Archive for the ‘POLITICS’ Category

PR & BRAND EQUITY

Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

Brand equity and brand positioning are both incredibly important.  However, an act that gives your brand power today can bring a cloud of negativity tomorrow.  Ringing the Opening Bell at the NYSE has long been a coveted photo opportunity and a chance to flaunt a brand in front of hundreds of millions of viewers. But with market turmoil and an unpredictable financial landscape, the act of ringing the Opening Bell has become an undesirable risk.  Who could have ever thought that a brand could be sullied by associating with the NYSE?  But, indeed, a New York Times article seems to say so.

As I have stated earlier vis a vis sponsorships, every action has a reaction, and brands have to be cognizant of the world around them before agreeing to participate in any initiative.  Public opinion can shift swiftly and dramatically.  The wrong association can cause it to shift against your brand.  We’ve had a number of clients ring the Opening Bell in the past, when the NYSE was seen as a bastion of power and prosperity, and I am sure those days will return soon.

 

Ronn Torossian

5W PR

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PUBLIC RELATIONS & MEDIA

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

Ronn Torossian on Public Relations & Media

There has been a lot of buzz today about the Us Weekly covers below vis a vis bias in the media.  Although idealists suggest otherwise, I find the concept of an unbiased media simply impossible.  First, as human beings, we have inherent biases that can’t be discarded on a whim.  Whether political, cultural or simply a level of taste, each of us holds certain ideas closer than others.  Secondly, bias creates tension and drama, which sells more magazines, attracts more viewers, and keeps online visitors coming back for more.  Especially in an age when a new, unbridled media is quickly usurping the old, the rules of objectivity will continue to be a moving target.

Regardless of one’s political stance, bias in the media is a discussion worth consideration by PR professionals, and certainly a topic this PR blog will continue to blog on.  As a student of journalism, I suggest reading Bias by Bernard Goldberg – Certainly will make you think.

Ronn Torossian

5WPR

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THE OLD MEDIUM IS A MESS

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

Great cover story today in The New York Observer entitled, “Convention Pits Texting vs. Press.”  Amid the buzz surrounding the Obama camp’s intention to release the VP choice via text message, the article focuses on how print journalists at the DNC just aren’t getting many exclusive (or good) stories that aren’t being told elsewhere.

Gail Collins of The New York Times was quoted as saying “There’s 10 million people watching TV, and if we can’t find something that’s not on the TV to be useful about, then what the hell is my paper paying me to be here? I feel morally obliged to be running around futilely trying to find something.”

In today’s new world of instant communication, it’s that much harder for print reporters to find good stories.  As the article states, “For journalists being powerful in the arenas they cover is as significant as being powerful in their own industry. A political reporter wants to cover politics.”

The New York Times’ chief political reporter, Adam Nagourney said, “If you come here and David Axelrod came walking down the aisle over there, there’d be 500 people around him, and you’d be getting the most boilerplate quotes. So what’s the point?”

I don’t believe print journalism is dead (as some have surmised). But the old medium is a mess.  Every aspect of the world has changed, and journalists and media have to learn to deal with it.  There’s much more competition and instant communication and much less exclusivity.

PR people need to continue to nurture relationships and feed media stories, but also learn to function differently as well.  This article is interesting reading for all of us concerned with spin and what media is thinking, and how they are continuing to evolve.

Ronn Torossian

5WPR

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POLITICS, SPIN & PR

Monday, August 18th, 2008

As a PR professional who started his PR career in politics, I remain consumed and fascinated with the art of the spin, particularly in the political sphere. Today’s reality is a McCain vs. Obama race, but the real story is the PR behind the campaign. From how Rudy Guiliani ran his race — focusing on Florida — to the way Hillary Clinton conducted her campaign, handling political public relations is often the most intense, serious, and challenging work a PR professional can have.

This article in The Atlantic is a necessary read for anyone interested in learning from mistakes. Although, as I often say, it’s easy to criticize and harder to do, and in business and life, hindsight is always 20/20. Nevertheless, the number of documents leaked at this extremely high level was amazing, and, as stated, “Everything from major strategic plans to bitchy staff e-mail feuds was handed over.”

Ronn Torossian

5WPR

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THE 5TH ESTATE: A VICIOUS MEDIA

Friday, August 1st, 2008

As the owner of a public relations agency, and someone who has worked with governments, lobbyists and journalists, I analyzed The Sunday Times of London expose on lobbyist Stephen Payne (Stephen Payne: a hotshot lobbyist who can get you into White House, July 13, 2008[i]).

Beginning with the basics; bribery is unacceptable, and for a democracy or civilized government it is wholly abhorrent. If that is what happened, it is illegal and reprehensible. That said, I am sure that it will be fully investigated, and I am also very confident that the investigation will lead to little or nothing.

Yet, lobbyists and PR firms are hired to represent and to advocate on their clients’ behalf. It doesn’t suggest that they agree with the causes; its business, not academics. Public relations specialists and lobbyists use their skill and resources to change minds, address laws and affect lives. The job of a lobbyist or PR pro, once they agree to accept a client, is to use every means within law and reason to arrange access, introduce and sell a client’s viewpoint or objective. That’s a fact; the concept that Paine was going to be paid to attempt to offer access and persuade policy is his business, and it is the sole purpose of the business of lobbying.

The author included, albeit buried towards the very end of the article, “that the payment to the Bush library was not a ‘quid pro quo’ and that his company had performed many ‘good things’ for the world that were ‘ethical and always above board… He said that making a payment to the library would have had no impact without the client’s cause having merit…”

So, what he said was, and as the video included represents: If you make a donation, serious people are more likely to listen to you over the crowd of others waiting.

How many political requests does any government receive? Cold calls? Urgent matters? The way of the world, like it or not, is about access and money. In this real world, those who pay are often taken more seriously. There is, of course, outrage that money vastly improves ones ability to gain access. Our system of democracy encourages this. Elections bring the need for campaigns; campaigns bring the need for campaign donations; donations grab the attention of the individual running for office.

Whether is should be that way is a great philosophical question that is often debated and even fought over. Still, no one has yet to develop a better system of government than what we know as our popular election system.

Access and name dropping are key parts of business for lobbyists, PR firms and those in political life. It is often how one gets in the door for new business; most of which may never need the access, save the fact that the client knows you have it. We see this on all levels of business in almost every business. Friends introduce one another for leads; others use a golf course, country club or fraternity to impress and flaunt. Isn’t that offering access? It is, and government access is no different. Payne had access, he dropped names; no scandal!

Also, many in PR are often too quiet about actions by an overzealous media attempting to make headlines and sell ink. Media oftentimes can endanger a client’s business interests to the point of no return. Some reporters, believing they are doing a public service, or thinking a “hard hitting” exposé will get them broadly noticed have zero boundaries at all; pure ruthlessness, often believing they can dictate morality and attack someone, while few call into question the tactics of the reporter.

The media is supposed to be impartial players in the news reporting process. Reporters should give the public objective facts and not impose his or her opinion. Unless the role of the media, is as Howard Kurtz so aptly states regarding a similar incident involving Ken Silverstein to “lie, deceive and fabricate to get the story?”[ii]

Certain elements of the media seem to have no restrictions when it comes to destroying people, businesses and those they deem not to agree with. To me, it comes as little surprise that Payne is someone supposedly close to the Republicans in an election year. Most of American media today leans left and anything on the right is fodder for ideologues with a bully pulpit… that pulpit being a keyboard and the Internet.

Clients pay for positive outcomes, but also for protection from potential negatives. One cannot approach media feebly or even be lulled into thinking they are friends looking to serve the cause of justice. Journalists often claim a mantle of self-righteousness, self appointed and self governed; it neither makes them right nor gives them the right. The public can decide right from wrong based on objectivity.

I recall my recent experience when a Journalist at top tier investigative TV news program called me. The reporter relentlessly pursued an interview with my client, and we were not accepting any. I was running out of ways of saying “no” kindly. He called my client’s office when he could not get me to move. He insisted on speaking with my client, yet I told him again politely “He’s not interested.” Making a long story short; he cursed, threatened, and bad-mouthed me, then he called for weeks on end. He could not get his way “” and was shocked.

Lobbyists, lobbying firms, PR agencies and the like exist to help influence public opinion. As long as the world has existed there have been people serving in those roles. Even God had Moses use his access to his “brother” Pharaoh to lobby the cause of the Hebrews. While of course Presidential libraries must not be built on bribes; being paid to perform a service and providing access are not bribes.

Ronn Torossian
5WPR

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