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Public relations is something that everyone has. Public relations fosters the improvement of public relationships through specific activities and policies. Public relations is the cornerstone of a democratic society.
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Every person and organization has a reputation ◦ Good, bad or neutral ◦ People form opinions without even thinking about how or why
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Public relations techniques can be applied to any social, cultural or political situation. ◦ Publics can be big or small ◦ The principles are the same ◦ The scale changes the appropriate tactics
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The “hacks” Propaganda Truth not essential One-way Sports, theatre, product promotion
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The “pros” Information dissemination Truth is important Reputation Management
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JPG, PUB475, Spring 20086 Public Relations as a profession ◦ Applies generally accepted techniques, strategies, structures and tactics ◦ Similar to “law,” “medicine,” etc. What it yields are desirable public relationships and positive reputations
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Standardized educational preparation ◦ Unique knowledge and skills ◦ Based on a body of theory developed through research Recognition by the community of a unique and essential service Autonomy in practice and acceptance of personal responsibility by practitioners Codes of ethics and standards of performance enforced by a self-governing association of colleagues JPG, PUB475, Spring 20087
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Self-policing protects the profession ◦ Defines PR practitioners as a group ◦ Protects the professional franchise Serves our clients ◦ Maintains public trust ◦ Provides basis and support for professional privilege. JPG, PUB475, Spring 20088
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Professional ethics ◦ Doing the right thing Imperative of trust ◦ Placing your client’s interests above your own Professional privileges ◦ Access to information, strategy, financials, etc. JPG, PUB475, Spring 20089
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Formal codes of ethics and professional conduct. ◦ Guide professional practice ◦ Provide the basis for enforcement and sanctions. Professional conduct ◦ Generally accepted virtuous motives ◦ Monitored and assessed against established codes of conduct ◦ Enforced through concrete interpretation for those who deviate from accepted standards of performance JPG, PUB475, Spring 200810
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Gains advantages for and promotes special interests, sometimes at the cost of the public well- being. Clutters already choked channels of communication with pseudoevents and phony phrases that confuse rather than clarify. Corrodes our channels of communication with cynicism and credibility gaps. JPG, PUB475, Spring 200811
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Adversarial in nature, but… Mutually dependent and mutually beneficial. Reporters and editors play a crucial gatekeeping role in all media. ◦ Practitioners must earn and keep the respect of journalists in the news media. JPG, PUB475, Spring 200812
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Some basic rules: ◦ Shoot squarely -- Honesty is the best policy. ◦ Give service by respecting media deadlines and by being available to the media. ◦ Don’t beg or carp, especially by asking for special treatment. (Hint: You won’t get any.) ◦ Don’t ask media to kill a story. ◦ Don’t flood the media with information with no news value. JPG, PUB475, Spring 200813
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