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Put your marketing budget in PR
Posted on January 6th, 2009 4 commentsMy Irish News article is in today and I have focused on the opportunity PR presents for marketeers in the credit crunch. Its all seems trivial when you consider what is happening to ordinary workers in the Gazza strip this morning but life goes on and the rest of us get on with our jobs.
When the going gets tough, PR gets going.
The credit crunch has focused minds on many things – not least marketing budgets. The debate about which marketing discipline is best placed to surf the digital wave and engage the empowered consumer is raging.
But the online vs offline debate is a red herring. Gone are the days of separate offline and online marketing communications. Today all communications should be – to use The Future Laboratory’s phrase – ‘inline’.
With its heritage in storytelling, creating conversations and managing reputations, PR is at the forefront of the new inline communications.
Why? First, PR is channel- neutral. It isn’t wedded to TV ad production or website building and has always understood the importance of third-party advocacy to a brand or issue. And never have brand advocacy strategies been more important.
Research for Weber Shandwick shows that consumers are turning to independent third-party advice when making purchasing decisions. Almost half of UK and Irish adult consumers surveyed said they were now more likely to seek out the insights of friends or perceived (offline and online) experts when making key purchasing decisions than they were a year ago. Two-thirds said they were more likely to read blogs, online reviews, and offline specialist media, as part of their decision-making than a year ago.
Second, PR as a practice is based on the principle that you need to earn interest and space and share of voice, not just buy it, and never has this been more true than now, given fast-changing media consumption trends. PR has never controlled communications channels, it has influenced them, and its leverage has been interesting, timely and relevant stories rather than big-bucks marketing budgets.
Third, PR has long understood that you can’t keep consumer and corporate communications separate. Consumers, investors and other stakeholders don’t sit in hermetically sealed boxes, and corporate ‘greenwash’ can be splattered by a bad newspaper story about a disgruntled customer or a negative blog.
Often derided as ‘spin’ (and in truth there is bad PR out there, just as there is dull advertising and dodgy accounting), good PR is in fact only too well aware of the dangers of corporate double-speak arousing cynicism and backlash from empowered consumers; the danger of creating ‘badvocates’ rather than advocates.
Fourth, PR moves fast. Today’s media requires brands to move fast in addressing issues, challenges and opportunities. Learning from its political campaign heritage, PR is fleet of foot in a way that neither traditional advertising nor direct mail can be.
Finally, PR can address the increasing complexity of the new marketing environment – it can not only tell compelling stories and create conversations, it can also manage lots of little stories and conversations.
In our increasingly complex world of niche groups of empowered consumers and an ever-growing number of communications channels, the days of the big, overarching brand message are over.
No more mass marketing, no more monolithic messages rammed home repeatedly, but lots of stories and conversations going on to suit the interests of specific and varied micro-audiences, all of which are credible and ‘on message’ with the core strategy.
So, with an ‘inline’ strategy, how do you employ the best PR principles?
• Identify what matters to your consumer – rather than what you think are your brand or product benefits – and champion that. Think about political campaign best practice (politics is a rich source of modern communications thinking – from Blair to Cameron to Obama – and many leading PR figures cut their teeth in political campaigns) and apply it to your brand.
• Don’t push your brand on corporate messages – tell compelling stories that engage and bring them to life.
• Don’t talk at your consumers – invite them to have a conversation with you.The core of any successful online or offline communication is the four ‘Cs’ – creativity, credibility, conversation and compelling storytelling. That isn’t spin, it’s substance with style.
Business, Corporate Communications, Corporate Responsibility, The Media Corporate Communications, marketing budgets, PR in a crisis4 responses to “Put your marketing budget in PR”
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Conall, thanks for this really well considered piece. However, might it not be argued that you, in part at least, defeat your own hypothesis in the second paragraph?
Yes, you’re absolutely right, offline versus online is no longer a debate, but I’d put it to you that we need to be not just channel-neutral, but truly media neutral.
As an old sales manager of mine used to say, you need to be singing whilst you’re dancing whilst you’re playing the mandolin.
That means that, yes, just like you indicate, good, effective PR is vitally important. I wish I had a pound for every charity I came across who are slogging away with minimal marketing budgets, but making minimal impact because they don’t have an effective PR strategy (should we be talking?).
However, I’d argue that PR alone won’t do it. Direct response is more important than ever, because when the pennies are tight, you need measurable results and testable campaigns, and nothing better fits that bill than direct response.
Yet, for all that, I find myself, a dyed in the wool direct marketer, advising some clients to embark on campaigns that we know will be loss-making, because they need to brand their ask with a core audience.
Which takes us back to good PR.
Like you say, it’s inline communications we need, and so far as I’m in concerned that means you need every duck in-a-line.
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mmm, now i’m really confused!!
So how can you create PR (positve) about something that is online and not inline?
I am involved in online selling of websites and software – a very difficult market at the moment as we dont really do much customer facing . Now if what conall is saying is true and taking into account what Brian was saying about tightening purse strings of marketing budgets never mind PR then am i in trouble??
much appreciated in advance lads.
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Debbie McGrory January 7th, 2009 at 14:34
Hi Conal,
Enjoyed reading your article. Definitely worth a longer debate.
Best,
Debbie -
One way floral shops could increase their branding without spending a lot of money is to donate flower arrangements at large, public events, so lots of people will see their works. Of course, they would display their store name alongside the flowers, and in program flyers.
Autoseller Network
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