In what could be “A Tale of Two PR Realities,” we have conflicting views of the state of the PR
profession, courtesy some of biggest and brightest names in the business, in recent pronouncements from the UK.
Chair Roger Warner of Squiz and Velocity Partners
kicked off the discussion by remarking that in the four years since
he’d left corporate PR, the landscape of the industry had become almost
unrecognisable. … What exactly has happened?
What’s happened, Will McInnes responded, is disintermediation.
This is quite an issue for PRs, since their business, for some time,
has been ‘mediation’: placing themselves between the client and the
world at large, feeding messages to the established channels. Nowadays,
though, everyone’s got access to their own printing press, and – if
they have the ability and/or the authority – an audience as influential
as those of mainstream journalists. At the same time, companies have
felt the pressure to start exhibiting a little more transparency. Dell,
for example, has moved from a position where it churned out products
from its secret R&D labs and refused to comment on complaints about
customer service to a point where it’s a very different company. The
Dell blog allows members of the public to hear from and talk to senior marketing and product managers, while the Ideastorm site takes suggestions from customers and turns them into product offerings.
Then, in roughly the same time frame – and as I mentioned in one of my posts last week – Sir Martin Sorrell of advertising giant WPP said that “revenues from PR are growing strongly and… ” the reasoning behind it is to do with social networking and the web.
Anyway, not one to give up too quickly, I did unearth this relatively recent press release from the Council of Public Relations Firms, which reported the following results of a survey last month:
More than three-quarters of public relations firms in the survey
reported revenues ahead of last year’s 3Q numbers. Additionally, nearly
half (48%) of participating firms claim that bottom lines will likely
best their original 2007 forecasts; 27% of participating firms expect
revenues to come in below their initial forecast…43% responded that they expect budgets to increase [in 2008]
Other findings from the survey included:
- More than half (53%) of survey participants author a blog
- A majority (57%) of firms have or follow best practices related to working with bloggers
Perhaps the glass really is half full, and the current and emerging landscape offers opportunities as well as threats.