Like it or not, no matter what your business, you have an image. And you're selling that image of yourself, your products and your services. PR, in all its forms, takes control of your image and boosts your firm’s reputation by getting you good media coverage and publicity.
Good media coverage for a firm is worth its weight in gold - and only a Public Relations campaign can create that. Done well, good PR develops and creates the fine reputation your business and products deserve with your public and customers, and at its best, drives your sales.
PR works because the public give it more credibility than advertising. Getting the media to say a good thing about your product or service is smart marketing.
Naturally, getting good PR is notoriously difficult - but our Donut experts, including PR Agency owner Edwina Hughes, SME adviser Debbie Leven and PR supremo Sarah Walker, exclusively share their insider secrets in a range of articles, checklists and toolkits created for the site.
Packed with professional’s tips and tricks of the trade, our PR Section shows you how to write great press releases and create good media relations as well as, crucially, how to get good, free publicity for your business. Access it on April 20 to create a comprehensive PR pack for your business.
This is my first time writing for the Marketing Donut, and truth be told, I was more than a little anxious as I approached this task. It’s not that I’m a stranger to writing, after all I was a journalist for something like 10 years before PR got its hooks into me in 2001. No, it wasn’t that.
The thing that weighed on my mind was the suggestion that I should write about the new rules of engagement for PR in this brave new 2.0 world. That’s a bigger topic than it might at first seem and many people have expounded opinions on it.
This isn’t the time or place to go into an exploration of how PR works – or has worked traditionally – nor am I entirely comfortable with dividing PR into old and new, using Twitter, blogging and Facebook as the yardstick for such distinctions. But it serves a purpose as far as this exercise is concerned.
Perhaps the greatest point of difference between the old and the new in PR terms is the way in which you communicate your message. It is still the case that media relations forms a hugely important part of PR – identify the journalists you need to win over and then work on giving them the materials they need to produce stories that present you in a favourable light.
While this is still important there’s now a lot more to it all. Blogs and forums in particular have become avenues for dialogue with audiences, as well as platforms from which your critics can berate you in public. Your customers, partners, and competitors will talk to you and about you online and will swap ideas and anecdotes about you. If you’re savvy you’ll join in.
To the novice, this is daunting stuff. And I have it on good authority that it causes sleepless nights to the heads of marketing at some of the world’s biggest brands.
Turning all of this to your advantage is not as hard as it might seem. Use your own blog to interact with others, set up an online forum, use Twitter to see what topics are of interest to the people you want to influence, track your competitors’ social media presence and see what you can learn from it.
In fact, learning from others’ experiences is one of the greatest and most immediate benefits of getting on the social media train – after all there are so many people out there willing (nay, desperate) to share their opinions with you.