Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Ridiculous PR and objectivity
Wikipedia requires contributors to write from a 'neutral point of view' and its founder Jimmy Wales discourages edits from PR practitioners because their view is deemed, as paid advocates, to be biased. (There's currently a lively debate on this topic on a Facebook group.)
This post is not about Wikipedia, but about the struggle for PR to be practised objectively. For, on the face of it, the paid advocate cannot ever be neutral.
It's because PR seems incapable of neutrality - and will always be vulnerable to charges of 'spin' or even deceit - that we should mind our language.
It is because we act as advocates (and have an intermediary role between the organisations and key groups) that we must be mindful of how the organisation is perceived.
A stream of self-serving, upbeat messages can easily be dismissed as 'just PR'. To be effective, PR must adopt the language and values of news and be written objectively. How does this sound?
- 'Smiley Company are pleased to announce Fun Fridays'
It's wrong in so many ways. It put the organisation at the centre of the story, where it is unlikely to belong. It views the company as plural (we, they) and describes its state of emotion (who cares?). In short, it's not news. It may look like PR (and there's a lot of this about), but it's not ever likely to be effective public relations.
How can ojective public relations improve on this?
- 'Call for Fun Fridays to banish national gloom'
It's still weak, the softest of soft news, but it does raise a topical issue. It's not so smug and doesn't open the organisation to ridicule. At least it's not quite so readily dismissed.
When subjectivity is so inappropriate and so easily-spotted, why is it still so common in public relations statements? The answer has to be group think - the downside of organisational group dynamics - and the desire to please the boss or the client.
But what is more pleasing? Soft words that flatter the boss but fail to deliver any news (and may lead to ridicule); or a more objective approach that removes the self-serving publicity but may deliver greater news impact?
It's the difference between writing with the organisation/client in mind and writing with the reader in mind (the reader, conventionally, being a jaded journalist who has seen it all before).
It's easy to understand, but hard to put into practice. I raise it here because I see so many students and junior practitioners falling into group think and believing that PR means writing in an overly-promotional style.
To respond to Jimmy Wales, we may not be neutral but we can and should be objective.
Posted by Richard Bailey at 07:58 PM in Marketing, Media, Students, Writing | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Why Sundays are still special (in PR)
On the face of it, there's nothing special about a Sunday. It's just another shopping day; just another day of professional sport.
Sunday is a religious holiday for just one of the world's three great monotheistic religions - and in this part of the world only a minority attend church regularly.
Yet a Sunday is still valuable as a punctuation mark in a busy, monotonous week. It's a pause; a semi-colon (like that).
When PR people were primarily media relations advisers, the better practitioners knew the value of announcing news on a Sunday. The 'Sunday-for-Monday' story was well-established practice, since Monday's newspapers are being produced from quiet newsrooms today and there's less competition for space in a Monday paper.
Something similar is going on in the blogosphere. It's a quiet day, so a good time to get noticed (or to get ahead of the pack by preparing for the week ahead).
Here are three blog posts I've noticed today. What's more, they're all reflections on milestones in life from three different ages of man (and woman). Leading with the youngest first:
- Jazz Chappell has life ahead of her, and I hope to help not hinder by highlighting her exceptional early promise.
- Wayne Burdett is in a tougher place having graduated in a recession and during a period of public spending cuts. He's charting his challenges in finding worthwhile work and I hope the process of blogging will help (it should be cathartic, at least).
- Shonali Burke wishes herself a happy birthday and provides a photo gallery of her serene-looking progress through life.
(I've not met any of these three, but feel I'm getting to know them through social media).
Posted by Richard Bailey at 02:40 PM in Careers, Weblogs, Writing | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack
Monday, August 03, 2009
White space
Designers are conscious of the value of white space on a page. It seems to me that white space is a universal concept that goes beyond page layout - it's the concept often described as 'less is more'.
- Novice writers and bloggers often forget to break up long paragraphs. (Look at any newspaper to see how it should be done.) Nothing reveals an amateur more readily than too many words.
- The conventional two week summer vacation provides white space in busy working and domestic lives (so please turn off your phone and try to avoid the newspapers too).
- In a busy, noisy world, silence is sometimes the best way to make a loud statement. (Tip: don't raise your voice to quieten a roomful of schoolchildren or students: give them the silent treatment instead. It works.)
- Don't always assume that exposure is a good thing. Kate Moss doesn't appear in the newspapers any less because she refuses to give interviews. Less is more.
- How to avoid becoming overstretched by spreading yourself too thinly across social media spaces? Jim Horton recommends focusing on the relationships that matter in his latest white paper.
Posted by Richard Bailey at 01:23 PM in Online PR, Writing | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack
Monday, May 18, 2009
The bad-on-paper problem
You know about good-on-paper people? They tick all the boxes - on paper. In person, they can be disappointing to meet: there's just no chemistry.
Posted by Richard Bailey at 08:35 AM in Consultancy, Students, Writing | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Monday, April 28, 2008
The word on storytelling
Children love stories; Jesus taught through parables; journalists call their output 'stories'. But corporate storytelling sounds like a fiction ('one upon a time...'). That's until you remember that there's a limit to facts unappreciated by Thomas Gradgrind in Hard Times:
Now, what I want is, Facts. Teach these boys and girls nothing but Facts. Facts alone are wanted in life. Plant nothing else, and root out everything else. You can only form the minds of reasoning animals upon Facts: nothing else will ever be of any service to them. This is the principle on which I bring up my own children, and this is the principle on which I bring up these children. Stick to Facts, sir!
What value is the fact that WPP was originally Wire and Plastic Products, a manufacturer of shopping baskets? It's now a quoted advertising and marketing services group and the interest is in the narrative (how did they get to here from there?)
So corporate storytelling has an important and respectable role (and a large and growing literature). Steve Rubel predicts a great future for digital storytelling. I filter out ads but stopped to read a persuasive advertisement from Shell in The Economist print edition; its narrative is the greatest story ever told. The story of how a nomadic people became city dwellers but never gave up the restless urge to travel. No greenwashing, but a persuasive case for the need for energy.
But what of those professional storytellers, journalists? Adrian Monck discusses stories, truth and trust in Media Guardian.
Posted by Richard Bailey at 09:46 AM in Writing | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Sunday, December 02, 2007
Copywriting tip
Vince Cable has been a surprising success as temporary leader of the Lib Dems. Following his 'from Stalin to Mr Bean' jibe, here's his advice on using striking, visual language (quoted in The Observer):
I've begun to realise that you can't use academic language; you have to think in images. So when I was trying to describe the crisis of Northern Rock, I felt that the amount of money that had gone into it, £24bn, wouldn't mean a lot to people because it's so vast, so instead I likened it to 30 Millennium Domes.
Posted by Richard Bailey at 11:59 AM in Writing | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Monday, October 22, 2007
Behind the Spin: call for contributions
Issue 18 of the UK's 'public relations magazine for students and young practitioners', to be published in March 2008, will have two main themes:
- Public Affairs (eg lobbying, political PR, issues management)
- PR for transport (bicycles, cars, planes, trains, space rockets etc)
Proposals to write articles on these themes are welcome now. We also welcome articles on perennial themes such as careers in PR and the value of a PR degree. As well as writers, I'm looking for photographers and editorial assistants.
You can contact me (the editor) via the comment box or by email r[dot]s[dot]bailey[at]leedsmet[dot]ac[dot]uk or through the email link on the right.
Posted by Richard Bailey at 03:49 PM in Publishing, Students, Writing | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack
Monday, August 13, 2007
Academic casts a spell
It makes a great news story: the university tutor who has collected and published examples of poor spelling and illiteracy from his students.
The problem is that good spelling is more a sign of experience than of intelligence given the notorious irregularity of written English. While I agree that good written communication skills should be expected of all graduates - and are essential for PR graduates - it helps to admit to our own howlers. Here are some of mine:
- I circulated a questionnaire among staff when at school as research for a magazine article. Many gleefully corrected my use of 'favor' in place of the conventional UK spelling.
- When I worked as a typesetter, I produced a menu for a local pub. They came back months later to ask me to insert a second s in 'lemon mouse'.
- As a PR consultant, I pitched my plans for a product launch to a very large client. Problem was, the slide said it was a 'press lunch'. Hard to justify the expense.
- My wife - who now writes for a living - once completed a graduate job application for the role of a university Accommodation Officer. She spelt accommodation wrong throughout (easily done) - and failed to be shortlisted.
- In recent years, I misnamed a local university in a presentation to colleagues. There's a second s in Teesside. Odd, but true.
Posted by Richard Bailey at 10:52 AM in Writing | Permalink | Comments (5) | TrackBack
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
You say effect and I say affect
This is unfortunate (and it's rather unhelpful of me to point it out), but how about this from a spokesperson for two dyslexia charities responding to an academic's claim that the condition is/are in effect/affect not real? I know, the mistakes are the BBC reporter's and editor's too:
Once again dyslexia seems to be making the headlines for all the wrong reasons. It is frustrating that the focus should be on whether dyslexia exists or not and claims that it does not is very upsetting to the one in 10 people that it effects.
Effect or affect; its or it's; compliment or complement. There are some spelling and grammar problems that are so common that they shouldn't catch anyone out anymore (accommodation anyone?). There are so many harder ones to adjudicate between: adviser or advisor; judgment or judgement, focuses or focusses etc.
Posted by Richard Bailey at 05:20 PM in Writing | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack
Wednesday, May 16, 2007
The food issue
Food is nutritional, fashionable, cultural and political. It's also big business.
Now that issue 16 of Behind the Spin (the environmental issue) has been published, we're looking for ideas for issue 17 of the public relations magazine for students and young practitioners. You could write about:
- Campaigns (eg Jamie Oliver and school dinners)
- Organisations (eg The Soil Association, Fairtrade)
- Issues (eg obesity)
- Small producers or big retailers
- Celebrity chefs
- Restaurant openings
- Polemics (eg Fast Food Nation, Supersize Me)
That's without mentioning drink. But what are your ideas? Brief proposals are welcome now (copy deadline will be in August). Please send your ideas to John Hitchins or to me.
Posted by Richard Bailey at 08:15 AM in Publishing, Students, Writing | Permalink | Comments (6) | TrackBack


