Archive for the ‘PR's Top 50 Thought Leaders’ Category

PR Thought Leader Jerry Schwartz

Friday, March 20th, 2009

Top 50 PR Thought Leader Jerry Schwartz, President of G.S. Schwartz & Co., and co-founder of Digital Power and Light discusses how PR professionals can stay on top of the changes and challenges facing the industry.

Some of Jerry’s VlogViews:

“The biggest problem right now is that everybody who walks through the front door says, ‘I want social media.’ Social media means a lot of things. The term itself is the hot new buzzword because a week ago it was social networks, and so this keeps changing fairly rapidly. But they do want something that is social media, that involves something like facebook, something like youtube going on in their programs to reach different target audiences. Even if sometimes unfortunately those target audiences are not relevant to the sale of their product or service”

“We created a term that we trademarked called Technoscape™ and a Technoscape™ is an analysis that we do of a target audience of any client and how they receive information…everyone gets their information differently from a different mix of media, and I think you need to analyze each target audience, and how they get their information.”

“We’re relying very heavily on a concept that we call upward mentoring, where the younger people in the firm are actually teaching the older people in the firm how to use new media. And we’re learning through them. That trend is an interesting trend and will continue for a while because they use it for social purposes. We’re in business. So we’re taking their social uses and putting a business model against them takes some work, so while there is upward mentoring, there is still a need for downward mentoring as well.”

PR Thought Leader Sue Bohle

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

Sue Bohle, PR Industry Top 50 Thought Leader and President and Chief Strategist of The Bohle Company, discusses the changes in what PR agencies will be asked to deliver.

Some of Sue’s VlogViews:

“I have clients now that are saying ‘I don’t care about print, I don’t care about magazines. What I care about is that online buyer, because that’s the power. That’s who is going to buy my products and I want you to get to that person.’ So we’re finding that in our budget and in our planning, we just focus on the internet and sites where they need, and we look at the target audience and really narrow that to people that are going to click through to that site and make that action that the client wants.”

“One good hit on the internet can be much more than all of the dozens of other small sites or print or other kinds of mediums for that client.”

“The most important thing is to look at the whole media span that you can deliver and decide where it’s going to be most effective. And we’re being asked more and more to do things on the internet. And that means we’re having to deliver not only a clip, but we deliver maybe a link from the media that’s writing about it, back to the clients website, or a link that will deliver them traffic.”

PR Thought Leader Ken Makovsky

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

Ken Makovsky, Founder and President of Makovsky and Co., discusses the changing landscape of public relations and how agencies should respond to those changes.

Some of Ken’s VlogViews:

“The word ’spin’ is going to disappear from the vocabulary of Americans in the near future… I have always hated that word because it has an implication of falsehoods, it’s misleading, it’s slick. We’re in an era coming out of this economic crisis where trust needs to be rebuilt with out financial institutions, with our government, with many businesses, with our banks.”

“[After this election] we are going to have [environmental] federal regulations. And I don’t think these companies are going to have a choice; so at a minimum, one thing they could be doing at this time is educating their employees about what is going to come and that doesn’t take a lot of money.”

“Everybody’s going green. I think that all client programs or nearly all client programs in some way are going to need to communicate that.”

Click Here for More Insights From PR Thought Leader Ken Makovsky

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Makovsky and Co

The Growing Role of PR: Stuart Elliott, The New York Times

Friday, October 24th, 2008

Stuart Elliott, Advertising Columnist for The New York Times, discusses the role of PR and advertising in the marketing mix and how to market in a recession.

Some of Stuart’s VlogViews:

“Several times I’ve written about campaigns…and it turns out there’s no advertising agency on record involved. The PR agency is the lead agency; and they’re the ones who are doing the quote-unquote advertising.”

“It’s sort of hard to tell where advertising starts and PR ends, or where the new media come in and where the old media step back. It’s being thought of in a much different way now. A lot of those lines are blurring or being erased completely; and as a result, a lot of agencies, a lot of marketers are scrambling to try to adjust to these realities.”

The shift to an opt-in culture “is a challenge for everybody, because you have people saying, ‘I’m not going to have this commercial wash over me; I’m going to choose when and where I want to be interrupted’…It’s the consumer who decides if he/she wants to engage.”

On the current economic crisis: “The question is whether these particular tough [economic] times are so unique and unusual that some of the traditional rules are not going to be effective in this climate.”

Stuart’s New York Times Page 

Stuart’s Blog
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