Two Worlds Coming Together: The Marriage Of PR & Marketing

Pub­lic rela­tions and mar­ket­ing are relat­ed and can work togeth­er and learn from each oth­er to increase the effec­tive­ness of dig­i­tal cam­paigns.

Bas van den Beld By Bas van den Beld from State of Digital. Join the discussion » 2 comments

One of the big chal­lenges of a mod­ern-day CMO is to break down walls between the dif­fer­ent silos inside the com­pa­ny and make mar­ket­ing peo­ple work with sales and PR teams. But how? They all seem to be very fond of their own lit­tle ter­ri­to­ry. And they are all “so dif­fer­ent.” Or are they? Let’s look at how mar­ket­ing and PR can work togeth­er and learn from each oth­er.


Aren’t PR And Marketing The Same Thing?

It’s a ques­tion you hear a lot: Aren’t pub­lic rela­tions and mar­ket­ing the same thing? Actu­al­ly, they aren’t, but the con­fu­sion is under­stand­able. After all, take a look at the def­i­n­i­tions:

  • Mar­ket­ing: the action or busi­ness of pro­mot­ing and sell­ing prod­ucts or ser­vices, includ­ing mar­ket research and adver­tis­ing.
  • Pub­lic rela­tions (PR): the prac­tice of man­ag­ing the spread of infor­ma­tion between an indi­vid­ual or an orga­ni­za­tion (such as a busi­ness, gov­ern­ment agency, or a non­prof­it orga­ni­za­tion) and the pub­lic.

If you work and think like many orga­ni­za­tions do and your mind­set is “I have a good prod­uct, I want to tell the world,” then, yes, they seem the same. In that case, after all, the goal is the same: spread­ing a mes­sage.

But if you have this way of think­ing, it also means you are only doing part of what mar­ket­ing and PR should be doing.

So how are they dif­fer­ent?

In the past, the dif­fer­ence between mar­ket­ing and PR has been quite clear, but these days the lines are blur­ring a bit. How­ev­er, you can say these ele­ments are defin­ing the dif­fer­ence between the two:

Advertising vs. “Free” Publicity

Tra­di­tion­al­ly mar­ket­ing has always been put on the adver­tis­ing side: you pay for mar­ket­ing, where­as PR is free. This means if you buy a big ad in a mag­a­zine, it’s mar­ket­ing, but if you get your CEO to be inter­viewed for the same mag­a­zine, it is PR.

Goals: Direct Value vs. Brand Value

Mar­ket­ing has a direct line with sales. When a mar­ket­ing cam­paign is start­ed, there are clear goals: In the end, we want to sell more. Even when it is not about direct sell­ing, the goals are clear: We want down­loads, we want vis­its or we want clicks.

PR, on the oth­er hand, is much more vague. It’s about brand val­ue. PR aims to make sure that the asso­ci­a­tion you have with a brand is right.

The fact that George Clooney is part of the Nespres­so cam­paigns in Europe is a clear PR strat­e­gy: It shows the brand and it will make peo­ple remem­ber the brand. We will, how­ev­er, not buy one more cup of Nespres­so cof­fee because George Clooney is there, but we will like the brand a bit more.

Controlling The Message: Get It Out There vs. Full Control

A big dif­fer­ence between mar­ket­ing and PR is how we han­dle mes­sag­ing.

Mar­keters want to get a mes­sage out there and let it “ride,” let it go viral and get input back from the audi­ence.

PR pro­fes­sion­als, on the oth­er hand, gen­er­al­ly want to have more con­trol. The word “spin” comes to mind. PR pros wants to craft a mes­sage and get that exact mes­sage placed with the exact right peo­ple, so the audi­ence will be influ­enced by it.

Measurement: Business ROI vs. No ROI

When it comes to the out­come of cam­paigns, Mar­ket­ing cam­paigns are looked at very dif­fer­ent­ly than PR cam­paigns.

Mar­ket­ing is gen­er­al­ly seen as busi­ness, which means it has direct goals in mea­sure­ments and there needs to be an ROI: i.e., new cus­tomers com­ing in.

When it comes to PR, how­ev­er, the mea­sure­ment is much more dif­fi­cult and thus, in most cas­es, they fail to put an ROI on the cam­paigns sim­ply because they can’t mea­sure it prop­er­ly. A change in per­cep­tion, after all, isn’t some­thing you can put in num­bers.

Where PR And Marketing Come Together: The Impact Of Digital

Some say PR is part of mar­ket­ing, but I wouldn’t sug­gest say­ing that to a PR per­son. They prob­a­bly won’t like you for it.

Dig­i­tal has changed how PR and mar­ket­ing are defined quite a bit, but most­ly in “who is doing what.” Out­reach used to be a PR job, but now mar­keters do out­reach as well: It start­ed off with the search mar­keters try­ing to get links and it evolved into guest post­ing and oth­er relat­ed strate­gies that are actu­al­ly a PR job, but are now most­ly done by mar­keters.

In oth­er words, PR and mar­ket­ing are relat­ed and they can work togeth­er and learn from each oth­er.

What Can PR Learn From Marketing?

The rapid­ly chang­ing dig­i­tal land­scape seems to be eas­i­er to get a grip on for mar­keters than for PR pro­fes­sion­als. This has to do with data. Where the PR professional’s job was to get a mes­sage to a jour­nal­ist, for exam­ple, who would then make sure it was “shown” to many at once, nowa­days social media has tak­en a big part of the role of the jour­nal­ist, which, in turn, means that the role of the PR pro­fes­sion­al changes.

For mar­keters, it seems to be more nat­ur­al to work with “audi­ences” because they nat­u­ral­ly are more work­ing with data. Fig­ur­ing out what an audi­ence actu­al­ly “wants” can be done using data, and mar­keters are more used to that. But it’s the oppo­site approach: where PR pro­fes­sion­als used to think from the “mes­sage” per­spec­tive, they now need to think from the “audi­ence” per­spec­tive: what do they want to hear instead of what do I want them to hear?

This is where mar­keters can help the PR depart­ment. Mea­sure, then share. Give infor­ma­tion about what is hap­pen­ing and what the audi­ence wants, based on the mar­keters’ expe­ri­ences and mea­sure­ments.

What Can Marketing Learn From PR?

One of the “hot terms” used in mar­ket­ing these days is “sto­ry­telling.” We tell the sto­ry of our com­pa­ny, we try and make a sto­ry of our prod­uct and we try to involve the audi­ence in sto­ry­telling.

Sto­ry­telling might be a “new” word in mar­ket­ing, but it actu­al­ly has been done by PR pro­fes­sion­als for ages. When Edward Bernays intro­duced “PR” as pro­pa­gan­da back in the ear­ly 20th cen­tu­ry, he used a lot of sto­ry­telling to give peo­ple the “feel­ing” they need­ed to do some­thing.

Take one of his most famous cam­paigns, for exam­ple, in which he got many women to smoke in pub­lic. Pre­vi­ous­ly, women were arrest­ed when smok­ing in pub­lic, but he staged a “sto­ry” in which a group of mod­els lit Lucky Strike cig­a­rettes dur­ing the East­er parade in New York. He made sure the cig­a­rettes were seen as “torch­es of free­dom,” cre­at­ing a sto­ry of rebel­lion instead of an adver­tis­ing cam­paign.

This type of sto­ry­telling is in a PR professional’s DNA. They know exact­ly how to tell the sto­ry of a brand or a prod­uct. Mar­keters should lis­ten to PR pro­fes­sion­als on this. And you can see this hap­pen­ing with, for exam­ple, e‑mail sub­scribe but­tons on web­sites chang­ing from “click here” to “join a group of experts.” The entry of psy­chol­o­gy in mar­ket­ing can be (and is) fueled by PR.

Mar­keters were used to “sell­ing type” con­tent, or con­tent with a direct goal. Now, con­tent, with the rise of con­tent mar­ket­ing, is much more indi­rect.

Working together

Mar­ket­ing and PR def­i­nite­ly aren’t the same. They do, how­ev­er, serve a sim­i­lar goal. That means work­ing togeth­er will make both par­ties much stronger. It will increase the effec­tive­ness of cam­paigns with the data of the mar­keter and it will increase the per­sua­sive pow­er of the cam­paigns with the knowl­edge and tac­tics of a PR pro.

And we are see­ing the two come togeth­er with­out maybe even real­iz­ing it. Con­tent mar­ket­ing is a good exam­ple with the sto­ries that are told there. Also think about influ­ence mar­ket­ing — how is that not a great exam­ple of two worlds com­ing togeth­er? And think about Social Media in gen­er­al. This is where the mea­sure­ment can come togeth­er, because now we can mea­sure change in per­cep­tion based on how peo­ple behave on Social Media.

PR and mar­ket­ing are slow­ly grow­ing togeth­er. That doesn’t mean they are the same, but they do make each oth­er stronger.

The key is that mar­keters and PR peo­ple start work­ing on cam­paigns and projects togeth­er, from the start. The silos real­ly need to be bro­ken down. If mar­keters do what they do best and PR pro­fes­sion­als do what they do best, but they don’t com­mu­ni­cate quick­ly enough, most things will be less effec­tive. If, how­ev­er, they work togeth­er from the start, cus­tomer out­reach will sky­rock­et.

Bas van den Beld

Written by Bas van den Beld

Digital Marketing Strategist, State of Digital

Bas van den Beld is an award winning Digital Marketing consultant, trainer and speaker. He is the founder of State of Digital and helps companies develop solid marketing strategies.

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