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Chronicling digital marketing trends & experiences, online tools & tips

Archive for April, 2008

Introducing your writers

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Better late than never. So that’s the motto we are following and introducing the people who have been behind this blog. As we mentioned earlier, India PR Blog is written by PR and media professionals across organisations brining a wide variety of experiences, insights, and views on current trends and developments in the PR industry and practice.

Read about the India PR blog authors here. – India PR Blog Authors

Your comments and suggestions o this blog are always welcomed.

Also while we are discussing this blog, a quick reminder about the initiative that we are taking up currently – to develop a directory of PR agencies and PR freelancers across India. When this is in place, this is going to be a good resource for all PR agencies looking out for partners and employees, and for all those seeking PR services. You can read more about the initiative and information on how to include your agency/yourself in the directory here- PR directory.

Cheers.

Written by Palin Ningthoujam

April 7th, 2008 at 12:01 am

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Breaking Media Gridlocks When Perception Lags Performance – PR Mind Games

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Every once in a  while, there comes the case of a company that is unable to throughput communication in stark contrast to its otherwise brilliant performance indices. I have sought to understand this malady now and again but a chance conversation yesterday with a known genius in the Indian Financial Services space triggered this post. If you are the guardian angel of the Aspirational; the evangelist with passion, fire and a head full of mindgames, the PR kind, then read on…

Perception lags performance, due to many reasons. The causes manifest themselves in three primary reasons. For a Public Relations, Communications or Brand consultant, it is important to understand the terrain before they pick up on a project that seeks to break logjams in the media and perception circuits for a customer.

Breaking gridlocks and logjams for late entrants to the perception game requires special skills, the tricks  and tactics have been there forever, question is have you ever thought about it, enough to elevate it to strategy?

Changing share of voice in the media and lecture circuit from a inane buzz to the screaming roar of a Ferrari or shepherding your customer (internal or external depends which side of the table you are sat) from the mind-numbing terrors and traps in the media, triggering a turbo boost for your spokesperson in terms of messaging uptake and effectiveness, is what this post is about.

Firstly, an inability or fear of dealing with the media due to a past bad experience can make efforts hard or non-starters. Media Relations is an art that requires constant practice, the ride comes with bumps and smooth stretches, sporadic crises thrown in for spice.  You give, you get, but you always talk! There is media out there that is out to trick you out, will they hesitate to rubbish your carefully build reputation for an exclusive? Absolutely not for a second! Can PR change the game for your business? Absolutely yes! Good comes with the bad, package deal like with most things in life. If you are going to get anywhere, you need to get started! Tell them like it is, chances are that they take risks in business everyday and will grow into the act with a little hand holding from you, the specialist!

Secondly, there is a clique out there as in most other domains, these ‘usual suspects’ then pretty much control the share of voice in the media, and this maybe specific to a beat. The media is most times too lazy to do any hard digging when mapping a business space and again relies on the ‘usual suspects’, who maybe be convenient darling MDs, CEOs and other assorted rabble rousers. Awards: every publication and their mother has an award stacked with their favourites, breaking into this game needs perseverance, a nose for ‘distress sales’, finally being able to work the apex bodies like CII, FICCI, NASSCOM, etc, for advocacy and influencer relations.

Third and last here, is clearly a lack of process internally at the client organisation be it in terms of communication superstructure, even if one does exist, its ability to deliver strategic advice to management may be suspect in hierarchy driven situations or where communicators are too junior to be taken seriously. Some people use external consultants to tell them what is known already as it brings a credibility they lack.

Anyone can tell you that game changing maneuvers are few and far in between as stereotypes and ’safe’ options abound but if you as a PR professional were ever able to affect changes that made a company’s perception congruent with its performance as benchmarked against its peers, then you indeed deserve to be in the hall of fame. If commitment is your destiny and you can help tell a story that is true and ethical but inconvenient, then you are indeed one lucky person!

We need our heroes just like we need our war stories to feel good about the tribe and what it does, so come on give!

Man and Superman = AdMan and PRMan: Thursday's with Tushar

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Last weekend, I was invited to speak on Advertising Vs. Public Relations by one of the large advertising agencies in Mumbai as part of their constant learning program. I made two slides presentation. I enjoyed every moment of my discussion with them and feeling very happy that I helped them to break some myths about PR and PR professionals – one of them was wondering what do we write in Release Orders? :) and another girl was wondering whether we look like humans or not?!

Sharing those two slides for you. The fonts are inspired by Tom Peters, and there is a high probability that even the first slide is from one of his presentations. Your comments are welcome.

The first slide was:

slide one

The second slide was:

slide two

Written by Tushar Panchal

April 3rd, 2008 at 12:01 am

Posted in Indian PR industry

Personality Not Included: Exclusive Interview with author and fellow PR professional

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PNIRohit Bhargava, Senior Vice President, Digital Strategy & Marketing, is a well known PR and marketing professional and known for his path breaking work in the social media segment. He leads the interactive marketing team at Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide in Washington DC and is a founding member of the 360 Digital Influence team at Ogilvy. He is a frequent speaker at industry events and is a specialist in combining “traditional” interactive marketing efforts with innovative social media marketing strategy to help clients succeed in the new media landscape. His current list of clients includes Intel, Johnson & Johnson, Lenovo, and Unilever. Prior to joining Ogilvy PR, he was Executive Producer of the interactive team at Leo Burnett in Sydney, Australia and has worked internationally in several countries. Rohit has also been featured as an expert on marketing in BusinessWeek, Wired, Business2.0 and The Wall Street Journal as well as many industry and trade publications. He authors the popular marketing blog Influential Marketing and has recently launched his first marketing book called Personality Not Included.In an exclusive interview with India PR Blog, he briefly talks about his book and more…

IPRB: ‘Personality Not Included’ is definitely an attention grabbing title. How did you think about that in this personality driven corporate world?

Rohit: I wanted something that could stand out, and this title was one that everyone involved in the book fell in love with right away. To be honest, it was the subtitle that took a really long time for everyone to agree to.

IPRB: We always talk about creating personalities – brand, corporate or individual. How does your book really help us to understand issues faced by personality creators

Rohit: One of the main things I tried to do with the book was avoid it being solely and theoretical book. To do that, I included two main sections. The first talks all about why personality matters, how to understand and use it, and how to get past the barriers that may stand in your way. The second part is all how-to style guides and action plans to help you put personality into your business immediately.

IPRB: A very basic but important question -what is personality? why it is so important? can’t we just live in a world where personality is not included?

Rohit: This is a very important question. Personality, as I define it, is a mixture of being unique, authentic and talkable. I believe it is a necessity for brands that want to stand out and build deeper relationships with their customers.

IPRB:Would your book help demystify some of the marketing jargon floating around or will add few more?

Rohit: Actually, there is an element of the book that I have called “Buzzword Bingo.” It is a downloadable file that makes fun of exactly this point – that there are too many buzzwords in business and we all need to simplify.

IPRB: When would it be available in India?

Rohit: The India release will be at the end of May. I am hoping to have a chance to be there later this year!

We will be reviewing Rohit’s book very shortly and let you know what our panel of experts think about it from the Indian perspective. And when Rohit visits India, we will surely have an opportunity to meet and interact with him. Till then, happy reading and keep visiting.

Written by Tushar Panchal

April 1st, 2008 at 1:37 pm