
New York Times advertising columnist Stuart Elliott may finally have given the public relations industry some needed street cred. His November 20th bylined article, "Redefining Public Relations in the Age of Social Media," discussed why the Public Relations Society of America has embarked on its own campaign to change the definition of "public relations."
This blogger
over the years has had several conversations with Stuart about the importance
of public relations (PR) long before this recent column, prompting the need for
more coverage on the industry since it has become more integral to the marketing efforts of brands and organizations.
The existing
definition, "public relations helps an organization and its publics adapt
mutually to each other," has been around for nearly 30 years. You'd be
surprised at a few of the suggested changes being floated around, some worse
than others.
Quite
frankly, nothing has changed. Public relations still helps organizations
"talk" to their constituencies. The only real change is the way these organizations
communicate with key audiences since the rise of the Internet. Social
media is just a new vehicle or another medium, whether it's a brand interacting
with consumers, a business-to-business organization talking with customers or
even a publicly traded company communicating with investors.
All this
chatter about a definition change ironically is good publicity for public
relations, which has gotten a bad rap now and then. The word "spin" has a
negative connation and often is incorrectly used to help explain PR, which is
only a small component of the broader discipline, although there may be no
denying some truth to the negative sentiment.
Explaining public
relations to those that don't really understand it always has been a challenge,
whether educating a family member or even a new business prospect.
It's very complicated to say the least and probably more art than science, not
to mention nerve-racking. Coincidentally, public relations continually ranks
high in surveys about the most stressful careers.
One crude
yet effective way to explain public relations is to compare it to
advertising. Advertising is an organization talking about itself and
public relations is someone else talking about that organization. A
client once said that people will remember an article in print or online but
very rarely recall the ad next to it.
Selling PR
to prospective clients may be a little easier as more people engage in the
discussion about a definition change. The reality however is that people are
talking about PR and for the public relations industry that's a job well done

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