Creating a Killer PR Strategy for Any Business
Even though I am no Ashley Zandey (just so you know she’s
leading PR for Facebook) but I do try to keep up with whatever is happening in
the digital marketing world and so just thought let’s talk some PR – accronym
for ‘Public Relations’.
What is PR?
Public Relations (PR) is the process most known for
relationship building and third party credible endorsement.
The definition is quite simple i.e Relationship Building and
Third Party Credible Endorsement. But there’s a whole new world around it.
Every PR strategy involves a program and scheme of things.
It all starts with a plan and here’s how you can skyrocket
your PR campaign.
PR is not just traditional media
It’s really important to choose and target the right
audience you share your news with. This will include the journalists, of
course, but also the news media influencers and bloggers who have huge online
networks and you are certain they will share it with their friends. Not only
this but you can also share your story directly to customers who are you
advocates and will share on your behalf.
Understand your existing audience
Searching through social media communities or tracking
keywords can let you tune in to conversations about you which your customers are
already taking part in. In today’s world chances are they can be found on top
social media networks like Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin etc, just to name a few.
Once you’ve gathered insights you can share much more meaningful and valuable
information with them.
There’s more to PR than mere News Release
Depending on your industry there will be number of
journalists with various publications who will be interested in your news
announcements. Companies normally use blog posts, multimedia content types like
videos, infographics with social media sharing capabilities. All this news is
shared to social media sites like Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Pinterest,
Instagram and others. It’s also important to judge and understand the audience
for each platform you’re posting news on separately. The culture in these
different networks and communities might differ from each other. You might
observe on some platforms people are more passionate about sharing your
announcement with their friends as compared to others.
PR is about being Data Educated
With an abundance of data at your fingertips, it’s up to
your shoulders to make sense and create insights based on it. This is
inevitable for your program’s success and progress. If you are in PR, being
data educated is an essential skill to have. This means being able to
understand the market and your audience by keeping  track of the efforts made during the PR
program.
 How to do PR
Research?
PR Research is essential. Research is simply defined as the
systematic collection and interpretation of information. You can use the
information to increase your understanding and knowledge about the target
public you want to reach. Here are five ways that you can take advantage of
information that’s at your fingertips because of the internet and social media.
Surveys and questionnaires
Focus groups
Website analytics
Research reports and studies
Social media intelligence
Formulating a Killer PR Strategy
Never jump in with your both feet. The basic principle
applies here too. For a successful PR strategy and implementation you need to
put everything in writing. Here are the essentials of a fool proof PR strategy.
Overview for the Bosses
Even though you can’t have a summary or overview unless
you’ve figured out the whole plan but still this needs to the first piece of
the plan. This summary is for the busy bosses and executives who are happy to
read through the highlights of the overall plan rather than reading the whole
thing. Make sure you have everything prioritized in it.
Why the PR Strategy?
You really have to understand the background of the
situation and lay the groundwork for why you’re developing a plan to begin
with. Your Background and Situation Analysis will uncover major issues or
challenges that you’ve faced with your communication program. You’ll also
identify and share the mission statement, vision and values in this section.
Message Statement
The plan has a message statement that captures the overall
idea of your plan. It’s your major ideas or overall theme. This piece of the
plan outlines what you’re trying to convey in the form of important messages
that will help to create the outcomes that you’re looking to achieve.
Audiences
Your plan will break down audiences into segments. Then,
you’ll need to prioritize how important it is to build a relationship with
these groups of stakeholders. You’ll be thinking about how these constituencies
are tied to the issues represented and understanding their interests and what
would move them into action.
Message for the Key Audience
Here’s where you take your overall messaging and really
break them down to meet the specific needs of a particular target public.
You’re also prioritizing these groups and what they need to hear from you.
Often tweaking the messages to make the communication much more relevant to
their personal or professional interest or cause.
Implementing your PR Plan
Implementation covers what happens when you roll out your
program and how you’re going to achieve all of the expected outcomes. You have
to outline the details of the launch from what messaging you’re using and the
media vehicles to the communication tactics and what monitoring services need
to be put in place to evaluate program success.
What’s your Budget?
Make sure your budget is well planned out and those hidden
costs don’t creep up on you later. Outlining carefully every item in your plan
and marking each with a price tag is one way of planning your budget. Your
budget might include video production costs, designer fees, media services and
event logistics.
Monitoring and Measurement
This is the final piece of your plan, but probably the most
important. If you’re not measuring, then why bother implementing your program?
Monitoring must be set in advance, and you have to know how you’re measuring
and what you’re benchmarking against to illustrate true success. And, do you
know what metrics you’ll capture? You have to identify if you’re evaluating
your own peer outputs and the communications outcomes with respect to the
relationships you build that add real impact or value.

 
 
 
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