1 / 12

Public Relations and Framing the Message

Public Relations and Framing the Message. Chapter 12. “Since its inception, PR has exerted a huge influence on American society and culture.... No matter what issue you care about, there is undoubtedly someone doing PR on its behalf, on all sides.”. Public Relations.

drake
Télécharger la présentation

Public Relations and Framing the Message

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. Public Relations and Framing the Message Chapter 12

  2. “Since its inception, PR has exerted a huge influence on American society and culture.... No matter what issue you care about, there is undoubtedly someone doing PR on its behalf, on all sides.”

  3. Public Relations • Total communication strategy conducted by an individual, government, or organization attempting to persuade its audience to adopt a point of view • Unlike advertising, PR focuses on crafting an image rather than increasing sales • Often reflects larger trends and ideas percolating through society

  4. PR’s Influence on American Society • Drove economic activity after Industrial Revolution, contributing to improvement in living standards • Set tone for corporate image-building that characterized 20th century • Influences political process by shaping images of both politicians and issues

  5. Early History • Age of the Press Agent • Press agents first PR professionals • Advanced clients through hype and stunts • P.T. Barnum • John Burke promoted Buffalo Bill • Business Adopts PR • Press agency tactics generate profits, get government funding • Example: railroad deadheading

  6. Early History (cont.) • Professional PR Emerges • Ivy Lee takes new approach of honesty and directness • Contained damaging publicity fallout for Rockefellers during Ludlow Mine Massacre • Edward Bernays first to apply psychology and sociology to PR • “Public relations counselor” • Helped women enter PR field

  7. Major Types of PR Organizations • PR Agencies • Almost 2,000 U.S. companies • Many owned by conglomerates • In-house PR staffs • Large organizations have PR departments • Write press releases, manage interview requests from journalists, stage events

  8. Public Relations Functions • Develop publicity campaigns and formulating messages about their clients • Conducting research • Surveys, focus groups • Convey the message • Press releases, VNRs, PSAs, Internet • Managing media relations • Securing favorable coverage in news media • Crisis management to handle bad publicity

  9. Public Relations Functions (cont.) • Coordinating special and pseudo events • Visibility raises profile of corporate, organizational, or governmental clients • Sponsorship, press conferences • Fostering positive community and consumer relations • Designed to sustain goodwill between clients and public • Cultivating government relations • Lobbyists, astroturf lobbying

  10. Tensions between PR and Journalism • Interdependence • Journalists rely on PR for information and news • PR raids news media’s workforces for talent • PR practitioners think they make journalists jobs easier; some journalists criticize their own colleagues for being lazy • Skepticism about PR practices • PR accused of undermining facts and blocking reporters’ access to clients • PR accused of presenting publicity as news

  11. PR’s Self-regulation • Formed Public Relations Society of America (PRSA) • PR professional organization with code of ethics, standards • Independent watchdog organizations • PR Week, PR Watch • Changing PR terminology to sound more ethically responsible • “Corporate communications,” “news and information services”

  12. Public Relations in a Democratic Society • PR’s most significant impact may be its involvement in politics • Shaping candidates’ image • “Spins” news • PR limited to the affluent members of society • Journalists need to be skeptical • PR practitioners need to urge clients to be responsible citizens • Media literacy includes knowledge of PR

More Related