Hello and welcome again. Here's my new work for coursera.org MOOC. I want to share it with you
1. Please look up media references to Public Relations in the country
where you are currently residing. What is the term used to refer to Public
Relations in the media? (5 points)
As I live and study in Russia, there are
a lot of media trying to depict the profession of PR practitioner. But in our
country term PR is used to refer to bad-quality promotion and mostly has a
negative perception. As opposed to it, mass media depict PR as vital for big
companies and even for government (as a part of social politics). But at the
same russian media says that traditional PR has become outdated. For example, http://www.kommersant.ru/ says the PR has become a
spam-machine because of the amount of press releases reaching for the editor’s
email. And some of this PR practitioners are annoying at their follow-up after
sending a press-release. Also kommersant.ru claims that PR has changed
dramatically since it was established: instead of making text press releases
you should monitor the agenda and integrate press-releases (filled-up with
images and videos) in accordance with the daily agenda.
2. How do the media describe the profession of Public Relations? (15
points)
2 years ago the famous russian
internet media “the Village” (http://www.the-village.ru/) has published a material in order
to describe daily life of PR Practitioner. “the Village” claims that the profession of Public Relations
“consist” of infinite flow of information PR practitioner trying to cope with.
PR practitioner should be communicative, confident about press-releases he
suggesting for publishing and persistent with media neglecting almost 90% of
suggested press-releases (as refer to statistics). In addition, “the Village”
reports that because of dependency of PR practitioners on journalists of
mass-media there’re some situations when these journalists force PR
practitioners to make them gifts in order to visit the event or publish a particular
release.
3. How do the media describe Public
Relations jobs? (10 points)
We can see that PR practitioners have
an average salary. USnews.com says writes that median pay per year is slightly
less than $55 000.
“Social media outreach has become an integral part of a PR specialist’s
job in recent years. With the onset of social infrastructure such as Facebook,
LinkedIn, Twitter and Pinterest, combined with the versatility of Web tools,
the jobs of public relations specialists are growing at a fast clip”
The Bureau of Labor Statistics
projects public relations specialists employment will grow 12 percent between
2012 and 2022. During that time period, an additional 27,400 jobs will need to
be filled.
At the same time Business2community asks if PR is doomed by a shortage of journalists: there are
roughly 5.7 PR professionals for every one journalist. But the answer is “No”:
PR will only be doomed by our failure to adapt to the ever-changing media
landscape, now and in the months and years to come»
4. How do the media depictions of Public
Relations resonate with and/or depart from the definition of Public Relations
we covered in the lecture videos? Please explain briefly with at least three
similarities and/or differences. (30 points)
In MOOC Mohan Dutta said that PR is
deliberate and data-driven. But statistics says that there’s almost 90% of
press releases sent by companies are not published by mass-media. So, only 1 in
10 of press releases are relevant to media and agenda. This shows that PR is
just under preparation to become data-driven.
Also, Mohan Dutta claims that PR practitioner
is a mediator between publics and organization. Nevertheless, most of media is
controlled by a third party. Therefore, the real mediator is journalist or
editor-in-chief.
In addition, Mohan Dutta declared
that successful PR practitioner should be conversant with data. I fully agree
with him. There was a research that PR activities are successful only when
relevant. To be relevant you need to work with data.
5. Based on your assessment of the
media portrayals of Public Relations jobs and the Public Relations profession,
what are the challenges facing the profession of Public Relations in the
context of the country you are referring to?
The main challenges in US are:
1) Because of the disproportion (5.7 PR
practitioner for only one journalist), PR practitioner should be flexible and
quickly adapt to fast-changing PR industry. Those who won’t adapt will lose
their job.
2) Junior PR practitioner is not
well-paid job. You need to be prepared to earn a few during the first year.
3) The expectation of growth of PR jobs
in not so good (only 6%). There many jobs booming now
4) As a PR practitioner, you need to
work even 24/7 to be on agenda. Not everyone ready for this. Actually many
people will switch to another profession in order to manage better work
conditions.
6. What steps would you suggest for overcoming these challenges to the
profession?
I think that PR industry is self-regulated. It means
that those practitioners who cannot adapt will lose their job. Those companies
struggled to adapt will lose their publics and will leave the market. However,
newcomers that will be more flexible and innovative will replace such companies.
This rule works for PR practitioners as well. PR in evolving, its effectiveness
is growing. The only thing that PR practitioners need is to stay on agenda and
learn more about future trends to be qualified enough.