pr101 - media relations, social media, crisis management - precious communications (nov2014)

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Lars Voedisch Principal Consultant [email protected] @larsv

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Getting started and mastering PR, social media and crisis management

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Page 1: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Lars Voedisch Principal Consultant

[email protected] @larsv

Page 2: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Or: The not so glorious life of a PR practicioner

Page 3: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

About Us

We are a boutique agency made up of highly adaptive, responsive and self empowered people. Each of our team members have a strong background knowledge in a specific industry on top of public relations experience. As a team, we aim to provide our clients the best working experience through active listening and understanding of needs.

November 20, 2014 © PRecious Communications 2014 3

Page 4: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

What we do

Summaroutcome present client

Execute required

ideas Propose relevant

ideas UnderstClient’s needs

November 20, 2014 © PRecious Communications 2014 4

Social Media Press release

Events Interviews

Newsletters

And other initiatives

Page 5: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

© PRecious Communications 2014 5

Start-ups kluje.com

PlayMooLah Smaato 99.co

Healthcare Miradry

Bone Marrow Donor

Program

Finance Dow Jones

DBS Citi Bank

One Asia Investment Partners

Technology LG

Gentay McAfee

Motorola Evernote

Page 6: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Some of our clients

November 20, 2014 © PRecious Communications 2014 6

Page 7: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

1 in 4 million

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1 + 1 = 2.5

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10

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20 vs 5

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911

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Page 17: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

2000

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brand messages/day 10 years ago

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4,000

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brand messages/day

today

Page 21: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

30,000

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500,000

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6,000,000,000

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20,000,000,000

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Page 29: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Infinity

Page 30: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

You can not NOT communicate

• What is your brand promise?

• Does your brand have a personality?

• How do you earn trust?

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Branding is first and foremost about gaining trust.

Page 31: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

• Be (Seen) Innovative – But Please Don’t Take Any Risk, Use Only Proven Methods

The BIG Cultural Dilemma

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Page 32: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Online Engagement? Customers are very demanding!

[Brands] have to surprise me, not only meet my needs, but anticipate my needs. By using social media exclusively, I think the company has to

answer me whenever I have a question, enlighten me whenever I complain, and thank me whenever I compliment them.

Source: The Language of Love in Social Media - Firefly Millward Brown 32

Page 33: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

• From natural respect to suspicion

• Are you approachable?

• Why would people want to connect with you?

The BIG Cultural Dilemma #2

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Page 34: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)
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Video: Street Interview

Page 36: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Building or maintaining an organization’s relations with its various publics

(groups of people who are important to it)

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• Two- way communication.

• More cost effective as compared to other forms of communication.

• Perception of an impartial opinion and reviewed in the media.

• Essential tool in business growth.

• Reputation and credibility as important as product and support.

• Messaging helps to position the company/brand/products, conveying its key attributes and value proposition.

Important!

Your message to your target audience

Page 38: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)
Page 39: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)
Page 40: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

1. The idea behind the story conveyed in a few words.

2. Communicating your story.

3. Graft powerful words together that pique emotion, stimulate a need, elicit a vision, and produce engagement.

4. Deliver the right content at the right time.

5. Share your content through multiple channels.

6. Be honest with your supporters.

Page 41: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Curiosity

• Content that reveals secrets.

• E.g.: Product leaks.

Motivation

• Content that reminds us that dreams can come true.

Against the odds

• David vs Goliath.

Small is beautiful, big is advantage

• Content that reminds us what we do matters.

Affirmation

• Content that confirms our assumption.

Sensationalism

• Content with unexpected twist.

Feel good story

• Content that tells a great story.

New discovery

• Content that challenges our discovery.

Transformation

• Content that inspires us to action.

Page 42: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Press Release

Whitepaper Interview Holding

Statement Byline Article

Photo Story Round Table

Event Research Comment

? Case Study Blog Post Opinion

Piece Video

Keynote Address

Review Programme

Exclusive Infographic Background

Talk

PR Stunt Advertorial Press

Conference Survey

Media Advisory

Page 43: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

• Found that fans wanted to share their own stories of ways they would connect with the brand. Focused on customer stories.

Let fans tell your story

• Launched the model in several U.S. cities and online with the help of its fans.

Rethink how you share news

• Produced tie-in content on other platforms to help the series reach a wider audience.

Share content everywhere you can

• Importance of keeping campaigns simple and giving fans a venue for being part of something larger than themselves.

Be willing to experiment and learn from mistakes

Case Study: Ford Motor

Page 44: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Why

How

What

Adapted from: The Golden Circle by Simon Sinek

What is essential to know?

How can one benefit from your story (or product)

Why should people care?

• Connects people, and gets people engaged and interested.

• Brings real personality to what it is you do.

• Brings your business alive.

Page 45: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Why

How

What

Adapted from: The Golden Circle by Simon Sinek

What is essential to know?

How can one benefit from your story (or product)

Why should people care?

• Connects people, and gets people engaged and interested.

• Brings real personality to what it is you do.

• Brings your business alive. For talking to the media that leads to two main

questions…

Page 46: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Why

How

What

Adapted from: The Golden Circle by Simon Sinek

What is essential to know?

How can one benefit from your story (or product)

Why should people care?

• Connects people, and gets people engaged and interested.

• Brings real personality to what it is you do.

• Brings your business alive. Why NOW Why ME

Page 47: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Who

• Customers

• Potential customers

• Suppliers

• Advertisers

• Media

• Financial bodies

• Regulatory and government bodies

• Industry groups and other networks

What

• Age

• Gender

• Occupation or qualification

• Geography

• Socio-economic group

• Family structure

• Lifestyle

How

• Choice of words

• Use of jargons and technical terms

• Tone

• Focus

• The design and feel of the communication

• The medium used

Page 48: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)
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1. unexpected (i.e., a surprise)

2. creates uncertainty

3. is seen as a threat to important goals

50

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Page 52: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Crisis Fundamentals

Emergence:

Issue gets

public

Spreading:

Growing

interest

Establishment:

Full crisis

Erosion:

Relevance

declines

Potential:

Known areas

YOU?

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Page 53: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Crisis Fundamentals

Emergence:

Issue gets

public

Spreading:

Growing

interest

Establishment:

Full crisis

Erosion:

Relevance

declines

Potential:

Known areas

YOU?

When a crisis happens:

Get it fast,

Get it right,

Get it out, and

Get it over!

Your problem won’t improve with age. N. Augustine, CEO Lockhead Martin

Time is crucial for managing risk

as it allows you to stay in the ‘driver seat’

Page 54: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Crisis Fundamentals

Emergence:

Issue gets

public

Spreading:

Growing

interest

Establishment:

Full crisis

Erosion:

Relevance

declines

Potential:

Known areas

YOU?

When a crisis happens:

Get it fast,

Get it right,

Get it out, and

Get it over!

Your problem won’t improve with age. N. Augustine, CEO Lockhead Martin

Time is crucial for managing risk

as it allows you to stay in the ‘driver seat’

33% of global CCOs are not prepared for social media based

reputation threats !!!

Page 55: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

The majority of all crises come from within an organization.

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Page 56: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

56 Source: Not So SMRT: A Case Study of Communications Failure - Skribe

Key Learnings

1) Speed is critical (on Twitter) 2) Honesty is a virtue 3) Make your CEO visible 4) Brands have to be on alert in order to

correct any false assumptions before they reach critical mass

5) Track it

Page 57: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Nestlé's social media crisis

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Page 58: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Nestlé's social media crisis

Nestlé unwillingly put

public attention to

Greenpeace's video campaign

58

Page 59: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Nestlé unwillingly put

public attention to

Greenpeace's video campaign

Activists change their Facebook profile photos to anti-Nestlé slogans and start posting to the Nestlé fan page

59

Page 60: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Nestlé unwillingly put

public attention to

Greenpeace's video campaign

Activists change their Facebook profile photos to anti-Nestlé slogans and start posting to the Nestlé fan page

Nestlé: “To repeat: we welcome your comments, but please don't post using an altered version of any of our logos as your profile pic--they will be deleted”

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Page 61: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Nestlé unwillingly put

public attention to

Greenpeace's video campaign

Activists change their Facebook profile photos to anti-Nestlé slogans and start posting to the Nestlé fan page

Nestlé: “To repeat: we welcome your comments, but please don't post using an altered version of any of our logos as your profile pic--they will be deleted”

Now it even went worse with all kinds of criticism, allegations and simple insults being posted (e.g. bottled water dispute in the US, “killing babies”…)

61

Page 62: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Nestlé unwillingly put

public attention to

Greenpeace's video campaign

Activists change their Facebook profile photos to anti-Nestlé slogans and start posting to the Nestlé fan page

Nestlé: “To repeat: we welcome your comments, but please don't post using an altered version of any of our logos as your profile pic--they will be deleted”

Now it even went worse with all kinds of criticism, allegations and simple insults being posted (e.g. bottled water dispute in the US, “killing babies”…)

Key learnings:

Control? You never had it. Don't use lawyers to take things off the Internet Admit it, stop it, and apologize. FAST! Customers criticizing you are telling you something very valuable

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Page 63: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Nestlé unwillingly put

public attention to

Greenpeace's video campaign

Activists change their Facebook profile photos to anti-Nestlé slogans and start posting to the Nestlé fan page

Nestlé: “To repeat: we welcome your comments, but please don't post using an altered version of any of our logos as your profile pic--they will be deleted”

Now it even went worse with all kinds of criticism, allegations and simple insults being posted (e.g. bottled water dispute in the US, “killing babies”…)

63

Key learnings:

Control? You never had it. Don't use lawyers to take things off the Internet Admit it, stop it, and apologize. FAST! Customers criticizing you are telling you something very valuable

Page 64: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Nestlé unwillingly put

public attention to

Greenpeace's video campaign

Activists change their Facebook profile photos to anti-Nestlé slogans and start posting to the Nestlé fan page

Nestlé: “To repeat: we welcome your comments, but please don't post using an altered version of any of our logos as your profile pic--they will be deleted”

Now it even went worse with all kinds of criticism, allegations and simple insults being posted (e.g. bottled water dispute in the US, “killing babies”…)

64

Key learnings:

Control? You never had it. Don't use lawyers to take things off the Internet Admit it, stop it, and apologize. FAST! Customers criticizing you are telling you something very valuable

What are your Rules of Engagement?

A crisis response protocol? How fast can you react?

Who decides?

Page 65: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

‘Classic’ Case Study: Domino’s YouTube Experience

• Domino’s Pizza Chain discovered the power of viral marketing last month: two employees in the US filmed "prank" videos of themselves stuffing cheese up their noses and then putting it into sandwiches.

• The video went popular on YouTube (over 1 million views), and Twitter lit up with disgusted customer complaints.

• Domino’s apologized and put its own President on YouTube, started a Twitter response site;

• Still: In just a few days, Domino’s reputation was damaged.

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• Key ingredient for business success still a product or service that uniquely fulfils the needs of the end user.

• May result in negative comments from employees about the company or potential legal consequences if employees use these sites to view objectionable, illicit or offensive material.

• With great power come great responsibilities. If it is not utilized properly it may cause severe loss to your business. Social media is a very sensitive tool.

• Pick up a wrong social media marketing strategy you can end up damaging your brand image and reputation in the market.

Page 69: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

• Small mistakes are magnified in front of thousands of people.

• Worst case: People might not even care!

• Can be also recklessly used for hampering the reputation of the organization as well.

• Building communities takes a lot of time and efforts – in a situation where’s a growing social media (or more: Facebook) fatique kicking in

• In the end: Where is your target audience?

Page 70: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Content that inspires high-energy emotions far more likely to be

shared.

Practically useful, surprising, and interesting

More likely to be shared

Page 71: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Humour

• 62% of ads being aired by Fortune 500 companies, 60% of viral ads were being generated by the smaller companies.

• “Humour was employed at near unanimous levels for all viral advertisements. Consequently, this study identified humour as the universal appeal for making content viral.”

Content with an

emotional tone

Fame of the author

• Slightly more important than content

Page 72: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

• 62% of ads being aired by Fortune 500 companies, 60% of viral ads were being generated by the smaller companies.

• “Humour was employed at near unanimous levels for all viral advertisements. Consequently, this study identified humour as the universal appeal for making content viral.”

Content with an

emotional tone

Fame of the author

• Slightly more important than content

Humour or Ridicule!

Page 73: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

• 62% of ads being aired by Fortune 500 companies, 60% of viral ads were being generated by the smaller companies.

• “Humour was employed at near unanimous levels for all viral advertisements. Consequently, this study identified humour as the universal appeal for making content viral.”

Content with an

emotional tone

Fame of the author

• Slightly more important than content

Humour or Ridicule!

Page 75: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

Viral video. Viral mistake. Viral opportunity?

• If your content goes viral, find a way to harness this new audience.

Who’s seeing your content?

• Best-case opportunity can become worst-case scenario.

• Plan ahead and understand how your website can handle more visits.

Can there be too much of a good thing?

• If people have misconstrued or parodied your message, how do you rectify?

Can your reputation stand the attention?

• Unpredictable digital marketplace.

• A leaked video or telephone conversation can blow up into a PR disaster (or opportunity).

• No one can control viral content.

How will you handle the unexpected?

Page 76: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)
Page 77: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

• Know your story (elevator pitch)

• Have a simple PR kit – Corporate background, product factsheet, executive

biographies

• Follow your competitors - allows you to see what they are doing, as they do it, as well as keeps you up-to-date on their progress, ideas, updates, and more!

• More than just Facebook “likes” or media clips - brand must drive marketing value and not merely be seen.

• Have a plan – and if it is trial & error. Accept defeat at certain points and move on.

Page 78: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

• Forgetting to ask why people should actually care. • Social isn’t the place for the hard sell or self-

promotion. • You don’t have to be everywhere. • You don’t have to keep up with the big brands. You

can’t. Accept it! • Social Media isn’t “Free”, it takes a loooot of time

which may need for other things. • Not knowing who and where your audience is. • Not planning or having clear objectives. What do you

want to achieve? • Not using the tools to analyze what you are doing. • Keeping momentum beyond the first buzz.

Page 79: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)

• Take 5 minutes and define what you want to be for your key stakeholders

• For each stakeholder group, think of maximum 3 key messages!

• Practice and refine. Then do it again.

• If in doubt, you have questions or feel like having a coffee or beer – call us!

Page 80: PR101 - Media Relations, Social Media, Crisis Management - PRecious Communications (Nov2014)
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81

Social media requires your

attention 24/7. The media landscape is fast

changing and eroding.

Brand perceptions are shifting as you read.

Customers are demanding a more human approach to

communication.

We provide : Communications Strategy | Traditional & Social Media Relations Digital Engagement | Crisis Preparedness & Management Internal Communications | Media Training Analysis, Measurement, Research

Where are you?

Your Reputation is PRecious