Tips to Succeed: Know your etiquette in

[Tip No. 30 from “The ABCs of Strategic Communication by M. Larry Litwin, APR, Fellow PRSA. To comment: larry@larrylitwin.com]

Dining out with your boss or a client is your chance to make a good impression.

 • Can I drink soda or beer from the bottle?

No. Use a glass.

 • What if I am served something that I don’t know how to eat?

 Watch your host and do what he or she does.You may not be right, but you won’t be wrong. And when you do have a choice of foods, don’t order anything that you don’t know how to eat.

 • Is it OK to kiss colleagues in business social situations?

The handshake is the proper business greeting in most business and business social situations.Yet there can be situations where kissing may be OK, depending upon:

A.Your relationship with the person. If people know each other

well, they may kiss at business social events.

B. The type of company you work for. Large, formal, or conservative companies usually have less kissing than smaller, creative or informal types of companies.

C. The type of business functions you attend. Company picnics may be more relaxed and informal than business dinners at a fancy restaurant.

D. When in doubt, shake hands.

Barbara Pachter – Author -When The Little Things Count . . .And They Always Count

http://www.pachter.com/ [To comment: larry@larrylitwin.com]

Techniques to Succeed: Just what is integrated marketing communication – synergy?

[To comment: larry@larrylitwin.com] This is Tip 125 from “The ABCs of Strategic Communication by M. Larry Litwin, APR, Fellow PRSA. Thanks to former Rowan University colleague Amy LeBow for this and her insight.]

Like many strategic communication practitioners, you may spend much of your life trying to get friends and relatives to understand what you do for a living. Try this example:

• You see a gorgeous girl at a party. You go up to her and say, “I’m fantastic in bed.” That’s Direct Marketing.

• You’re at a party with a bunch of friends and see a gorgeous girl. One of your friends goes up to her and pointing at you says, “He’s fantastic in bed.” That’s Advertising.

• You see a gorgeous girl at a party. You go up to her and get her telephone number. The next day you call and say, “Hi, I’m fantastic in bed.” That’s Telemarketing.

• You’re at a party and see a gorgeous girl. You get up and straighten your tie You walk up to her and pour her a drink. You open the door for her, pick up her bag after she drops it, offer her a ride, and then say, “By the way, I’m fantastic in bed.” That’s Public Relations.

• You’re at a party and see a gorgeous girl. She walks up to you and says, “I hear you’re fantastic in bed.” That’s Brand Recognition.

[To comment: larry@larrylitwin.com]

BIG 12 Etiquette Rules from Elon University PRSSA

Always worth sharing are outstanding suggestions from PRSSA chapters (Public Relations Student Society of America). Also found in Chapter 15 of “The Public Relations Practitioner’s Playbook,” these hints could help recent graduates get jobs and current students get internships.

[To comment: larry@larrylitwin.com]

1. Always wear your nametag on your right.

2. Allow the Host to point out where the guests should sit.

3. Follow the Host’s lead. Once the Host begins to eat-you eat.

4. Once seated, immediately place the napkin in your lap.

5. Utensils: eat from the outside in – NEVER pick up dropped silverware.

6. Your bread is to the right, water is to the left.

7. Elbows should never rest on the table while eating.

8. Use the silverware to signal you’re finished: the 4:00-10:00 position.

9. Take out food the same way it went in.

10. If you have to pick or clean your teeth – excuse yourself from the table.

11. Never order alcohol – even if the Host does.

12. Whoever invited the guest will be paying unless discussed.

Don’t forget, [To comment: larry@larrylitwin.com]

Being Ready For A Crisis

Worth checking out. These are the plays from CHAPTER 14 of “The Public Relations Practitioner’s Playbook.” Check out book availability on www.larrylitwin.com. To comment: larry@larrylitwin.com.

PR Play 14-1
Three Rules of Damage Control
1. Get information out early.
• Respond within 2-4 hours – if only as an acknowledgment
that you are on top of the situation.
2. Get it out yourself.
• The spokesperson should be a high profile representative of
the organization.
3. Get it out on your own terms.
• Control the message.
PR Play 14-2

Phases of an Emergency
• Initial Crisis
• Successive Events
• Follow-up Management
PR Play 14-3

Communicate Early and Often
• Contact the media before they
contact you.
• Communicate internally first, then
externally.
• Put the public first.
• Take responsibility.
• Be honest.
• Never say “No comment.”
• Designate a single spokesperson.
• Set up a central information center
(staging area).
• Provide a constant flow of information.
• Be familiar with media needs and
deadlines.
• Monitor news coverage and telephone
inquiries.
• Communicate with key publics.
• Be accessible.
PR Play 14-4
The Role of Public Relations in the Johnson &
Johnson
® Tylenol® CrisisThe public relations decisions related to the Tylenol crisis and the
product’s strong comeback came in two phases.
Phase one was the crisis phase, which began on the morning of
September 30, 1982, with the grim news of the cyanide poisonings.
Since the extent of the contamination was not immediately known,
there was grave concern for the safety of the estimated 100 million
Americans who were using Tylenol. The first critical public relations
decision, taken immediately and with total support from company
management, was to cooperate fully with the news media. The
press was key to warning the public of the danger.
Later it was realized that no meeting had been called to make that
critical decision. The poisonings called for immediate action to
protect the consumer, and there wasn’t the slightest hesitation about
being completely open with the news media. For the same reasons
the decision was made to recall two batches of the product, and later
to withdraw it nationally. During the crisis phase of the Tylenol
tragedy, virtually every public relations decision was based on
sound, socially responsible business principles, which is when public
relations is most effective.
cont.
PR Play 14-4 continued
Almost immediately, planning began for phase two, the comeback,
and this involved a more detailed and extensive public
relations effort that closely followed important marketing decisions
and reached out to many audiences. The comeback began officially
with a 30-city video press conference via satellite, an innovative
approach suggested by Burson-Marsteller, the public relations
agency responsible for Tylenol product publicity.
The video conference and all other key decisions were discussed
and debated by a seven-member strategy committee formed by
Chairman and CEO James E. Burke to deal with the Tylenol
crisis. The committee included a public relations executive and met
twice daily for six weeks. The decisions it made dealt with every
aspect of the problem – from packaging to advertising to appearances
on network television. Many required follow-up by the public
relations staff at corporate and at McNeil Consumer Products
Company – the subsidiary that manufactures Tylenol.
The Tylenol tragedy proved once again that public relations is a
business of basics, and that the best public relations decisions are
closely linked to sound business practices and a responsible corporate
philosophy.
Lawrence G. Foster
Corporate Vice President-Public Relations
Johnson & Johnson
PR Play 14-5

Lessons Learned
• Don’t duck the issue.
• Take responsibility.
• Offer to make good on broken promises.
• Cover all the bases.
• Measure results.
KDPaine & Partners, LLC • www.measuresofsuccess.com
PR Play 14-6

Get Down to Basics
1. When a crisis breaks, first, before anything else, get the facts –
gather information.
2. Once you have the facts, determine which changes must be
made in the strategic plan to best manage this particular crisis.
3. Communicate your plan, first internally, then externally.
4. Seek feedback.
5. Evaluate your plan.
PR Play 14-7

The 10 D’s of Crisis Communication
•  Direct
• Distance
• Deflect
• Distract
• Divert
• Diffuse
• Defuse
• Dilute
• Dissolve
• Dodge
PR Play 14-8

Crisis Management Tips from Professionals
1. Even the most carefully laid plans must be constantly
re-evaluated and refined.
2. Planning is just the beginning.
3. Every crisis is different and when one occurs, it is a mistake to
assume a plan will handle all the answers.
4. In a crisis, the best defense is staying on your toes.
PR Play 14-9
Considerations Your
Single SpokespersonMust

Keep in Mind (During A Crisis)• Do your homework.

• Be accessible.
• Be prompt and dependable.
• Avoid being pushed into easy solutions.
• Accept responsibility.
• Be responsive and forthright, and show compassion for victims
and their families.
• Bluffing an answer is not acceptable – wait until you have the correct
information.
• Speak and write your information clearly.
• Be prepared to respond to incorrect information.
• Remain calm and confident.
PR Play 14-10

Successful Crisis PR Depends on Planning
and the Practitioner’s Mindset. Needed Are:
• A strategic communication process in place
• Support from senior management
• Communication with the chief PR officer or someone with direct
access to senior management
• Good relations and credibility with the news media
• Effective internal communication
• Strong peer relations, especially with attorneys
• Ability to “fly the plane” so to speak
C. Fernando Vivanco – The Boeing Company – and
Kathleen L. Lewton – Fleishman-Hillard, Inc.
PR Play 14-11

Emergency Management Kits
No matter the industry or profession, when a crisis or emergency
hits, you should be just as ready with your own Emergency
Management Kit (EMK) of communication-type items as you would
be with a first-aid kit containing bandages, antiseptics, alcohol, etc.
Below is one public relations practitioner’s suggestion for an EMK.
Its contents might depend on the type of company or organization
and staff size. You or your staff should customize your own, determine
quantities and keep it current. Emergency Management Kits
and copies of a Crisis Communication Plan should be in several
locations so that if an emergency hits, the plan and kit will not be in
a quarantined area.
At the very minimum, it should contain:
1. Copy of Crisis Communication Plan (keep the plan on a password
protected Web site link, USB “flash” drive, CD and hard
copy.) Be certain it is up to date.
2. Legal pads.
3. Pens (ballpoint, felt tip [Bic
4. Large felt-tip markers.
5. Plain white peel-off stickers (used to identify injured staff at the
emergency site).
6. List of telephone numbers for various offices and satellite company
locations, local law enforcement agencies, emergency
medical services, fire department and other agencies that need
to know of the crisis. Include cell phone numbers and e-mail
addresses on this list. Fax lines and e-mails at major offices
should also be included.
7. List of cell and beeper numbers for staff.
8. Local telephone directory with e-mail addresses.
9. Current staff directory.
10. Floor plans showing locations of all exits, telephones and wall
jacks, computers, and other devices that may be useful in communication
during an emergency.
11. Fully charged battery-operated bullhorn.
12. Local street and zone maps.
13. For all trips from the site, a map showing the most direct and
safest routes to be traveled to and from the destination.
® and Sharpie® brands are dependable])
14. List of assigned roles for personnel.
15. Summary of information that can be made public during an
emergency. Include Freedom of Information Act summary,
company policy and others.
16. List of professional and community contacts for organizing a
crisis care team of counselors, clergy and others.
17. Laptop computer with fresh batteries.
PR Play 14-12
An Award-Winning Crisis Communication Plan
To view the award-winning plan,
“Philadelphia Phillies – A Crisis
Communication Plan Commissioned by
Courier-Post
click on Student Resources, Classroom
Handouts, No. 49. Plans use a decimal system
for easy reference. The plan earned the
2006 Pepperpot Award from the Philadelphia
chapter of the Public Relations Society of
America for Crisis Communication and the
Frank X. Long Achievement Award for
“excellence in writing and creativity.”
” go to www.larrylitwin.com andPR Play 14-13

Bernstein’s 10 Steps of Crisis Communication
“Crisis communication’s function is to preserve the value of the
brand. That’s accomplished by minimizing the impact of the crisis.”
1. Identify your crisis communication team
2. Identify spokesperson
3. Train spokesperson
4. Establish communication protocol (notification systems)
5. Identify and know your stakeholders
6. Anticipate crises
7. Develop holding statements (quick response)
8. Assess the crisis situation
9. Identify key messages
10. Riding out the storm
Jonathan Bernstein – Bernstein Crisis Management LLC –
www.bernsteincrisismanagement.com
PR Play 14-14

Jack Welch’s Five Stages of Crisis Management
1.
and immediate emotion people feel at the receiving end of any
really bad news. That doesn’t excuse any official from not reacting
quickly and staying “in front of the story.” Rather than denial,
the reaction should be forthright, calm, fierce and bold.
2.
usually plays out with leaders trying to keep the “matter”
quiet – a total waste of energy. All problems, and especially
messy ones, eventually get out and explode.
3.
fight to get their side of the story told, with themselves as the
heroes at the center.
4.
someone has to pay for the crisis with his or her head.
5.
best part – is the awareness raised by a crisis.
Denial – Denial in the face of disaster is human. It is the mainContainment – In companies and other organizations, containmentShame-mongering – This is a period in which all stakeholdersBlood on the floor – Too many times, officials believe thatGalvanizing effect – The fifth and final part of the pattern – theJack Welch – Former Chairman and CEO – General Electric

PR Play 14-15
Bill Jones’ 10 Commandments of Crisis Communication
1.
2.
and no crisis is unmanageable if you give clear, cool facts.
3.
Perception is reality. If your audience thinks it is, it is.Response is control. The community wants access to information,Information is power.4.

Credibility is survival.

to hide, people will think that you do.
6.
act knowledgeable and calm.
7.
so don’t be afraid to admit mistakes.
8.
community to keep them informed.
9.
Body language is crucial. If you behave like you have somethingCalmness is essential. Unflappability is your best asset. AlwaysGive a confession. The public and the media want a confession;Tell the franchise what happened. It is in the best interest of thePreparation is 99% of success.10.

Out of every crisis comes the chance to “build a better mousetrap.”From every crisis there are major lessons to be learned.

11.
Pray like hell that you never have to handle numbers 1 through 10!

Critical Thinking — We have to do more of it

To comment: larry@larrylitwin.com

There are various ways to
analyze the quality of a news story. This involves “critical thinking.” Think
of it as the focusing ring on a camera that brings the image into sharp focus.

Critical Thinking

  •  Why does the story matter?
  • What’s the Point?
  • What does it sayabout Life?
  • What does it say about the World?
  • What does it say about the times we live
    in?
  • What does it say about connecting with Readers

What’s the story about? One word –

All About You:

1. What surprised you?

2. What did you learn about yourself?

Just some thoughts as we analyze what we read, hear or view. To comment: larry@larrylitwin.com

 

QR Codes

To comment: larry@larrylitwin.com.

As I have said in class so many times: “The future is now.” create your own QR code…
http://zxing.appspot.com/generator/

Scan this with your iPhone or BlackBerry…

Google QR codes and read up on the Quick Response — its visual and how it works.Try this one. Let me know your thoughts. No ad should be designed without a QR code. 

Remember:      To comment: larry@larrylitwin.com

 

Types of Advertising of “Special Interest” to Public Relations Counselors

With Rowan University’s graduate comprehensive exams coming up this week, here is information vital to pubic relations practitioners when it comes to political and advocacy advertising. [To comment: larry@larrylitwin.com]

IssueAdvocacyAds – These ads try to influence public perceptions of proposals being debated in Congress or state legislatures, often by putting public pressure on lawmakers. Like political ads that aim to defeat or elect a candidate, for the most part, issue ads are not regulated. Sponsors are neither subject to spending limits, nor must they disclose sources of funding.

Political Advertising – The purpose of political ads is to persuade people to vote for a candidate, or in some cases, an issue. While the Federal Trade Commission, Federal Communications Commission and Federal Election Commission view political ads liberally when it comes to “truth in advertising” and “deceptive” practices, there are certain guidelines that must be followed:

•  Political advertising does not have to adhere to truth in advertising as other types of ads do. They may use deception and misleading information (PR Play 11-21) in “The Public Relations Practitioner’s Playbook.”

•  If a printed piece is mailed, the name and address of the candidate or representative must be on the ad.

•  All printed pieces, brochures, fliers, and newspaper and magazine ads must indicate who is paying for them.

•  Radio commercials must contain the candidate’s voice and television commercials must show the candidate’s face (even a still shot). They must also state who is paying for the commercial.

•  Candidates for federal office must disclaim their radio and television ad – either at the beginning or end – stating their name and saying “I approve this message.” On TV, they must be shown saying it.

•  Generally, both print and electronic media charge the lowest rate on a rate card for a section or page in the newspaper or magazine, or “day part” in radio or TV. (Congress is considering legislation related to political pricing charged by TV stations.)

•  As a safety precaution, most media outlets require that payment is made at the time ads are placed.

One word appeared in press releases 776 times—in a 24-hour period

Taken from: Ragan’s “PR Daily” By Michael Sebastian | Posted: March 23, 2011

If you have time…and want the full article — plus comments: http://www.prdaily.com/Main/Articles/7660.aspx

 

To comment: larry@larrylitwin.com

I hope you’re sitting down. 

Last month, PR strategist Adam Sherk took 25 of the most overused buzzwords in marketing and PR—he compiled a list of the top 100 in June—and ran them through PRFilter, a website from RealWire that aggregates press releases.

The results: “Solution” led the pack with 243 appearances.

Shortly after he published the post, PRFilter set the record straight: “Solution” did not appear in press releases 243 times; it appeared 622 times—and it was the second most common buzzword.

The most common word is “leading,” which showed its face 776 times—in one 24-hour stretch.

Here’s the full list—compliments of Adam Sherk and PRFilter:

1. leading (776)
2. solution (622)
3. best (473)
4. innovate / innovative / innovator (452)
5. leader (410)
6. top (370)
7. unique (282)
8. great (245)
9. extensive (215)
10. leading provider (153)
11. exclusive (143)
12. premier (136)
13. flexible (119)
14. award winning / winner (106)
15. dynamic (95)
16. fastest (70)
17. smart (69)
18. state of the art (65)
19. cutting edge (54)
20. biggest (54)
21. easy to use (51)
22. largest (34)
23. real time (8)

UPDATE: As RealWire CEO Adam Parker noted in the comments, there are 23 (instead of 25) buzzwords because PRFilter treats some words (innovate, innovator, innovative) as single words.

A few comments…including one from that Litwin guy:

 

Comments (27)

donmorberg · 2 days ago

Most interesting. Not sure how 25 of 23 words were run through PRFilter, but nonetheless it’s interesting. Where did synergy go?
dm
Hi Don 

The difference in number is because Adam had innovate, innovator and innovation as separate words on his list but in actual fact PRFilter treats them all the same within its relevance processes as it sees them as all relating to innovation – hence why they are grouped together above.

Synergy wasn’t on Adam’s original list but having looked at our data I can confirm it appeared 19 times on the day in question.

Thanks for your interest.
Adam Parker, Chief exec, RealWire

 

Larry Litwin
Don’t kn ock synergy. I’ve been using it effectively in strategic sommunication for 25 years. (Even wrote a book about it.) When your output achieves your planned outcome and you achieve your goal by assuring the whole is greater than the sum of its parts, you have achieved synergy and more. Do not knock synergy. Each of us functions daily thanks to the unique physiological makeup of our bodies.

Robert Cole

Adam,

 

Apologies for the comment being longer than the post – bad habit of mine…

Love the analysis, but I am not really surprised. Fundamentally, what you are seeing is what I have frequently called “Synonym Syndrome” or “Thesaurus Theory” in action.

In essence, in an effort to differentiate their product and break through the clutter, marketers are using seven basic pillars to justify product superiority or noteworthiness:

– Bigger
– Faster
– Simpler
– Smarter
– Different
– Popular

To sum up, they all are actually applying one unifying construct as an umbrella,

– Better

Some concepts, like Bigger, Faster, Simpler, Smarter are product related and traditionally dominated the landscape in an effort to describe HOW a product is better.

The other two, Different & Popular are a bit more socially oriented, referencing aspects that relate to other competitive products or an earlier version. These tend to address the WHY a product deserves attention.

Finally, if the product features/benefits & differentiation present a challenge, one can always fall back on those good ‘ole non-specific superlatives like Better. Does it really matter who gave you that award (thanks Mom) as long as you are now award-winning? Didn’t think so.

What I find most interesting is how these specific terms stack up when aggregated into groupings of similar terms –

Popular:1339
1. leading (776)
5. leader (410)
10. leading provider (153)

Better:1330
3. best (473)
6. top (370)
8. great (245)
12. premier (136)
14. award winning / winner (106)

Simpler:887
2. solution (622)
13. flexible (119)
21. easy to use (51)
15. dynamic (95)

Different:425
7. unique (282)
11. exclusive (143)

Bigger:303
9. extensive (215)
20. biggest (54)
22. largest (34)

Smarter:188
4. innovate / innovative / innovator (452)
17. smart (69)
18. state of the art (65)
19. cutting edge (54)

Faster:78
16. fastest (70)
23. real time (8)

Now that we live in more complex times where branding often trumps product feature sets, popularity and simplicity has apparently become the dominant theme, with the impact of social media perhaps tilting the scales, as you note, from Solution (Simpler) to Leading (Popular) within the last year.

Of course, it could be worse. We can be thankful that we are not suffering the product marketing malaise of the 1960’s & ’70’s when the generic and typically unsubstantiated “New & Improved” were undoubtedly the most popular terms.

Great stuff – would love to see you semantically categorize the concepts as the context is what really makes the usage of these terms most intriguing.

Associated Press Removes Hyphen From ‘Email’ In Style Guide

From “Huffington Post” [huffingtonpost.com] comes the following: [To comment: larry@larrylitwin.com]

The Associated Press decided to remove the hyphen from “e-mail” in its Stylebook–the bible for many media outlets–on Friday.

The AP announced the changes at the annual conference of the American Copy Editors Society in Phoenix. The use of “e-mail” was seen as a relic of an earlier age, when the Internet was new to most people and the idea of “electronic mail” was confusing.

The change mimicked a similar one that the AP put in place in 2010, when it decided that “Web site” could now be called “website.”

The AP also announced that it is changing “cell phone” and “smart phone” to “cellphone” and “smartphone.”

The organization also announced the move on Twitter, writing, “language evolves.”

The changes go into effect on Saturday. Copy editors, take note.

Read More:Ap, AP Stylebook, Associated Press, Associated Press e-Mail, Associated Press Email, Media News

[To comment: larry@larrylitwin.com]