Posts Tagged‘PR strategy’

Staying Ahead of the Game: The Importance of Proactive Communications

Last week, a car crashed into a tree on a road not far from my own. A neighbor, who had just come from the direction of the accident, reported the news.  “What happened?” I asked. “Not sure,” she said. “But the air bag deployed; it looked bad.”

Unintentionally, I was already formulating theories in my head. It was just past noon; surely the driver hadn’t been drinking? Maybe they were texting; it seems everyone is distracted one way or another these days. Was it an adult? A teen?

Days later, the photo of the clearly totaled SUV was in the local paper. Again, not many details on the accident other than the driver’s name, age and town. No cause yet determined. With a shortage of facts, I continued to fill in the blanks on my own. An adult male, middle of the day, tells me speed was a factor. Probably some sort of device causing a distraction as well.

Did I have a right to form these theories? I don’t know this man one bit. He could have swerved to avoid a deer, or been experiencing chest pains. Who am I to sum him up with no solid information?

We’re Only Human

Like it or not, such is human nature. When lacking the immediate information we so crave, we tend to fill in the blanks ourselves, often to negative ends. Without a detailed police report, I’ve proclaimed this driver a distracted speeder – without a shred of evidence to support it.

The same exists in the world of business communications. A public so used to immediately disseminated information – right or wrong – exhibits very little patience when not fed quickly enough. If your company’s first words to them are reactionary and incomplete, you’ve already lost control of the message.

Be Known to Them Before You Need Them

How can your company avoid such a misinformation feeding frenzy? Through proactive communications. By maintaining a steady stream of messaging to your target customers on a regular basis, you become a known quantity. Your public consistently receives information which helps them understand who you are, what you do and how you do it.

This familiarity is invaluable when a sensitive public relations situation arises. The groundwork  you have taken the time to lay means you won’t be forced to start from square one – introduction – when trying to manage potentially damaging information on its way to your public.

Spin Free Zone

It is also key to keep proactive communications positive in an effort to develop trust. If you have paid attention to the concerns and preferences of your target customer, and have developed your messaging strategy appropriately, your public will feel a connection with your company which is regularly reinforced.

Again, when faced with a tricky public relations scenario, this means your customers will pause before they believe whatever information hits them first. The need to “spin” furiously is eliminated, because your public is less apt to jump on a negative message bandwagon if they feel they know enough about you to doubt it first.

A Relationship to Build On

Once familiarity, consistency and trust are in place, you are in a much stronger position to hold on to your customer base through even the stormiest corporate communications storms. In this sense, public relations is very much like interpersonal relations. When you truly feel you know someone, you trust first, weigh information carefully, and doubt almost never. Does that sound like a connection you’d like to forge with your target customers?

If so, we’d love to help. At Kovak-Likly, we make it our job to help you define your audience, refine your message, and formulate a public relations plan which build that level of trust layer by layer. To find out how we can work together, give us a call at 203.762.8833 or visit www.klcpr.com.

– BML

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When the PR Team Has the Ball – When to Shoot, When to Pass

Last week, after the New York Knicks wrapped up a troublesome 37-45 season and landed in the unenviable position of watching the playoffs from the sidelines, the team’s front office wasted no time in cleaning house. Within days, it was announced that Head Coach Mike Woodson had been fired, along with his entire coaching staff.

So, how does the PR team of a major sports organization announce a substantial managerial shake up? When it comes to social media, they start with as few words as possible.  Here’s how it looked on Twitter:

nyknickstweet

NBA New York Knicks Official Twitter Account

April 21-Phil Jackson announced today that the team’s coaching staff have been relieved of their duties, effective immediately.

Keep it simple and stick to the facts. In addition to the straight-forward social media message, a brief press release reiterated the decision to “relieve” the coaching staff of their duties, adding statistics from the three seasons Woodson was with the team.  Finishing with the declaration that the search for a new coaching staff was now underway, the release stayed simple and direct.

Then, it was the sports writers’ turn. Building off of the release, ESPN added quotes from a disappointed shooting guard, CBS2 included information on player injuries which had contributed to the lackluster season, and one New York Times sports writer opined that the Knicks move was just another spin of the ever revolving door at the Madison Square Garden Company.

But what about the fans?

From here, the Knicks PR Team made the smart decision to pass the ball. The focus turned toward feeding and populating the conversation, while letting fans and followers fill in the commentary. Following Monday’s announcement, the topic seemed paused on the team’s Twitter feed until Wednesday’s press conference featuring club owner Phil Jackson. Between Wednesday and Thursday, more than a dozen related tweets were sent out, mostly linking to videos clips from the press conference. By breaking Jackson’s conference into these mini-highlights, there were repeated opportunities to engage followers; almost every tweet elicited comments, as did the videos themselves. With over 900,000 Twitter followers, plus those reached via retweets, this was one widespread conversation. (Interestingly, most fans supported Jackson’s decision, perhaps still smarting from the season’s premature end.)

As PR professionals, it is important we know when to hold the ball and when to pass; when to target and direct a specific message, and when to give a topic a gentle nudge and let it ripple from there as it should. At Kovak-Likly, we work with our clients to find the pulse of their target audience and strategize accordingly. We offer expert guidance surrounding which approach is best for the intended audience, for the product itself, for the timing involved…always utilizing the best moves from our playbook.

If you are working on a PR strategy for your product or business, the good news is that there are plenty of interactive channels through which you can actively engage your current and target customers. The other good news is that we are here to help you choose the path and the vehicle to best maximize them. Give us a call, we’re ready to get the game started.

-BML

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Don’t count on luck when it comes to your PR strategy

If you’re wondering why your coworkers have been pinching you all morning, here’s a hint: It’s St. Patrick’s Day. Did you forget to wear green? Since luck is top-of-mind today, I think it’s the perfect opportunity to talk about the importance of planning. I cannot stress this enough: Do not leave your PR strategy to chance. Rolling the dice and hoping for the best is not a strategy.

Let’s pretend you’re a medical device maker with a new product set to launch next week. You’re planning to issue a press release. However, that press release should be the tip of your planning iceberg. (If you just read that line and thought “uh oh…,” give me a call asap.) Here are some other basic things to consider:

  • Press kit. What will you do if a reporter asks for more details about your new product? You’ll want to be prepared with a press kit you can send. At a minimum, the press kit should contain a product fact sheet, a company fact sheet and a product FAQ, plus high resolution product images and your company’s logo. Based on your unique needs, it might make sense to include other elements, particularly if your technology is complicated.
  • Spokesperson. What will you do if the reporter wants to speak with someone at your company? Before any press release leaves your office, identify who will serve as spokesperson. Sometimes it makes sense to identify a couple of people who can respond to different aspects of the story. It could be a company researcher or clinical trial investigator to handle the science-based questions, and a C-level exec to handle questions about corporate strategy. You’ll want to identify these folks in advance, make sure they’re amenable to the spokesperson role and find out their schedules the week of the announcement. There’s nothing worse than finding out at the last minute that your star spokesperson is incommunicado when you need her.
  • Spokesperson prep. What will it take to ensure your spokesperson is prepared? I recommend using your key messages (you did refine your key messages after reading last week’s blog post, right?) as a starting point for creating talking points for the interview. You might also think about conducting a mock interview. We’ll get into media training in detail in a future post.

That’s my bare-bones, at-a-minimum, the least you can do planning recommendation. I highly recommend doing a comprehensive assessment of your overall PR strategy to uncover potential issues and make a plan. The team at Kovak-Likly can help with that, whether you need a basic strategy or a full, comprehensive marketing communications plan. Oh, and if I still haven’t convinced you of the need to plan to succeed, take a look at Business Insider’s summary of the 15 biggest PR disasters of the decade. Shoot me an email when you figure out what all 15 fails had in common.

– BML

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