+ relationship management theory by: tori, sarah & katie

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+ Relationship Management Theory By: Tori, Sarah & Katie

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Page 1: + Relationship Management Theory By: Tori, Sarah & Katie

+

Relationship Management TheoryBy: Tori, Sarah & Katie

Page 2: + Relationship Management Theory By: Tori, Sarah & Katie

+Agenda

Brief explanation of the emergence of this theory

Definition and content involving RMT

How RMT contributes to the practice and management of public relations

A study that exemplifies the theory

Discussion of recent PR campaign

Interactive activity

Page 3: + Relationship Management Theory By: Tori, Sarah & Katie

+Four pivotal developments spurred the emergence of the relational perspective

(1) Recognition of the central role of relationships in the study and practice of public relations

(2) Re-conceptualizing public relations as a management function

Page 4: + Relationship Management Theory By: Tori, Sarah & Katie

+Four pivotal developments spurred the emergence of the relational perspective

(3) Emergence of measurement strategies, relationship components and types of organization- public relationships and linkage of organization-public relationships to public attitudes, perceptions, knowledge and behavior

(4) The construction of models that accommodate relationship antecedents, process, and consequences of organization-public relationships

Page 5: + Relationship Management Theory By: Tori, Sarah & Katie

+Relationship Management

Effectively managing organizational relationships around common interests and shared goals, over time, results in mutual understanding and benefit for interacting organizations and publics

Page 6: + Relationship Management Theory By: Tori, Sarah & Katie

+Important focus on….

Placed the notion that the appropriate domain of PR is relationships

Building mutual benefit

Evaluates PR in terms of outcomes instead of outputs

Creating a framework for scholars and practitioners

Page 7: + Relationship Management Theory By: Tori, Sarah & Katie

+Organizational Relationships:

Are transactional and dynamic: they change over time Goal oriented Have antecedents and consequences Can be analyzed in terms of relationship quality,

maintenance strategies, relationship type and those involved in the relationship

Driven by the perceived needs and wants of interacting organizations and publics

The continuation of an organization-public relation depends on whether those needs and expectations are met

Described as: personal, professional and community

Page 8: + Relationship Management Theory By: Tori, Sarah & Katie

+Evaluative Relationship Indicators

Control mutuality

Trust

Satisfaction

Commitment

Exchange relationship

Communal relationship

Page 9: + Relationship Management Theory By: Tori, Sarah & Katie

+How does this theory relate to PR? Represents a fundamental change in the function and

direction of PR Focus moves from focus of “communication” to

“relationships” Movement away from traditional impact measures and

toward evaluation of PR initiatives Strategic planning = central in decision-making process Bigger picture versus small details when assessing

problems

Empowers the PR function Begins to answer those long-standing questions concerning

the value of public relations to an organization

Page 10: + Relationship Management Theory By: Tori, Sarah & Katie

+What does this theory mean for you?

Proficiency in messaging AND strategic planning & evaluation

Understanding of management principles (for those who aspire to higher-level management positions)

Students must be prepared to develop and manage organization-public relationships in addition to proficiency in traditional communication skills

Page 11: + Relationship Management Theory By: Tori, Sarah & Katie

+Relationship building as a retention strategy (Related Study) Shift of enrollment

Strategies to building mutually beneficial relationships

Results: overall satisfaction was

strongly related and university–student relationship attitudes were substantially related to the criterion

What the results mean for PR

Page 12: + Relationship Management Theory By: Tori, Sarah & Katie

+“Practitioners cannot expect to build lasting relationships by adopting a “one size fits all orientation when communicating with key public members” (Brunig, 2000)

Page 13: + Relationship Management Theory By: Tori, Sarah & Katie

+Aspen Heights = Relationship Management Example

Page 14: + Relationship Management Theory By: Tori, Sarah & Katie

+Activity

“Organizational involvement in and support of the community in which it operates can engender loyalty toward an organization among key publics when that involvement/support is known by key publics [and] what emerges is a process in which organizations must: (1) Focus on the relationships with their key publics (2) Communicate involvement of those activities/programs

that build the relationship to members of their key publics

(Botan, 471-472)

Page 15: + Relationship Management Theory By: Tori, Sarah & Katie

+Conclusion

Using communication as a tool to build mutually beneficial relationships between organization and key publics

The focus of PR should be the management of relationships not individual communication strategies

PR should not involve a one-size-fits-all approach

Evaluation based on relational and behavioral outcomes (bigger picture) vs. communication outputs

Page 16: + Relationship Management Theory By: Tori, Sarah & Katie

+Sources Beckett, K. (2012). Harrisonburg’s first gated community for

students moves in. The Breeze. Retrieved from http://www.breezejmu.org/news/article_31df4ef4-1346-11e2-9fcd-001a4bcf6878.html

Botan, C. H. & Hazleton, V. (2006). Public Relations Theory II. New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

Bruning, S.D. (2000). Examining the role that personal, professional, and community relationships play in respondant relationship recognition and intended behavior. Communication Quarterly, 48(4), 1-12.

Stephen D, B. (n.d). Relationship building as a retention strategy: linking relationship attitudes and satisfaction evaluations to behavioral outcomes. Public Relations Review, 2839-48. doi:10.1016/S0363-8111(02)00109-1