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PR needs to promote its creative side

Advertising agencies are known as the hot houses of big ideas and creativity. What few realise is that the same can be said about public relations firms.

Time and again, public relations agencies don’t promote the creative work they do. In fact, PR firms are often so busy working to raise awareness for clients that they seldom remember to generate the same level of awareness for themselves.

The public relations industry needs to promote itself as a big-picture creative strategist, the engine-room of lateral thinking.

Innovative ideas are at the core of the most successful media campaigns. Creativity in PR may not have the same visibility as Clemenger BBDO’s acclaimed NAB Break-up ad campaign, but nonetheless the impact of a creatively-driven PR campaign has incredible power and reach.

This was demonstrated in The Museum of Australian Democracy (MoAD) campaign that Porter Novelli launched last year. The objective was to attract more visitors to the museum. Based on this broad brief, Porter Novelli put its creative hat on.

The vision was to create an environment where people could come together and share their experiences of democracy. From this, the idea of a series of speaker events – Uncensored Conversations – came to life.

By pushing traditional boundaries with the choice of speakers, Porter Novelli extended the appeal of MoAD and helped more Australians understand what democracy means in today’s society.

The strength of this campaign was in the seamless integration of social media, audio and video multimedia to drive awareness and ultimately traffic to the museum.

We need to get past the generalisation that a great PR person is someone who has such great relationships with journalists that they can position any story.

PR is so much more than this. It’s a perception issue the public relations industry has to address in order to extend its role in the future.

An Open Letter To Bloggers

Mummy bloggers are growing at a rapid rate in Australia.

There are more than 2,000 mummy bloggers nationally, and to provide a one stop shop to help educate Mums how to build their blogs into businesses the Mummy Bloggers Blog was launched 1 March 2011.

I was invited to contribute an Open Letter to Bloggers from a PR perspective to help bloggers understand our place in this sphere.

This was first published here

Porter Novelli

I’ve been working in PR at Porter Novelli Melbourne for three years, on campaigns for Walt Disney Studios, Rubbermaid, Coles Supermarkets, Stahmann Farms and many others.

What I have to say here is about our workplace; I can’t vouch for others in my industry.

Bloggers vs Media

About two years ago we started really reaching out to bloggers, in recognition of the growing value and influence, particularly of Mummy bloggers.

Even a couple of years ago Australian blogging was relatively uncharted, and many PR people made the mistake of approaching bloggers in the same way as print, broadcast or other online media.

The rise of email has made it easy to overlook the art and value of building relationships, personalising contact and doing research to make sure we’re approaching the right people with the right ideas.

Paid vs Earned media

Most brand companies have a number of marketing services suppliers, and that usually includes a media buying agency as well as a PR agency. The media buying agencies plan, negotiate and book ad space. For bloggers, these are the people who work with Nuffnang and pay for sponsored reviews.

In other media, this would be declared as “advertorial” or “sponsored” content.

Much of our PR business is to earn media attention.

In principle, we don’t pay for media space.

We work with journalists and bloggers to identify information that’s worth telling other people about.

It’s not that we don’t believe your work isn’t worth paying for; it’s that content that stands on its own two feet has greater integrity and authenticity than content that is paid for.

More brands understand the influence you wield, but they are still uncomfortable putting their ideas into an uncontrolled environment that where they can’t dictate what’s said or the dialogue that follows.

Paying bloggers to write reviews allows them to feel they have some control, but readers see this for what it is: paid media. Advertising.

PR companies set out to work with you, to earn your interest, unbiased and unhindered by financial reward.

We should never ask you to change something you’ve written, or ask to see reviews before they are published.

We have no right to do that, and you have no compulsion to do what we might ask.

Your supporters value your thoughts and opinions, and that’s why we want to work with you.

But we do believe we should provide something of value for you if you dedicate time to our campaigns.

To date we’ve never asked for sample products to be returned. I understand for some PR people this can be tricky when dealing with very expensive items, but the principle is the same.

For starters, we will recommend our clients buy banner advertising on blogs.

And, should we ask something a lot larger from a blogger, such as acting as an ambassador for a campaign, we will negotiate a fee, just as we do with brand ambassadors – but we will also declare that commercial interest.

Giveaways

We’ll always work to offer a reader giveaway with a review. But if we can offer you a giveaway, it’s because we fought for it; brands aren’t always willing to give away product. We have to argue the case, but we know giveaways are popular and help drive traffic to the post, so everyone wins.

Approach

There are so many “Rules”, “What Not to Do” lists and PR-blogger horror stories.

If we hear somebody here has sent a “Dear blogger” email, it’s not just me who’ll have words with them about it.

This PR/blogger relationship is a new dynamic for us all.

We’re still feeling our way around and working out how to make it work for everybody.

As an example, we’ve had feedback that you don’t want to pay postage for sending out winners’ prizes. So, we’ve taken that back as one of our jobs.

What’s next?

I’ll be at the Aussie Bloggers Conference in Sydney on March 19.

I hope to meet many of you there. Please come and say hi, and I can ask you about life as a blogger, and you can ask me about life in PR. I’m sure we’ll get along fine.

And the #Oscar goes to… Twitter

Twitter has changed the landscape for how news is identified and shared. Nothing new in that statement.

This week’s Oscars provide an obvious case in point.

Co-host James Franco (using #oscarsrealtime) was one of 388,717 tweeters, tweeting as the ceremony unfolded and even posting footage of his first steps onto the stage http://say.ly/BNqa5c

Tweets referencing the Oscars totaled an impressive 1,269,970, generating 1,663,458,778 potential impressions.

Contrast that with Nine’s evening replay of the event: 505 000 Australians tuned in, down nearly 200 000 last year.

To manage this evolution, what do we need to know?

We need to understand and respect – even if we disagree with the accuracy or integrity of content – the power of information shared via social media platforms

Twitter particularly provides quick, inexpensive (read: free) and measurable means to tap a community’s thoughts, gauge and manage response, and operate in real time

The passive consumption model is less valid each day; consumers want and will participate, even if they don’t know what they’re talking about

The daily news beach-head of the mastheads in print and broadcast are now part of the media landscape – not the dominant feature