As a business owner, how much value do you place on your brand reputation? How much value do you place in holding the trust of your audience?
It doesn’t matter what you’re selling, or if you’re a small business or a huge company, you’re trading on that trust. Marketing can help you build a presence and profile, but marketing alone cannot build this trust.
For that you need Public Relations, and this is seven ways PR can elevate your brand and bring business success.
Public relations is all about credibility.
Business X approaches PR agency Y; they want to be seen as legitimate, trustworthy, and professional. Agency Y rolls up their sleeves, crafting a narrative that does exactly that.
Now, it would be easy to think PR is just about getting your name in the papers. But this is a rather outmoded view of what public relations delivers. But it’s still a commonly held viewpoint that PR is just about media coverage.
Media relations is still a big part of what we do, because if you’re building credibility and trust, third-party trust signals are everything. When respected industry publications highlight your achievements or innovations, it creates a kind of credibility that no amount of paid advertising can buy.
That third-party endorsement, whether through media placements, speaking at events or tactically placed thought leadership content, is like gold dust for your business profile.
But third-party endorsement is no longer the sole remit of ‘ traditional media’ it can come in the form of influencers, industry analysts, ambassadors and so much more… and it works in multiple directions too. Let’s take podcasts as an example. You can launch a podcast and the guests you bring into your podcast can act as third-party endorsement, that you have effectively created yourself.
Third-party endorsement has the potential of adding value to your business, in a way you cannot achieve on your own.
When we talk about “brand reputation,” what are we really talking about? It’s quite a loaded term.
It brings up notions of public perception and business standing, but it’s almost intangible. Understanding reputation within a business context is evolving, and it’s evolving for the better.
Your brand’s reputation isn’t just some fuzzy concept; it’s an incredibly valuable asset, and it’s fuelled by everything you say and do.
PR professionals are like strategic guardians who proactively manage your public image. They help you control the narrative before little issues snowball into big ones. But great agencies aren’t spin doctors.
Great agencies are the ones who recognise issues and crises from a distance, then help keep you true to your values and ethos by avoiding the root cause entirely.
In today’s hyper-connected world, a well-managed reputation can be the difference between thriving and merely keeping your head above water.
Effective PR isn’t just about getting your name out there; it’s about strategically positioning your business for growth.
To this extent, PR isn’t a vanity project and strategic media coverage can do a whole lot more than make you feel good about seeing your name in print. It can:
PR folks aren’t just media hounds. They’re master communicators who understand how to craft messages that hit home across multiple platforms.
Marketing and PR are not about overloading a funnel with as much content and messaging as possible and hoping for the best.
Great PR and marketing is about honing in on what’s special and unique about your business and making that the central narrative. It is about telling great stories with this at its heart. PR can help you:
This approach, which blends creativity and strategy, ensures that when you speak, people don’t only listen but remember.
There’s no escaping the fact that budgets have a major effect on marketing decisions. We see this in the growing importance of PR as a cost-effective alternative to traditional advertising.
Compared to splashy ad campaigns, PR can offer a significantly higher return on investment. Because when done right, it can compound over time.
That’s where the real bang for your buck comes in.
PR generates predominantly organic results, which audiences find more trustworthy and engaging.
Starting from a position of earned media rather than paid placements can help you win and build audience trust. Then, over time, you introduce more paid elements across your full PR and marketing mix.
The amplification across paid and earned, shared and owned can spread your message exponentially and incrementally.
Now, this is quite a high-stakes area of PR and one where no business is immune.
At face value, it’s easy to see crisis management solely as a reactionary tactic. But it shouldn’t be.
You need to recognise the impact proactive planning can have on a smaller, more manageable level. We call this issues management, and its something that only comes with a wealth of crisis communications.
When you have an expert who’s been through crisis after crisis, they know the patterns and the triggers. They can see what others cannot: the root cause of a crisis and how to avoid it.
In practice, this could be anything from managing negative reviews, addressing product recalls, or navigating leadership changes. These are just a few examples of crisis management, which businesses can leverage for protection and recovery.
Avoiding a crisis entirely is always the preferred option. But sometimes, there are those unforeseen and unavoidable moments. Things that could never have been predicted. Whether it is in issues preparedness or full-blown crisis management, a PR expert can help you:
The best way to think about crisis preparedness is that you’d rather have it and not need it than need it and not have it.
Rome wasn’t built in a day. Neither is your brand.
Every business needs to play the long game when it comes to positioning, and public relations is a marathon, not a sprint.
It gradually builds your brand’s equity and positioning through consistent communication of your values, achievements, and unique perspective. This binding together of narratives doesn’t happen overnight. This is a cumulative effect.
It’s not about quick wins or overnight success stories but rather creating a sustained narrative that positions you as an innovative, reliable, and forward-thinking organisation.
Public relations isn’t just another item on your marketing checklist; it’s an investment in your business’s most critical asset: reputation.
It’s a strategic communication discipline that goes far beyond simple publicity.
Remember that PR is a broad church.
It’s no longer just about media relations, though that’s still part of what we do. Contemporary PR is now entwined with specialisms like content creation and production, SEO and the nascent GEO (now being called LLM SEO).
In short, the line between public relations and marketing continues to blur.
But while PR and marketing are often bucketed together, it’s important to recognise that while they can indeed be complementary, they are two very different disciplines.
PR is about building meaningful connections, telling compelling stories and creating lasting value that resonates with audiences long after they’ve forgotten your latest marketing campaign.
AMBITIOUS by name and by nature, we are a PR led communications agency that delivers integrated strategic communications - online, offline and everywhere in-between. Proud to be crowned winners of The Drum Magazine's RAR Best PR Agency of the Year.
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