18 Feb 2008 04:53:16 | Robert A. Kelly
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including guidelines and resource box. Robert A. Kelly © 2004.
Do You Have an Exclusive Market Segment?
You do if you’re a business, non-profit or association manager
with important external stakeholders whose behaviors affect your
department, division or subsidiary the most.
In your own best interests, here’s what you’d better be doing
about them.
Accept the fact that the right PR actually CAN alter individual
perception that leads to the kinds of changed behaviors that can
help you succeed.
That confidence will position you to do something positive about
those behaviors. Specifically, to create actual behavior change
among your key outside audiences which leads directly to
achieving your managerial objectives.
But is there a roadmap available that will get everyone working
towards the same external audience behaviors, and that insures
that your organization’s public relations effort stays sharply
focused?
There sure is, and the blueprint goes like this: 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 the very people whose behaviors
affect the organization the most, the public relations mission
is accomplished.
What sort of results would you expect from such an approach? You
could see membership applications on the rise; new proposals for
strategic alliances and joint ventures; rebounds in showroom
visits; enhanced activist group relations, and expanded feedback
channels; as well as community service and sponsorship
opportunities; not to mention new thoughtleader and special
event contacts.
As the effort takes hold, you might see improved relations with
government agencies and legislative bodies, stronger
relationships with the educational, labor, financial and
healthcare communities; prospects starting to work with you;
customers making repeat purchases; and even capital givers or
specifying sources looking your way.
The people running PR for you – agency, staff or freelance --
really have to be dedicated team members and committed to you,
as the senior project manager, to the PR blueprint and its
implementation, starting with target audience perception
monitoring itself.
Think for a moment just how crucial it is that your most
important outside audiences really perceive your operations,
products or services in a positive light? Then question your PR
people to assure yourself that they buy into that notion
wholeheartedly. Be especially careful that they accept the
reality that perceptions almost always lead to behaviors that
can help or hurt your unit.
Take the time to go over the PR blueprint in detail with your
team. Discuss your plan for monitoring and gathering perceptions
by questioning members of your most important outside audiences.
Review questions like these: how much do you know about our
organization? How much do you know about our services or
products and employees? Have you had prior contact with us and
were you pleased with the interchange? Have you experienced
problems with our people or procedures?
It’s obvious that professional survey people can handle the
perception monitoring phases of your program, IF the budget is
available. However, remember that your PR people are also in the
perception and behavior business and can pursue the same
objective: identify untruths, false assumptions, unfounded
rumors, inaccuracies, misconceptions and any other negative
perception that might translate into hurtful behaviors.
Be careful as you set your public relations goal. You will need
one that is well-defined, and one that responds to the
aberrations that appeared during your key audience perception
monitoring. The new goal could call for straightening out that
dangerous misconception, or correcting that gross inaccuracy, or
doing something about that damaging rumor.
As night follows day, your new goal will need a strategy to show
you how to get there. Fortunately, you will have just three
strategic choices for handling a perception or opinion
challenge: create perception where there may be none, change the
perception, or reinforce it. Unfortunately, a bad strategy pick
will taste like sauteed onions on your pecan pie. So be sure the
new strategy fits well with your new public relations goal. For
instance, you don’t want to select “change” when the facts
dictate a “reinforce” strategy.
Because bringing people’s minds around to your way of thinking
is a tough assignment, your PR team must get busy immediately
crafting the needed corrective language. Words that are
compelling, persuasive and believable AND clear and factual. You
must do this if you are to correct a perception by shifting
opinion towards your point of view, leading to the desired
behaviors.
Review your message for impact and persuasiveness with your
communications specialists. Then, carefully select the
communications tactics most likely to carry your words to the
attention of your target audience. You can pick from dozens that
are available. From speeches, facility tours, emails and
brochures to consumer briefings, media interviews, newsletters,
personal meetings and many others. But be sure that the tactics
you pick are known to reach folks just like your audience
members.
You might introduce your message to smaller gatherings rather
than using higher-profile tactics such as news releases or talk
show appearances. Reason being that the credibility of a message
can occasionally depend on its delivery method being acceptable
to each audience. Everyone will want to see progress reports.
For you and your PR colleagues, they sound the signal for you
and your PR folks to return to the field for a second perception
monitoring session with members of your external audience. Using
many of the same questions used in the first benchmark session,
you must now stay alert for signs that the bad news perception
is being altered in your direction.
Things not moving fast enough? You can always accelerate matters
with more communications tactics and increased frequencies.
Clearly, those important outside audiences constitute market
segments that are exclusively yours, and you must do something
positive about the behaviors of those outside audiences that
MOST affect your organization. Thus, they are segments you will
need to persuade to your way of thinking, then move to take
actions that help your department, division or subsidiary
succeed.
end
About Author :
Bob Kelly counsels managers about using the fundamental premise
of public relations to achieve their operating objectives. He
has been DPR, Pepsi-Cola Co.; AGM-PR, Texaco Inc.; VP-PR, Olin
Corp.; VP-PR, Newport News Shipbuilding & Drydock Co.; director
of communi- cations, U.S. Department of the Interior, and deputy
assistant press secretary, The White House.
mailto:bobkelly@TNI.net Visit:http://www.prcommentary.com