Communications: PR and Marketing

Public relations (new definition from CPRS) is the strategic management of relationships between an organization and its diverse publics, through the use of communication, to achieve mutual understanding, realize organizational goals, and serve the public interest.

Strategic management allows an organization to integrate its overall purpose and long-term vision with internal capabilities and current and upcoming external environmental pressures, including socioeconomic trends and competitor actions. The strategic plan helps an organization adapt to an ever-changing world and provides a framework to build and maintain mutually beneficial relationships as well as to anticipate and effectively deal with potential problems and opportunities.

Corporate social responsibility (CSR) is a combination of several management roles as it centres around the organization's strategies for being – and being seen as – a good corporate citizen. CSR strategies and tactics can include:

Organizational documents. The creation and maintenance of specific organizational documents designed to keep the organization on track and ensure that all involved are kept in the loop.

Return on investment (ROI) – A measurement of the return an organization receives on its public relations expenditures. The ROI can affect the organization's bottom line through sales. In some cases, those expenditures do not have a direct or immediate effect on that bottom line but they can contribute to fiscal success by creating good will, enhancing the image of the organization, creating interest in the product/service, etc. Some purists believe ROI should not be used in any PR measurement, pointing out that it is an accounting valuation method that means "percent return on a financial investment." For this point of view: http://kdpaine.blogs.com/themeasurementstandard/

Research

Research is a term used to describe the systematic gathering of information and data prior to, during, and after an endeavour. There are three stages of research: formative, intermediate, and summative.

Marketing

Four P's of marketing is a concept used to encompass the four factors to be considered – product, price, place, and promotion (including advertising and public relations). Some marketing experts include two additional factors or P's: people and performance.

Selling propositions are based on the key feature/benefit that relates to the consumer's self-interest. This can relate to consumer needs and wants, values, feelings, or lifestyles.

Brand refers to all the tangible and intangible attributes of a brand (product or organization) that create an image in the public mind.

Brand equity is value attributed to a brand in the marketplace as expressed by the opinions and behavours of customers, other consumers, key influencers, opinion leaders, etc. Brand essence captures the promise of the brand in a couple of words that express its key benefit to consumers. Brand identity involves the physical and visual "look" of the brand, including its name and package design (colour, packaging materials, font, graphics, etc.) Brand positioning is the niche the brand occupies in the minds of a key audience or in the public mind at large. A brand positioning statement is the brief written description of the desired niche or position. Brand tone of voice establishes how the "brand" speaks to consumers, i.e., a little cheeky, serious and authoritative, fun, etc. This tone is used in all communications. Brand management ensures that everything everyone associated with the brand says and does (deliberately and inadvertently) supports all the brand's promises and expectations. This often is called 360-degree branding.

PR and marketing communications

Word of mouth involves the passing on of information in an informal person-to-person manner via such channels as face-to-face communication, social networking, telephone, IM, and email conversations. Most recent studies have found that the most trusted sources of information about products/services are other consumers. On a personal level, the most credible sources of information are friends and family members.

Two-step flow process refers to the process whereby messages get to receivers through a second source, including opinion leaders, key influencers, etc.

Target audience is a term that refers specifically to any groups targeted to be the recipients of a message. Target audiences may comprise entire individual stakeholder groups or publics who belong to several different stakeholder groups.