Media Relations
eBook - ePub

Media Relations

Issues and strategies

  1. 304 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Media Relations

Issues and strategies

Book details
Book preview
Table of contents
Citations

About This Book

Public relations and the media are in a time of major change. The rise of social media, altered media platforms, evolving legislative environments and new models of communication have altered not only the working environments of public relations and the news and entertainment media, but also many aspects of how these industries work together. Media Relations provides a practical and thorough introduction to media work in this changing environment. Based on a solid understanding of media culture and theory, Jane Johnston shows how to steer a path between the technical and human elements of media relations. She drills down into the different types of media, analysing their applications, strengths and weaknesses, and shows how to target your message to the right media outlets, whether national television, community radio, celebrity magazines or influential blogs.This second edition has been revised throughout and includes new case studies, and new chapters on digital and social media, media campaigns, and legal and ethical considerations.' Media Relations: Issues and Strategies is written in an engaging, easy to understand style. It provides excellent examples and cases of media relations.' - Global Media Journal

Frequently asked questions

Simply head over to the account section in settings and click on “Cancel Subscription” - it’s as simple as that. After you cancel, your membership will stay active for the remainder of the time you’ve paid for. Learn more here.
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
Both plans give you full access to the library and all of Perlego’s features. The only differences are the price and subscription period: With the annual plan you’ll save around 30% compared to 12 months on the monthly plan.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, we’ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes, you can access Media Relations by Jane Johnston in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Languages & Linguistics & Communication Studies. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Routledge
Year
2020
ISBN
9781000246582
Edition
2

1 MEDIA RELATIONS IN CONTEXT

This book is about the working relationship between public relations (PR) and the media—the role of media relations. This is one of the best known segments of the public relations mix; its outcomes are often tangible and visible, whether printed in a newspaper, published on the internet or broadcast on radio or television. But achieving and managing media coverage is just the tip of the media relations iceberg. Media relations is also about establishing professional relationships, knowing the way your professional counterparts (in this case, the news media) operate, understanding the timeframes, deadlines, varied formats and practices of this profession, and using the media as a barometer for society, as well as a launching pad for your own initiatives.
As with any field of practice, it is important to know the environment in which you will be working. The book therefore investigates the shifting terrains of the modern media and introduces some key theoretical concepts that underpin contemporary media practice. It analyses the current state of play in the media environments of newspapers, radio and television, magazines, the web and the blogosphere, as well as sections of the entertainment media like reality TV, panel shows and lifestyle programs. It takes a look at trends and changes within contemporary media, including the impact and adoption of social media, and how public relations professionals working within these industries and platforms can best operate. Throughout, the book aims to remain focused on the people who work within these media environments: journalists, editors, news producers and bloggers—the individuals with whom the media relations professional will engage to get their story published and heard. Finally, it presents a range of tools and techniques that may be employed in this practice—from preparing a media campaign to putting together the components of media kits, releases, conferences, events, social media and more.
While the field of media relations is a practical one, it requires research and reflection to grow and develop. This book works towards this goal, with a balance of analysis, policy, theory and practice to place media relations in context within the profession of public relations, the news (and sometimes entertainment) media and the changing patterns of society.

THE MEDIA AND CHANGE

The media are facing a time of massive change. With the emergence of the internet as one of the primary forms of communication, media commentators across the globe have begun questioning the news media’s capacity to adapt: How have the news media reorganised themselves in the contemporary media environment? What other media channels are now the dominant forms of information in local, national and global contexts? Is glocal—a mix of local and global—the way forward? In Australia, Tony Moore (2010, p. vii) argues that the internet will be ‘journalism’s saviour. What will perish, however, is the 20th century’s version of journalism’. The ‘model’ of journalism that has held since the introduction of the printing press is now outdated. Prophesies from all over the world predict massive change; book titles such as Changing Journalism (Lee-Wright, Phillips and Witschge, 2012) and Will the Last Reporter Please Turn Out the Lights (McChesney and Pickard, 2011) focus on significant shifts in the media, referring to it as being at best in a period of ‘transition’ (Lee-Wright et al., 2012, back cover) and at worst in a ‘meltdown’ and ‘crisis’ (McChesney and Pickard, 2011, back cover). In his book, The Vanishing Newspaper, Meyer predicts that the final copy of the final newspaper will appear on somebody’s doorstep in 2043 (Meyer, 2004). However, many see change as a way to strengthen the news media: ‘Citizen journalism will not make institutional journalism redundant or irrelevant . . . it will make traditional journalism stronger, better, more responsive. Sceptics tend to make you lift your game’ (McDonald, in Deitz, 2010, p. xii). However the change is articulated, the media are, as McChesney and Pickard (2011) explain, on a ‘new and shifting terrain’.
In the few years since the first edition of this book was published in 2007, social media have changed the ways individuals, corporations, governments and the not-for-profit sector communicate—this includes how the media communicate to their audiences and how we, as media relations professionals, communicate with the media.
At the same time, social media and other digital technologies have also provided the means to circumvent the need for working with the news media, reaching niche audiences and publics via targeted alternative channels of communication such as Twitter, Facebook or YouTube. Communication choices have never been greater, but the issue is where to start, which to choose and how to make the best choices. This book is all about providing choices from the sea of news and entertainment media, and using the variety of communication channels now available to us.
News is still news, whether it’s distributed in a 140-word tweet, a radio or newspaper story or TV panel show—or all of these. The important issue is whether the news reaches the audience it is intended to reach. Very often, if the story is interesting enough, one story or medium will lead to another. Take, for example, the ‘Gasp gaff ’ in which Melbourne clothing store Gasp became the focus of a major news story after a confrontation with a bride-to-be shopper in late 2011. An email response by Gasp to a complaint by the shopper went viral and the story began to trend in social media, on Twitter and Facebook, with ‘Boycott Gasp’ and ‘We hate Gasp’ social networking sites springing up immediately. At the same time, the story became mainstream news, with articles and interviews on Channel 7’s Sunrise, Channel 10’s The Project, newspapers The Age, the Sydney Morning Herald, the Herald Sun, radio station NovaFM and made international news in the Daily Mail and Telegraph in the United Kingdom. The story trended for days in both mainstream and social media, illustrating how news spreads like wildfire across all mediums and around the globe, and how both news and social media continue to fan each other’s flames.
The choices available to the news media, including citizen-generated material, provide both opportunities and challenges to journalists and other media workers—opportunities because the choice of material available to the news gatherer is so huge, and challenges because these very choices now compete with the media for attention and audience share. The media relations professional, too, must work strategically if they are successfully to reach their audiences in the competitive and saturated ocean of media and information sources.
With this is mind, it seems logical that public relations professionals will shift more and more to specialising within the industry. As noted in Johnston and Zawawi (2009), just as other professions (such as doctors) include both general practitioners and specialists, public relations is now taking this specialised approach, too. Increasingly, organisations are employing social media experts to work alongside their traditional media experts—organisations like the Law Institute of Victoria and Bond University, which have adopted social media strategies with newly appointed social media coordinators. At the very least, media relations experts must also be social media savvy, able to work across platforms to maximise impact and reach, and to work collaboratively with others in the 360-degree media environment.

MEDIA RELATIONS IN THE PUBLIC RELATIONS MIX

But media relations is just part of the bigger picture of public relations, so it is useful to take a step back to look at that bigger picture. As outlined in Johnston and Zawawi (2009), confusion remains over just what public relations is because it is an inappropriately and over-used term—that is, people see great ‘public relations’ as being any behaviour that has a positive outcome. In addition, it encompasses such an array of roles, tasks and functions, as noted by Foster (1995), who found 74 different titles used in job advertisements for people performing public relations roles. One study found that, over a 70-year period, a total of 472 definitions for public relations had been developed (Harlow, in Lamme and Russell, 2010, p. 284). Indeed, public relations has been described as ‘amoebic in its ease at changing shape to functionally conform to different situations and circumstances’ (Cropp and Pincus, 2001, p. 194). A working definition sees public relations understanding and facilitating the needs of the various publics that surround and interact with an organisation or group. The media constitute one of these publics.
Media relations is among the best-known fields of public relations because its work can be seen in media outputs. Nevertheless, it is sometimes viewed as a ‘soft’ part of public relations—not as complex as issues management, or as urgent as crisis management, as personal as community relations or as specialised as financial relations. But since media relations often plays a part in each of these areas of public relations (and many others), it is more useful to recast it as providing important access points and communications options for the industry as a whole. A strong working relationship with journalists, bloggers and other members of the media translates into smoother practices right across the spectrum of public relations activities and functions.
Media relations is often classed as a technical area of public relations work associated with publicity. Much of media relations is indeed technical—writing and distributing media releases, media alerts and media kits, staging media conferences, maintaining up-to-date media distribution lists, photographs, video and audio materials, and updating online organisational information are all important parts of the role. These tools are outlined and described in later chapters. However, media relations comprises much more than compiling, writing, distributing and posting information for the media. It also requires skills that are more complex than ‘using’ the media simply to get a message out or control a story. Successful media relations is underpinned by knowing more than what to do to achieve your goals: it also requires that you consider why you do what you do in the first place and how you would best achieve it. By implementing some of the generic skills commonly associated with public relations—careful research, strategic planning and implementation, clear and succinct writing, and systematic evaluation—media relations practitioners can achieve the best possible outcomes for their clients, themselves and the media.
Media relations is one of the 20 or more primary roles and functions of the public relations practitioner, and is equally important in all three sectors of society: the political, corporate and ‘third’ (or not-for-profit) sectors. There are few definitions of media relations to help establish how we might best define the field. To provide us with some parameters, the following definition brings together its key elements:
Media relations is the ongoing facilitation and coordination of communication and relationships between an individual, group or organisation and the media.
This definition suggests that the media relations practitioner holds a dual role with the media: both as a communicator but also as a relationship manager. It further identifies how media relations can be undertaken at many levels—within an organisation or group of people, or individually. This definition will resonate as you work your way through the book and learn more about the multi-faceted role of the media relations professional.

THE IMPACT OF MEDIA RELATIONS

Partly because of its great flexibility and adaptability, and partly because of the growing recognition that organisations need to communicate effectively in an increasingly complex information world, public relations has become a growth industry. In 1989, Australian political academic Rod Tiffen described public relations as ‘one of the most spectacular growth industries in Australia’ (1989, p. 71), noting how the number of public relations practitioners employed in the 1980s was ten times greater than the number employed in the 1960s (1989, p. 73). Since that time, those figures have continued to rise at exponential rates. In 2010, it was estimated that 822 public relations and marketing personnel were employed by the Victorian state government (Rolfe and Kearney, 2010). In 2008, Queensland Premier Anna Bligh said 320 media and public relations officers were employed in that state—compared with 46 such positions in Queensland less than 20 years earlier (EARC, 1993). Likewise, the industry has seen massive growth internationally. Davis (2000) notes that from 1979 to 1996, the number of information officers in the British government’s Central Office rose from 36 to 160. And, in 2005, Fortune magazine listed public relations as one of the top ten fastest growing professions in the United States (Fisher, 2005).
Accompanying this growth is a rise in information supplied to the media—through either media releases or other public relations-initiated materials. International studies show that the media have become more and more reliant on media relations materials. Lewis, Williams and Franklin (2008) studied 2207 newspaper stories from five newspapers in the United Kingdom and found that public relations and wire agency (such as the Press Association, see Chapter 2) copy represented 88 per cent of stories. They suggest a ‘clear linear process in which PR material is reproduced by agency journalists whose copy is, in turn, reproduced in the news media’ (2008, p. 15). Davies (2008, p. 74) confirms this, noting that news is based largely on ‘two primary conveyor belts: the Press Association and public relations’.
In Australia, studies by journalism academics and public relations professionals have reached the same conclusion: that journalism relies heavily on media relations-generated material. Brisbane public relations firm Brumfield, Bird and Sandford’s (BBS) 2007 Media Survey report found 55 per cent of journalists use press releases to create news (Edwards and Newbury, 2007, p. 3). Their 2011 media study, which focused on bloggers rather than mainstream journalists, found that 42 per cent of bloggers had used media releases or other PR material more than once (Edwards and Newbury, 2011, p. 17). In Sydney, the Centre for Independent Journalism (CIJ) and the independent news organisation Crikey.com found similar outcomes: nearly 55 per cent of stories were ‘driven by some form of public relations— media release, public relations professional or some form of promotion’ (Crikey, 2010).
An earlier Australian study found 31 per cent of press releases were used, either wholly or partly, in mainstream media, with far higher figures found in trade and specialist media (Macnamara, 2001). This trend had been developing for some time; in 1994, well over half of news in three daily papers was found to have been generated by public relations sources (Zawawi, 1994), while in 1993, other research found a heavy reliance by media outlets on government media releases, with 279 media releases resulting in 220 news stories that had been ‘reproduced virtually unchanged’ (EARC, 1993, p. 70). The trend has become known as ‘media release journalism’.
But it is not just media releases that are used in media relations. Information made available to the news media has been called ‘news subsidies’ and ‘information subsidies’ (Gandy, 1982)—which simply means that it subsidises or adds to the news that the media finds itself. As well as the media release and media conference—both of which are described in detail in later chapters—there are a range of other channels for distributing information or news either to the media or directly to the public. These include:
  • talkback radio public responses
  • letters to the editor
  • media interviews
  • speeches
  • attendance at public meetings
  • emails
  • Twitter
  • Facebook postings
  • YouTube videos
  • blogs
  • leaks
  • phone calls.
As the media and communications environment becomes increasingly cluttered with this activity, it is becoming much more difficult to track the sources of news. Reich (2010, p. 81) refers to the ‘elusive and fragmented streams of textual and oral PR input reaching the journalists i...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Contents
  5. Acknowledgements
  6. 1 Media relations in context
  7. 2 Understanding the media environment
  8. 3 Theorising media relations
  9. 4 Law and ethics in media relations
  10. 5 Working with the news media
  11. 6 Media relations campaigns
  12. 7 Media releases
  13. 8 Media kits, guides and online media centres
  14. 9 Media conferences, 'famils' and events
  15. 10 Not just the news
  16. 11 Working with newspapers and magazines
  17. 12 Working with radio and television
  18. 13 Working with the internet and social media
  19. References
  20. Index