Issue #6
Cover | The Directors | Eastern Awakening | The Survivors | Publisher's Note | Marketing | Social Networking | Basic Instincts | Contest | Fact File | Media | Tough Love | View From the Crow’s Nest | Crisis Sense | EBA News | Fast Forward | People Power | Cartoon | Ukraine Observer
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Selling the story an important part of marketingOften the success of a marketing campaign fails because the public relations support effort is not successful in bringing a corporate change or new product the public attention needed. Sometimes, the difference comes in whether or not company PR people know how to work effectively with the media. We raised the issue of how journalists really feel about PR people with a couple of professional journalists. After a lengthy career as a reporter and editor with first the Miami Herald and later the Washington Post, John Pancake currently lives in Kyiv, where his wife is an official of a well-known international NGO. Pancake still writes occasional pieces for the Post and other publications. Regarding the question of how journalists view PR people, Pancake said, "I think reporters in general have a low opinion of PR people. However, PR people can earn reporters' trust but it takes a long time and must be approached in the right way. "There are a couple of things that reporters consider very important. First, to gain a reporter's trust, a PR person must deal with the reporter without shading the truth and never lying. In addition, one of the most important things a PR person can do is return a reporter's phone call expeditiously. Most reporters work on short deadlines and they appreciate a PR person who understands that and returns calls as quickly a possible.
"A great talent that a PR person should develop is the ability to pitch a story to a reporter quickly and precisely. Being able to get on the phone, tell the reporter what the story is about and do it in a few words is a valuable talent for any PR person. "It will always be tough for a PR person to win reporters' trust, but it is not impossible." John Pancake has to his credit the most coveted American journalistic award, the Pulitzer Prize. Pancake won the award in 1992 as the editor in charge of the Herald's coverage of Hurricane Andrew. Later, when Pancake was arts editor for the Washington Post, three of his writers won Pulitzers. Among the new generation of professional reporters in Ukraine, Olesya Oleshko, is recognized as one of the best. Her background includes graduate journalistic education in the United States and political writing for the Ukrainian Observer and a number of local publications. Her take on the same question was as follows:
PR people working in business, NGO or arts areas are much more helpful. Unlike their political counterparts, the PR people in these areas do not treat media as their personal enemy. On the contrary, they have figured out that media can provide them or their organization with publicity that is vital, so these people usually do their best. The relations between journalists and public relations persons will always require the care of as porcupines mating, but the true professionals will find a way for each to do his or her job without compromise. |
Tough Love with the Omniscient Pablo PistachioWe had a news conference the other day, and though my boss had something important to say, he didn't get quoted as much as the other company on the platform. Selling the story an important part of marketing Often the success of a marketing campaign fails because the public relations support effort is not successful in bringing a corporate change or new product the public attention needed.Skype Gaining Steam in Ukraine After a slow start, Internet telecommunication-the most famous example being Skype-- is catching on with Ukrainian businesses. There are two major and obvious reasons for this: It saves time and moneyThe Accidental PR Specialist Contrary to the belief of some, public relations is a rather complicated profession, though many stumble into it like a drunk can often find his way home by sheer luck.The Fantastic Facebook Challenge This month's contest is simple. We expect tons of entries and have turned over the judging of the contest to our arbiter of good taste and man with a plan, the Sagacious Swami of SpinTraditional vs. new media: Which one wins the loyalty of Ukrainian Internet users? More Ukrainians say they trust so-called "new" media over traditional media but 70 per cent say they would not pay for access to online content.These are just two of the findings in a major study by iVOX* Ukraine on the attitudes of Ukrainian internet users toward traditional and new media.Tough Love with The Sagacious Swami of Spin Back for a sixth issue of Willard Marketing Monthly to answer the toughest of questions on advertising, public relations and life in general is the Sagacious Swami of Spin.The Corpse in Waiting? I think it is time we put the terms public relations and advertising in a time capsule. Fact is, we all went to sleep one day and woke up in a new and different world.Previous issues |
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