Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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The Role of New Public Relations Practitioners as Social Media Experts | Institute for Public Relations

The Role of New Public Relations Practitioners as Social Media Experts | Institute for Public Relations | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Social media has become a prevalent part of public relations practice. Research and observation suggest young public relations practitioners are often the ones to perform social media tasks. Guided by literature on public relations roles, millennials, and pigeon-holing, this qualitative study explored whether new professionals are in fact relegated to being social media practitioners. Analysis revealed several factors, including agency billing rates, mentorship, and personal attributes, which impact the tasks new professionals are assigned....

Key Findings

  • Several participants admitted that they used social media for one-way message dissemination, although they recognized that this might not be the best use of such platforms.
  • Although many participants spent more time on social media than they did on traditional tasks, very few of them did social media exclusively.
  • Many participants attributed their social media use to agency billing rates, rather than specialized expertise. Senior practitioners have higher billing rates that do not fit into the client budgets allocated for social media.
  • Several young practitioners discussed the role of mentorship in their professional development. Those with strong mentors and advocates shared more diverse professional experience.
Jeff Domansky's insight:

Research indicates juniors get social media role because of lower billing rates for social media functions. Iandicates PR agencies aand organizations haven't bought into the value of social media.

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PR Needs to Grapple with the Implications -- and Power -- of Big Data and Images | Institute for Public Relations

PR Needs to Grapple with the Implications -- and Power -- of Big Data and Images | Institute for Public Relations | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

I have a blog post published May 29th at CommPro.BIZ, “Seeing Is Believing — Why PR People Should Take Infographics More Seriously.” I make two related arguments. I contest that PR people generally have fallen behind other marketing and analytical disciplines in their understanding and use of big data, both for understanding challenges and for constructing effective advocacy. At the same time, though in a radically different realm, PR fails to take seriously the use of infographics in responsible, effective, and ethical ways.

On the one hand, the data (numbers) scare us off, and on the other hand we don’t take visualization (pictures) seriously. All this while Microsoft (see Microsoft’s SharePoint Insight), IBM Enterprise Marketing, and Booz Allen are developing products and services based on both big data and visualization....

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University of Alabama News | Study of Trends in PR Reveals Digital, Gender, Generational Shifts, According to UA Plank Center

The largest and most global examination to date into the state of public relations profiles a profession being reshaped by forces as current as digital networks and as timeless as generational divides....

 

Respondents identify the impact of digital networks and massively available real-time information as the fundamental forces transforming the practice of contemporary public relations. The new realities and consequences of the digital revolution underlie the four most important issues identified by nearly two thirds of global respondents to the online survey. In order: managing the volume and velocity of information (23.0 percent); the role of social media (15.3 percent; improving measurement (12.2 percent); and dealing with fast-moving crises (11.9 percent)....

 

The headline here is that current leaders may be reading too many of their own press clips. The most striking divides in the survey are the gaps between older and more experienced professionals and younger practitioners. Practitioners take a dimmer view of leadership performance within the PR function, the type and quality of leadership development, and the relative importance of the top issues facing the profession, and it was common for practitioners to rate the performance of the senior PR leader lower than they rated the CEO’s understanding of the role of communications....

 

[This is a MUST-READ for PR and communication professionals ~ Jeff]

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PR Dummies: Survey Says, 'Nobody Gives a Shit' | Gawker

PR Dummies: Survey Says, 'Nobody Gives a Shit' | Gawker | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
The public relations industry is the birthplace of nutrition-free filler that grows up to become pseudonews. Sometimes, it can be a terrifying thing to behold in its rawest form. This is PR Dummies. The dumbth of PR, every week.

This week: surveys are a classic way to drum up fake news coverage. Surveys can be dumb. But they can't be super, super, super dumb. This one is....

[Classic PR Fail and stupid PR trick - JD]

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