Introduction There's no denying that the Internet has been one of the most overly hyped technologies in human history. Newspapers, TV shows, magazines, and yes, even a few books promised us a revolutionary new business world in which hard-charging dot-coms stole markets away from established brick-and-mortar companies that were supposedly too stupid and slow moving to realize what was happening around them. All Americans would soon have personal Web pages and spend countless hours in online "communities" swapping advice with like-minded peers. Of course, that's only if they weren't running to the front door to accept deliveries of the books, toys, pet food, and sofas they bought online at low, low prices. Anyone who didn't recognize the magnitude of this Internet revolution and invest a few bucks in skyrocketing Internet stocks just didn't get it. Today we know that the Internet mania of the late 1990s was as much about greed as it was about innovation. Investors, sold on the notion of a worldwide network of billions of consumers, bet on startups and pushed them to run hard despite poorly formed business plans, faulty technology, and total ignorance about the difficulty of cost-effectively delivering things like groceries or bedroom sets across wide geographic regions. All has not been lost in the dot-com bust, however. The world has embraced this new medium of communication and it is not going to let go. The Internet might not be the megamarket previously advertised, but it has very quickly changed the way that business is done in nearly every industry-;from finance to manufacturing, from real estate to retail, and most certainly in public relations. Indeed, it is not hyperbole to argue that the field of public relations has been revolutionized. PR professionals schooled in the old world of pretty press kits and faxed press releases have had to adapt quickly. Overnight mail is no longer fast enough. Reporters, feeling the Internet's demands for immediacy, want instant access to press releases and updated versions of corporate fact sheets, executive backgrounders, and every kind of data that PR people can make available. They expect to find the information in online newsrooms, where all these items are located in one place. Even more revolutionary, perhaps, is the fact that public relations people are increasingly finding themselves interacting with the public. Reporters and analysts are only one part of the job. The Internet has given customers, stockholders, prospective business partners, and others access to the materials developed by PR people. It is both a marvelous opportunity to get a client's message out to the public without the interference of reporters and a dangerously out-of-control situation in which facts, rumor, and innuendo can be circulated about a company in seriously damaging ways often under the radar of clipping and monitoring services employed to report on what's being said about a company in the press. The infamous Internet grapevine has already created big headaches for some of the country's most popular brands. From Heinz ketchup to Coors beer and even talk show hosts, such as Oprah Winfrey, no one can escape the Internet's ability to spread rumors like wildfire. PR people obviously have not been hiding with their heads in the sand. Most are getting press releases out quickly via broadcast e-mail and many have invested countless hours in developing online pressrooms. But who is using these tools to greatest effect? What have they learned that others in PR should emulate? What have they learned that the rest of us should avoid? What potentially helpful new tools are on the horizon? How do companies keep their online PR strategies in line with what they're doing in the offline arena? Our goal for this book is to answer these key questions for public relations professionals-;regardless of whether their clients are new Internet companies or old manufacturers. Deirdre Breakenridge's first book, Cyberbranding (Prentice Hall, 2001), told marketers how to use the Internet to build their brands. Strong public relations was an element to that story, but The New PR Toolkit focuses intently on public relations to offer solid advice to practitioners. Despite this focus, we believe that marketing professionals, senior level decision makers, and entrepreneurs are sure to find value in the tips and case studies presented here. We understand that the Internet fundamentally has changed PR; however, we also counsel a strong back-to-basics approach to avoid many of the pitfalls of unsuccessful strategies of recent years. Business is still business, even if there's an e hung on the front of it. Research and planning were often the enemies of dot-com executives living on souped-up "Internet time," but both functions are actually more important than ever as PR people struggle to determine who is interacting with their brands online and offline and how can they be presented with the best possible image of the company. The New PR Toolkit is full of solid examples of companies that have used the Internet to improve their public relations efforts and of lessons that can be learned by some high-profile failures. Our "Odd Couple" authoring partnership (we won't identify who's Felix and who's Oscar) guarantees that readers get not only the perspectives of a PR professional who's represented clients such as JVC, GMAI, and Derek Jeter's Turn 2 Foundation, but also the views of an experienced editor who has fielded thousands of pitches and written hundreds of articles in his 15 years with respected publications such as Internet World and The Chronicle of Higher Education. PR people and reporters, whether they want to admit it or not, are partners in bringing information to readers and viewers. Our intent with this book is to point out successful strategies and tactics as seen through the eyes of the PR people who orchestrated them and the journalists who responded to them and gave the stories ink, airtime, or online play. The first part of The New PR Toolkit helps you to lay the groundwork for your online PR efforts, explaining the importance of identifying your target audience and understanding its needs and wants. The short lives of several dot-coms help us point up the dangers of overlooking the importance of such research. Research results, we argue, must not be derived from secondary sources, but should come from primary, qualitative, and quantitative studies focused on the perceptions and well-being of a brand. We tell you, the readers, about the tools available to you, running the gamut from online databases, tracking software, monitoring and clipping services, and so on, and use case studies to explain how they've been employed successfully. The middle part of The New PR Toolkit is devoted to explaining how the news media have evolved in the Internet era and the tools that can be used to reach them. Journalists of the 21st Century are more deadline conscious than ever, as weekly publications produce nightly electronic newsletters, and daily newspapers publish twice-daily Web updates. The historically hard-charging wire services now get their stories to the online public within minutes of their writing. The demands on their time and the power of the Internet means that many journalists consider faxes and overnight mail to be akin to the Pony Express. They want instant access to information through your Web site or via e-mail, but the details they want are the same as what they've been seeking for years. They want exclusives. They want to know in a timely fashion about big-money deals and industry-altering product announcements. They still love colorful personalities, preferably in conflict with equally colorful rivals. Getting personal access to such bigwigs is still tremendously important to most journalists and a task still best handled by PR professionals in the flesh, rather than their Internet-based tools. We offer specific advice and case studies to illustrate exactly how to construct effective pitches in e-mail, complete with compelling subject lines. We discuss the use of permission-based e-mail that can keep reporters updated on your company while protecting you from being branded with the odious and possibly debilitating label of spammer. We discuss the essential elements of an online newsroom and offer our advice on how to produce an effective and accessible Webcast to get your executives out in front of the worldwide press. In the final part of The New PR Toolkit , we focus on the pieces of a solid online public relations strategy that extend beyond day-to-day interactions with reporters or the public. We note, for example, the incredible speed of Internet communications and the importance of protecting your company from the damaging effects of message boards and rogue Web sites that spread less-than-pleasant words about your brand. As dissatisfied online users bad-mouth brands (you know the rule: have a good experience and you're likely to tell three people, have a bad experience and you tell 50 people), reporters often stumble across these postings and some might receive wider press coverage unless the affected company has a way of monitoring and intervening to protect its name. Another important element of an online strategy must be a crisis management capability that lets a company get information out quickly on any number of newsmaking events from plane crashes to oil spills to product recalls. The Internet audience expects to be able to go to a company's site for the latest news, which means that PR professionals need to have a ghost template ready to go live, one that is developed before a crisis occurs and can be quickly updated with the latest details and posted to the Web site. A quick online response of the type employed on September 11, 2001, by companies such as United Airlines and Sandler O'Neill and Partners can make a company appear proactive rather than defensive and can be supplemented later with materials such as written statements, legal documents, or video of the CEO's remarks that give the com...
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这本书真正体现了“与时俱进”的含义,它没有对过去的方法论进行全盘否定,而是像一位高明的园丁,剪除了枝蔓,培育了新的根系。我对它关于“去中心化影响力的管理”那几章印象尤为深刻。在传统公关中,媒体是金字塔的尖端,而这本书则描绘了一个“网状生态”:用户生成内容(UGC)、加密社区、匿名论坛,它们共同构成了新的信息流核心。作者提出的“影响力池稀释策略”非常有启发性——与其花巨资去争夺一个顶流KOL的关注,不如用更小的投入去激活十个中层意见领袖,从而在信息网络中构建更广泛的、更难被攻击的“冗余传播路径”。它彻底改变了我对“影响力投资”回报率的计算方式,让我认识到在信息碎片化的今天,深度不如广度,而韧性胜过爆发力。这是一本真正面向下一个十年公关挑战的指南。
评分阅读体验上,这本书的处理方式相当有特点,它成功地避免了陷入那种枯燥的学术论文腔调,但同时又保持了极高的专业性。它的叙事节奏感很强,你会感觉作者像一位经验丰富的战场指挥官,时而高屋建瓴地指出战略方向,时而又迅速拉近镜头,聚焦到一个具体的、可能导致公关灾难的“五分钟决策时刻”。我个人最欣赏它对“数据伦理”的探讨。在当前这个大数据和AI驱动的传播时代,如何平衡个性化触达的效率与用户隐私的尊重,是一个巨大的道德困境。这本书没有回避这个问题,而是提供了一套基于“透明度契约”的实践框架。它详细分析了几个跨国公司在数据使用上引发的争议,并清晰地界定了“可接受的边界”。这种前瞻性的视角,让我对未来几年公关行业的监管趋势有了更清晰的预判,而不是仅仅停留在解决眼前问题的层面。
评分这本书的理论框架简直是为我们这个时代量身定做的,它没有沉溺于那些过时的公关神话和陈词滥调。我特别欣赏作者对“真实性”的强调,这不是那种空洞的口号,而是深入到企业文化、产品研发乃至高层决策的每一个环节。比如,它详细阐述了如何在社交媒体的瞬息万变中,构建一个既有韧性又足够灵活的叙事结构。书中花了大量篇幅探讨“危机预演”的精细化操作,不是简单地准备FAQ,而是模拟了不同利益相关方(从愤怒的KOL到沉默的监管机构)可能采取的复杂博弈路径,并提供了切实可行的、分阶段的“信息投放控制图”。对于那些希望把公关从成本中心转变为价值驱动引擎的专业人士来说,这本书提供的工具集,比如那个关于“情感共鸣指数”的量化模型,简直是里程碑式的。它不再要求公关人仅仅是“讲故事”,而是要成为“价值的转化者和风险的对冲者”。我甚至发现,书中的一些案例分析,其复杂程度已经超越了传统的危机公关范畴,更接近于地缘政治信息战的微观操作。
评分坦白说,我买这本书是冲着那些所谓的“新工具”去的,但最终让我留下深刻印象的,却是它对“人际网络资本”的重塑方法论。我过去一直认为,PR的核心在于媒体关系,但这套逻辑在如今这个“去中心化”的传播环境中已经失效了。这本书提出了一种非常精妙的“多层级影响力渗透”模型,它不仅仅关注传统记者,还深入挖掘了行业意见领袖(KOLs)背后的“影子顾问”和“非正式决策者”。作者用了一种近乎人类学研究的笔触,描述了如何通过非正式渠道(比如专业论坛、私人晚宴、甚至共同的爱好俱乐部)来建立基于信任而非交易的联盟。其中关于“信息引爆点的识别与培育”那一章,简直是教科书级别的。它不是告诉你“要有一个好故事”,而是告诉你“在一个特定受众群体中,哪些潜藏的文化焦虑或未被满足的需求,可以被你的信息点燃”。这种对传播心理学的深刻洞察,远超我预期的技术指导手册。
评分这本书的结构设计,非常注重实操性和可复制性。我发现它最大的价值在于,它将那些看似玄乎的“品牌定位”和“市场声誉”这些抽象概念,拆解成了一系列可以被量化和管理的SOP(标准操作程序)。举例来说,书中关于“跨文化传播适配性测试”的工具包,就非常实用。它不是泛泛地说“要注意文化差异”,而是给出了一个包含语气、视觉元素、比喻选择等多个维度的评分系统,确保一个全球性的宣传活动在不同地域都能保持核心信息的完整性而不产生负面解读。我尝试着将其中一个“利益相关者地图绘制法”应用到我最近的一个项目上,效果立竿见影。它迫使团队跳出传统的部门壁垒,从更广阔的生态系统角度去审视每一个沟通行为的潜在连锁反应。这种系统化的思维转变,是这本书留给我最宝贵的财富。
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