The Evolution of Public Relations. Chapter 2



Similar documents
How To Understand The History Of Public Relations

Public Relations and Framing the Message. Chapter 12

Early Developments in Public Relations

COMMUNICATION. COMMRC 0005 INTERVIEWING AND INFORMATION GATHERING 3 cr. COMMRC 0310 RHETORICAL PROCESS 3 cr.

Courses in Communication (COMM)

Identity, changes and challenges of the profession in the 21st Century. With the goal of gathering national and international researchers to discuss


COMMUNICATION STUDIES

What is Public Relations?

The Role of Media Influencers is Changing. The Media s Appetite for Digital Content is Strong

Introduction To Public Relations

COMM - Communication (COMM)

Colonial Influences STEP BY STEP. OPTIONAL: A PowerPoint presentation is available to walk students through the activities in this lesson.

Chapter 18. How well did Presidents Roosevelt, Taft, and Wilson promote progressive goals in national policies? Essential Question 18.

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics Edition

Speech to the Bell Telephone Systems General Commercial Conference 1

Communication Classes

A Service of SRI World Group, Inc. 74 Cotton Mill Hill A-255 Brattleboro, VT (802)

PROSPECTING-- Promotional Strategies. By Dr. Tony Alessandra

College of Arts and Sciences Communications Course Descriptions

Professional English. Text adapted from Emilio Robles ipad: Mass communications doesn t have to be massive, just smart

Online Programs. Undergraduate Minors. sojonline.wvu.edu ADVERTISING PUBLIC RELATIONS HEALTH PROMOTION SPORT COMMUNICATION

state of the union bingo

How to Write a Great Press Release: A Sample Press Release Template from PublicityInsider.com

Progressive Presidents: Teddy Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, & Woodrow Wilson

Writing Prompts US History

How to Measure an Effective PR Campaign: The ROI of Public Relations

COURSE TITLE COURSE DESCRIPTION

Comprehensive Community Relations and Communications (CRC) Plan

Chapter 17 Promotional Concepts and Strategies. Section 17.1 Promotion and Promotional Mix Section 17.2 Types of Promotion

INTERNATIONAL COUNCIL OF NURSES

Preparing Material for Mass Media. Chapter 14

Terms of Reference (ToR) To Conduct Media Monitoring during the Parliamentary Elections July 2013

How has Web 2.0 reshaped the presidential campaign in the United States?

Guidelines for Monitoring the Media. The Federal Board of Revenue

Public Relations Specialists

A Primer in Internet Audience Measurement

EUSA UNIVERSITY CENTRE DEGREE IN ADVERTISING AND PUBLIC RELATIONS SUBJECT DESCRIPTIONS

Information for Law Firms On Public Relations

ADVANCED PLACEMENT UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS

News on the Internet: Information and Citizenship in the 21st Century

Public Relations Course Descriptions

The Media Studies Section

How to Measure the Performance of Your Outreach Programs

Stanford University Bulletin. Series 12 No. 1 May 13, Courses and Degrees

Principles of Marketing Lecture 13a: Promotional Mix Decisions: Advertising and Sales Promotion. The Traditional Communication Model. Noise.

WHITE PAPER The Changing Role of the Sales Person.

How to Master Behavioral Interviews. Properly answering these 100 questions will help job seekers make the final candidate list

The History of Public Relations

What is Psychology? A set of questions about mental functioning trace back to philosophy Aristotle asked about memory, personality, emotions, etc.

Progressive Era agrarian urban industrialization Trusts VOCABULARY Progressive Era: Agrarian: Urban: D Industrialization Trust

Analyzing Corporate Brochure Websites

Viral Marketing 100 Success Secrets

Preparing for and coping with a crisis online. White Paper 2 Crisis management in a digital world

Detailed Knowledge, Skills and Abilities Tested on the Computerbased Examination for Accreditation in Public Relations (effective January 2016)

How to Write an Effective News Release. A Guide for Industrial Marketers

COMMUNICATIONS. Lower Division

Policy analysts: Shaping society through research and problem-solving

The Development of Advertising and Marketing Education: The First 75 Years. Edd Applegate. Professor. School of Journalism

Keywords SIOP, industrial, organizational, workplace, employer, employee, business, leadership

In this activity, students try to solve a mystery about the Pledge of Allegiance.

SYLLABUS FOR SCHOOL PUBLIC RELATIONS. A. To create an awareness and eliminate any misunderstanding of what public relations actually is.

Glassdoor Survey: How to Recruit Healthcare Professionals. A Strategic Guide for Talent Acquisition Professionals

Publishing Online Learning Marketing 65 Gadsden Street Charleston, SC t f

The impact of corporate reputation on business performance

The Principles of PR Measurement. Presented by Ketchum Global Research & Analytics

The Principles of PR Measurement. Presented by Ketchum Global Research & Analytics

Public Relations, Publicity, and Corporate Advertising

Public Relations 101: Understanding and Using the Tools

BOARD OF REGENTS EDUCATION AND STUDENT AFFAIRS COMMITTEE 12 STATE OF IOWA AUGUST 7-8, 2013

Setting Measurable Public Relations Objectives for Law Firms

Integrating media relations into your BtoB marketing communications plan

D.C. OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL GOVERNMENT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA POSITION VACANCY ANNOUNCEMENT

The Art of Persuasive Writing

Analysis. From PSP to MSP: A Phased Approach. November Exclusively Prepared for:

UN WOMEN MICRO-GRANT FACILITY PROPOSAL RELATED TO 16 DAYS OF ACTIVISM AGAINST GENDER- BASED VIOLENCE 2012

Public Relations: What is it? How can you get the most from it?

How To Study Political Science At Pcj.Edu

Federal Aviation Administration Communications

MASTER OF ARTS WITH A MAJOR IN COMMUNICATION

Corporate Communications Policy

Metrics and ROI. Tell Your Story. Where Do I Start? Matt Hutchinson

CSCMP Roundtable Marketing Guidebook

A Guide to Promoting your Project

The Press and the Presidency

JOURNALISM AND MASS COMMUNICATION Vol. II - Communication Campaigns Advocating Sustainable Development - Lea J. Parker

How To Learn To Manage A Corporation

Fresh Edge Services CORPORATE IDENTITY

The Truth About Commercials Writing a persuasive advertisement

Designing and Implementing Your Communication s Dashboard: Lessons Learned

ED Mass Communication: Technology Use and Instruction. ERIC Digest.

DIGITAL STRATEGY AND TACTICS FOR BRAND REPUTATION MANAGEMENT

REPUTATION MANAGEMENT

What is PR today? James L. Horton. Official Statement on Public Relations

Before You Begin. Unit 14. Introduction. Learning Objectives. Materials Needed

Cutting Through the Myths, Hype and Confusion Real Answers, Real Facts about SEO

Dr. Wang Dongming National Disaster Reduction Center of China, Ministry of Civil Affairs. Action Plan to Promote BCPs in China

Social Media and the Evolution of Corporate Communications

Proposed Minor in Media Studies. Department of Communication. University of Utah

Transcription:

The Evolution of Public Relations Chapter 2

PR has been around a long time While a 20th century development in terms of a profession, techniques used to persuade people to accept the authority of the government and religion have been used throughout time. Techniques (still in use today) such as: interpersonal communication, speeches, art, literature, staged events, and publicity. Not called public relations at the time but the purpose and effect were the same as today.

Evolution of PR s three principal Press agentry Publicity Counseling functions: hyping: the promotion of movie and television stars, books, magazines, etc. through shrewd use of the media and other devices press agent: is at the center of hyping and is defined as a a person whose work is to get publicity for an individual, organization, etc.

PR s Evolution (cont d) Pseudoevent a a planned happening that occurs primarily for the purpose of being reported. Some of the more flamboyant and fun aspects of PR today trace their roots to the development of press agentry Phineas T. Barnum the great American showman of the 19th century was the master of the pseudoevent.. Best remembered for his Barnum & Bailey three ring circuses. Publicity: consists mainly of the issuing of news releases to the t media about the activities of an organization or an individual, is one of the earliest forms of PR. As far back as the Roman period, Julius Caesar ordered the posting of a news sheet outside the Forum to inform citizens of the actions of Roman legislators

Key 20th century American figures who (indirectly) advanced public relations: Henry Ford recognized recognized as the first major industrialist to utilize two basic PR concepts: positioning the idea that credit and publicity always go to those who do something first-- and ready accessibility to the press Theodore Roosevelt: proved a master in generating publicity. He was the first president to make extensive use of news conferences and interviewing in drumming up support for his projects. And he knew the value of the presidential tour for publicity purposes

20 th Century figures (cont d) o o o o o Ivy Lee: the first public relations counselor Lee was a former business reporter at the New York World. Emergence of modern PR began in 1906 when Lee was hired by the coal c industry, then embroiled in a strike. Miners leaders was talking g to reporters, providing facts and figures, but coal owners leader had h refused to talk to the press. Lee persuaded leaders to change their attitude. Lee issued a Declaration of Principles which signaled the end of the public-be be damned attitude of business and the beginning of the public-be-informed era. Lee in 1914 was hired by industrialist John D. Rockefeller in the e wake of the Ludlow Massacre in Colorado, a strike at Rockefeller s s fuel and iron plant. He got Rockefeller to talk to the press and the striking workers, staged events and portrayed the tycoon as seriously concerned about his workers

20 th Century figures (cont d) o o o George Creel: brought in by President Woodrow Wilson to organize a comprehensive PR effort to advice him and his cabinet, to carry out programs, and to influence U.S. and world opinion. Persuaded newspapers and magazines to provide free space for promotion of war Liberty Bonds. The Creel Committee s s efforts had a profound effect on the development of PR by demonstrating the success of these full-blown techniques. It also awakened an awareness in Americans of the power of mediated information in changing public attitudes and behaviors.

20 th Century figures (cont d) Carl Byoir was on that Creel Committee. Byoir in 1930 founded a company that for more than 50 years was one of the largest PR firms in the U.S. He pioneered use of third- party endorsements to give products or policies credibility, legitimacy and newsworthiness. This involved having experts endorse products or having newspapers endorse candidates, for example. Elmer Davis: hired by FDR to head the Office of War Information during WWII. The former journalist and Rhoads Scholar orchestrated an even larger PR effort during this war. OWI was the forerunner of the U.S. Information Agency established by Eisenhower in 1953 to tell America s story abroad.

Key PR figures (cont d) Edward Bernays and his wife and business partner Doris Fleischman: helped define PR s counseling role as advisers to corporate and institutional managements beginning in the 1920s. Bernays widely acknowledged as the founder of modern public relations- wrote the influential 1923 book, Crystallizing Public Opinion that was the first to set down the broad principles that govern the new profession of public relations counsel. Bernays called PR the engineering of consent.

PR s Evolving Practice and Philosophy 1800s press agentry model best represented by the hype and exaggerations of P.T. Barnum and various land developers Early 20th Century PR began to reinvent itself along journalistic lines, mainly because former newspaper reporters such as Ivy Lee started to do PR work and counseling extension extension of the journalistic function focusing on the dissemination of information or one- way communication models in which the quality of information was important but audience feedback had yet to be fully considered.

PR s Evolving Practice and Philosophy (cont d) 1920s thanks to the breakthroughs in social science research, the focus of PR shifted to the psychological and sociological effects of persuasive communication on target audiences. Rex Harlow, Edward Bernays and others believed any campaign should be based on feedback and an analysis of an audience s s disposition and value system so messages could be structured for maximum effect (i.e. scientific persuasion based on the research of the target audience)

PR s Evolving Practice and Philosophy (cont d) 1960s Issues management was added to the job description of PR managers because of the Vietnam War, Civil Rights, the women s movement, environmental concern growth. The idea that PR should be more than persuading people that corporate policy was correct. The idea emerged that perhaps it would be beneficial to have a dialogue with various publics and adapt corporate policy to their particular concerns.

PR s Evolving Practice and Philosophy (cont d) 1970s era of reform in the stock market and investor relations. Companies must immediately disclose any information that may affect the value of its stock. The field of investor relations boomed. 1980s the concept of PR as a management function is in full bloom. Strategic became a PR buzzword and MBO (management by objective) was heavily endorsed by PR practitioners

PR s Evolving Practice and Philosophy (cont d) 1990s Reputation or perception management were the buzz phrases the idea of PR people working to maintain credibility, to build solid internal and external relationships, and to manage issues 2000 the concept grows of PR as the practice of relationship management. PR people, the idea goes, are in the business of building and fostering relationships with an organization s s various publics.

Trends in PR Feminization of the Field today women constitute 70 percent of PR practitioners. Reasons? (see page 65) But women still earn only about 75 cents for every dollar earned by men (overall, not just in PR)

Trends (cont d) The advent of Transparency companies companies committed to being more open the public is demanding more accountability from all of society s s institutions The Internet/Websites allow companies to share more insider -type information they may not have shared in the past

Trends (cont d) Increased Emphasis on Evaluation PR pros will continue to improve measurement techniques for showing management how their activities actually contribute to the bottom line. Managing the 24/7 News Cycle the need for PR people to constantly update information, answer journalists inquiries at all hours of the days, and be aware that any and all information is readily available to a worldwide audience.

Trends (cont d) New Direction in Mass Media Traditional media aren t t what they used to be. Circulation of U.S. daily newspapers down 11 percent since 1990 and network evening news ratings are down 34 percent since 1993. Local news share is down 16 percent since 1997. Even cable ratings have been flat since 2001. PR is now expanding communication tools to account for the fact that no single mass media, or combination of them, will be a good vehicle for reaching key publics. There is, for example, more electronic preparation of media materials. To many professionals, the printed news release and media kit are becoming artifacts of the past. ###