • Issues move globally in an instant • Media focus/general awareness of corporate crisis • Changing customer expectations • Public trust in business is low • Employee relations are played out on an international platform • Changes in distribution channels, intermediaries • Transparency and the demand for instant responsiveness • Expanded board oversight of risk and compliance • No credit for not knowing • No credit for doing only what is expected/required

  8. Planning—Do it Right • III. Litigation/Crisis Preparedness • Focus on prevention and mitigation • Values- What do you stand for in relation to how you treat others • Strengthen customer/stakeholder trust and commitment • Attract/retain the best employees • Lessen risk, protect legal position, reduce costs • Protect corporate reputation/brand

  9. Planning—Do it Right • IV. Core Litigation Communications Functions • Notification And Staffing of Corporate Communications Team • Insure Corporate Communications staff is alerted and prepared • Manage stakeholder communications, reputation issues, message and rumors • Consumer Communication and Public Information • Reliable, actionable information to consumers/Gov’t and Community officials • Relay information effectively regarding actions being taken by the company • Employee and Executive Communication • Reliable/actionable information to employees, executives • Provide accurate information regarding company actions • Operational Coordination • Maintain coordination between Corporate Communications and the Management to ensure rapid access to facts and approval of messaging • Recovery • Assess reputational impact/damage, take corrective actions • Review all areas of response, adjust planning, training and staffing

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