digital marketing

Public Relations: Your Marketplace Superpower

Public Relations: Your Marketplace Superpower

With apologies to all of the action heroes in the metaverse and the silver screen – there’s a superhero in the world of business and its name is

Public Relations.

While there’s no catchy name (we could call the strategy Super PR Powerhouse or similar but…naw) or stretchy unitard uniform, make no mistake:

there are strategies out there that deliver the same ability to bring trusted, credible and long lasting brand visibility and prospect awareness to an

enterprise.

Keeping It All in the Family: Public Relations and Content Marketing

Keeping It All in the Family: Public Relations and Content Marketing

Content marketing and public relations are “in the family” you might say, each a distinctive marketing tool within the broader strategy of brand communications.

However, like most family members, they have their similarities and their differences: each come to the family marketing reunion with their very distinct benefits and challenges.

Which should you use? Both, really, but the how, when, and why depends on your resources and goals.

Public Relations and the Digital Footprint

Public Relations and the Digital Footprint

There is one extraordinarily effective tool in the marketing strategy kit that is not used as often as paid content: public relations, otherwise known as earned media in recognition of its status as relvant content written and published by independent media without compensation. Educational or news-focused in nature, it delivers crediblity, trust and educational authority to its readers and viewers in the marketplace.

TRUST, PUBLIC RELATIONS IN A SATURATED WORLD

TRUST, PUBLIC RELATIONS IN A SATURATED WORLD

As trust declines and saturation escalates through marketing channels, it's interesting to note the rise of personal trust and relationships. This article addressing key social media trends isn't really addressing "trends." Instead, it's re-emphasizing the importance of your personal authority, integrity and one-to-one communications in your marketing strategy. In a word: trust. As relevant as ever in the world of public relations and marketing.

4 Secrets to a 2.0 PR Strategy

Creating a positive and engaging brand is different than in the old, one-way communications flow of press releases and pitches. The good news is there are more ways to engage, the challenge is you must stay on your toes and on top of the innovations and opportunity to connect in the realm of PR. Think of current PR as the new improved version of communications, the 2.0 version of your public relations strategy!

Show Up and Engage

Two-way engagement is key for today’s PR strategy. Consumers feel more connected to your brand when they know real humans are not only behind it but care about them. They want to be seen as individuals rather than a marketing target. Through empathizing with customers, you show that you care about them, while showing what your brand is all about. An important way to help with humanize your brand is to establish core values for your company and lead based on those core values. Crackerjack Marketing explains, “People respond to people – it’s that simple. Steer away from the robotic marketing tactics and instead focus on being relatable, interesting, and most importantly, relatable. Have you ever visited a blog and noticed that an “admin” created all of their posts? Who is this “admin” you speak of and do they have a name? Appearing mysterious is just not going to work in your favor in this scenario. Your audience not only wants to understand the “why” behind what your brand is doing, but they also want to get to know your brand itself and the people behind it.” Everything done in the company should be in line with those values, including your PR.

Get Feedback

Two-way communications is the heart of strategic PR. One great example of this is reviews. Positive reviews are important for your business; too many bad reviews will turn customers away, as we know. Podium explains, “84% of people trust online reviews as much as recommendations from family and friends as long as they meet certain criteria like authenticity, being in the right industry, and having multiple reviews on the same site.” You should never fabricate reviews or pay people for reviews without proper disclosure. The truth has a way of coming out, and when it does, it can hurt your brand. Remember that customers who receive a sample of your product in exchange for a review also need to disclose this information in their reviews, so that you don't get in trouble.

Collaborate with Influencers

Influencer marketing has become more important in business over the years. Consumers now have more trust in influencers than they do in traditional advertising. Pixlee explains, “you want to connect with influencers, so they will speak about your brand. Ideally, you want them to say positive things about your company, but when you pay an influencer for a review, keep in mind you have limited control over what is said.” Authenticity is important to influencers because it's how they gathered a loyal audience. Make sure to collaborate with influencers who like your product and have similar values as your company. Just as with compensating customers for reviews, disclosure is required when you compensate an influencer.

Use Native Advertising

Although PR is correctly identified as an earned, not paid, communications channel, there is synergy with certain paid promotional communications. Native advertising is non-promotional content that's natural in its environment. Sharethrough explains, “Native advertising is a form of paid media where the ad experience follows the natural form and function of the user experience in which it is placed. Native ads match the visual design of the experience they live within, and look and feel like natural content.” Although it appears to be informative content, there is still a goal of introducing readers to your brand. Traditional advertising isn't as effective on consumers as it used to be because people have come to view it as too pushy. Native advertising tells a story. It doesn't have salesy or promotional content. How do you inform people of your brand this way? Oftentimes, you'll have your brand name somewhere on the page stating the content was sponsored by your company.

To create an effective PR strategy, you need to be authentic with your brand communications, pay attention to feedback, collaborate with influencers and use native advertising. These are some of the most powerful strategies being used today in PR 2.0, the new, expanded approach to collaborative communications.


If you’re looking for managed public relations that digitally connects you with your customers, let PRA Public Relations help!

PASSION & BRAND: DEVELOPMENT, NOT DISCOVERY

PASSION & BRAND:  DEVELOPMENT, NOT DISCOVERY

BAM. Yes. Sitting and waiting for that overwhelming swoon moment to hit you out of nowhere is akin to that greeting card joke showing a women skeleton, all dressed up, sitting at a bus stop, waiting for the perfect man. 

Thought Leadership, Google & the Digital Guardian

 

There's been a lot of change happening in the world of communications, much of it is affecting two issues near and dear to my heart:  

1.  My client's thought leadership

2.  The swiftly-evolving landscape of marketing, and the expansion of paid content.

Last week had some serendipity happening, in that several incidents converged and prodded me to give some thought to our evolving communications marketplace, and the changing roles of Paid, Earned, Shared and Owned Media*.  Here's the outcome:

Three Things Happened

1.  Top Media Access for Almost No Money

Yet again, someone called and wanted to be featured in the New York Times for a grand total investment of $500.  I responded in my usual fashion; thanking them politely for contacting me, sending on some free DIY reading materials, then hanging up and having a small fit.  Again.

2.  Yet, Someone is Doing This

A number of someones, apparently, as a partner of mine mentioned one of several companies that provide "cooked to order" articles in top publications, for the cost of most New York agency's lunch meetings.  While this has been part of the landscape for quite some time, I'm seeing a proliferation tipping point.

3.  I had my Bias Surgically Removed

By this, I meant I stepped back and took a hard look at the industry and its changes.  I need to stop automatically dismissing, and start thinking about this here-to-stay member of the marketing ecosystem.

Here is What I Saw, This is What I Think

Yes, indeed, the change in access to top publications has opened dramatically.  Content networks, and agencies focused on providing client-vetted articles to "top outlets" has proliferated, and this is not anything new.  

Democratic Ecosystem

It is part of the very democratic ecosystem that allows enterprises and thought leaders to get their messages out in the marketplace in a controlled manner.  From dialogue across social platforms, to paid-message positioning and paid amplification, the enterprise is now also the gatekeeper.  This is an excellent thing, as elbow grease and budget can now allow companies and their founders to drive their market dialogue.

The Slippery Slope Downside:  Third Person Credibility

There is a caveat however; institutions, conventions, media and markets are in many ways like a luxury car or fine jewelry:  these things only hold their value if the market consensus agrees there is value; and one of the hallmarks of value is quality and rarity.

To put it bluntly, if anyone with the price of a weekend trip to the beach can be featured in a top business magazine, then what is the value of that coverage in the publication?

Right.  Not much.  So, what protects the asset value of true earned media, the independent coverage of an issue, executive or company, by a credentialed journalist when favorable coverage and low-cost interviews are readily available?

Google:  Thought Leadership's Digital Guardian

While Google means many things in the marketing universe, for the discipline of public relations and its role as conveyor of thought leadership, Google has emerged as ultimate boundary and gate-keeper.  It ranks and reveals quality content, and pushes away the also-rans (which is why some of my client's coverage outranks even their website; a powerful earned media placement carries significant gravitas in the search world).

Why is Google the thought leadership gatekeeper?  Because it needs to retain its role as unbiased source of legitimate search.  Allowing search to be impacted by paid-placement media results ultimately lowers the confidence of the consumer in Google ranking and results.  An earlier post of ours takes a look at the power of Google, SEO and public relations.

This is content which is featured "as seen in" on company websites cannot be found in search.  Google won't index independent content, as it impacts credibility.  And that is an issue as critical for thought leaders and enterprises as it is for the world's foremost search engine.  Which means, in my humble opinion, the need for journalists, and independent news coverage, is here to stay.  But so are the other communication strategies.

What does all of this boil down to?  Here's what I decided

Pam's Three Laws of Thought Leadership Immutability

1. Original, Visionary Thinking Always Needed

Leaders of companies and causes lead precisely because they see pain points, solutions, big pictures, and are often the very first to see things in a fresh new light.  Society needs them; we most especially need to hear what they have to say, and read their words.  The role of the public relations expert is to help them get their words out to a larger world.  This need will never change.

2.  The Market Decides. Always

Marketplaces are peculiar things.  On a collective level, there is a continual surge and recede as solutions, products, trends and thinking are adopted and discarded.  If prestigious publications are flooded with paid content, it is highly likely the market will decide the publication is not as prestigious, or more importantly, credible**. It is no accident that media outlets considered to be "authentic" have seen extraordinary rise in readership and revenues; it is a natural reaction to the rising tide of paid and opinion-driven content being served across all channels.  So, yes, paid content is valuable, and will largely find a receptive audience.  But issues such as credibility and trust will belong to what they perceive as independent media coverage.

3. There is a Time and a Place

The reality is the marketplace - and marketing industry - needs a smart mix of ALL the channels, paid and earned.  While there is tremendous benefit to having an independent journalist cover an executive's forward thinking, or a company's breaking news, the reality is paid marketing content is critical for sustained, managed engagement with the consumer.

My course of action for my clients is to keep these channels separate and distinct.  Do not try and pass off a paid placement, advertorial or other controlled content as the work of an independent, credible journalist.  Both Google and your market community will look askance.  DO, however, use the paid and and PR channel mix to carry a blend of strategic messages and market touch-points across social, digital and media channels, ultimately connecting with your customer in a fluid, seamless and  multi-channel way.

*At the crux of this change is a topic I've written about previously:  PESO - the strategic combination of Paid, Earned, Shared and Owned media channels, and their impact on both the brand and the position of company executive leadership.  

**This research summary provides a valuable look into consumers'relationship with the media.