| Add You |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > PR > Mind Your Own Business! |
|
Add You - Mind Your Own Business!
Public Relations and Painting Companies believable - not
aggressive or overbearing - as it outlines in plain language the
simple truth of the matter.What types of public relations projects can a painting contractor do to promote positive community goodwill? Well let me throw an idea out there for you? Why not join a Neighborhood Mobile Watch Program. Why? Well because painting companies are often referred by HOAs Home Owners Associations and it makes sense to help them with their needs, Also consider if you will the Painting Companies method of operations and over all business model for a second or two;PAINTING COMPANIES: These are usually run by owner operators and have many accounts from How do you move messages from your business to the eyes and ears of members of your key target audience? You use communications tactics, or "beasts of burden" as I like to call them. There are a ton of them and their job is to carry your message directly to the attention of key audience members. Tactics range from Internet communications, facility tours, editorial board meetings and press releases to broadcast interviews, promotional contests, brochures, face-to-face meetings and many others. But how do you know whether the effort is 10 Reasons Why Your Company Needs Custom Invitations And the best way to mind your own business is to insure that
those audiences whose behaviors have the greatest effect on
your enterprise keep thinking about you in the most positive
way. Reason is, bad behaviors often follow bad perceptions,
so what your external audiences think about you can mean
success or failure.I am always amazed when I hear about companies who spend tens of thousands of dollars organizing a make-it-or-break-it company event designed to celebrate a company milestone and/or impress prospective customers. Sometimes these events have big contracts or sales at stake! Yet, often planners will fall short on the most critical aspect of planning the event—the invitations! After all, before a client steps foot into your venue, or even confirms attendance, the invitation sets the tone and leaves the first and most important (and lasting!) impression!< It's not hard to do, but it's something you must attend to on a regular basis. How? Try this. Nobody can do it all, so put those outside audiences in order-of-importance with the REALLY key audience at the top-of-the-list. Once prioritized. and beginning with #1, learn more about what's on the minds of that audience. In other words, monitor their feelings and perceptions about you and your business. Ask questions. While you will appreciate positive input (and take it into account), it's absence of awareness, misconceptions, inaccuracies and hard feelings that you're really after because that's what can cause you grief. Also, stay alert for similar indicators coming from print and broadcast media, emails, and business and community speeches and pronouncements. In public relations, we know that people act on their own perception of the facts before them, which leads to predictable behaviors about which something can be done. So, when we create, change or reinforce that opinion by reaching, persuading and moving-to-desired-action those people whose behaviors affect the organization, the public relations mission is accomplished. O.K., you've now gathered a lot of information about how your key target audience feels or doesn't feel about you and/or your business. What do you do with it? You establish your public relations goal. For example, correct this inaccuracy; straighten out that misconception; reinforce and strengthen a slightly positive perception; change a view of your business that's just plain wrong. But now, you need a strategy to help you achieve that goal. In public relations, that means you get to choose one of three basic strategies: create opinion (perceptions) where none may exist; change existing opinion; or reinforce it. Take another look at the public relations goal you've established and make certain that the strategy you've selected is a logical match. Which brings you to "the message." Exactly what meaning and what remedial understanding do you want to convey to members of that key target audience? Your message must be crystal-clear about the misconception, rumor, inaccuracy or wrong-minded belief you discovered while interacting with, and gathering information from members of that audience. The corrective message must be persuasive and believable - not aggressive or overbearing - as it outlines in plain language the simple truth of the matter. How do you move messages from your business to the eyes and ears of members of your key target audience? You use communications tactics, or "beasts of burden" as I like to call them. There are a ton of them and their job is to carry your message directly to the attention of key audience members. Tactics range from Internet communications, facility tours, editorial board meetings and press releases to broadcast interviews, promotional contests, brochures, face-to-face meetings and many others. But how do you know whether the effort is Here's How to Find Your Dream Career s, monitor
their feelings and perceptions about you and your business.
Ask questions. While you will appreciate positive input
(and take it into account), it's absence of awareness,
misconceptions, inaccuracies and hard feelings that you're
really after because that's what can cause you grief. Also,
stay alert for similar indicators coming from print and
broadcast media, emails, and business and community
speeches and pronouncements.Everyday millions of people go to jobs that they can't stand, with bosses that they can't stand, and do exactly what they can't stand doing. In a word, this life sucks. So hopefully in this article I can give you a bit of advice on how to find your dream career.Have you ever gone to work, and as you're supposed to be working, sat day dreaming about something that you'd rather be doing instead. Things such as fishing, quilting, building a new deck? Maybe even some other job title such as being a doctor solving medical cases that will In public relations, we know that people act on their own perception of the facts before them, which leads to predictable behaviors about which something can be done. So, when we create, change or reinforce that opinion by reaching, persuading and moving-to-desired-action those people whose behaviors affect the organization, the public relations mission is accomplished. O.K., you've now gathered a lot of information about how your key target audience feels or doesn't feel about you and/or your business. What do you do with it? You establish your public relations goal. For example, correct this inaccuracy; straighten out that misconception; reinforce and strengthen a slightly positive perception; change a view of your business that's just plain wrong. But now, you need a strategy to help you achieve that goal. In public relations, that means you get to choose one of three basic strategies: create opinion (perceptions) where none may exist; change existing opinion; or reinforce it. Take another look at the public relations goal you've established and make certain that the strategy you've selected is a logical match. Which brings you to "the message." Exactly what meaning and what remedial understanding do you want to convey to members of that key target audience? Your message must be crystal-clear about the misconception, rumor, inaccuracy or wrong-minded belief you discovered while interacting with, and gathering information from members of that audience. The corrective message must be persuasive and believable - not aggressive or overbearing - as it outlines in plain language the simple truth of the matter. How do you move messages from your business to the eyes and ears of members of your key target audience? You use communications tactics, or "beasts of burden" as I like to call them. There are a ton of them and their job is to carry your message directly to the attention of key audience members. Tactics range from Internet communications, facility tours, editorial board meetings and press releases to broadcast interviews, promotional contests, brochures, face-to-face meetings and many others. But how do you know whether the effort is Problem Employee? - Hold A Counsel Interview y reaching, persuading
and moving-to-desired-action those people whose behaviors
affect the organization, the public relations mission is
accomplished.A Counsel Interview is a practical approach to dealing with staff problems - and all such situations. Issues rarely solve themselves and therefore it is essential that managers recognise that a problem exists and then solves it as rapidly as possible, because an unhappy employee will not be working at optimum performance levels.Step One: Decide to Hold a Counsel InterviewWhere a situation is wrong, and is obviously going to get worse, take the positive decision to hold a counsel interview, it is the only way. Face the problem - do O.K., you've now gathered a lot of information about how your key target audience feels or doesn't feel about you and/or your business. What do you do with it? You establish your public relations goal. For example, correct this inaccuracy; straighten out that misconception; reinforce and strengthen a slightly positive perception; change a view of your business that's just plain wrong. But now, you need a strategy to help you achieve that goal. In public relations, that means you get to choose one of three basic strategies: create opinion (perceptions) where none may exist; change existing opinion; or reinforce it. Take another look at the public relations goal you've established and make certain that the strategy you've selected is a logical match. Which brings you to "the message." Exactly what meaning and what remedial understanding do you want to convey to members of that key target audience? Your message must be crystal-clear about the misconception, rumor, inaccuracy or wrong-minded belief you discovered while interacting with, and gathering information from members of that audience. The corrective message must be persuasive and believable - not aggressive or overbearing - as it outlines in plain language the simple truth of the matter. How do you move messages from your business to the eyes and ears of members of your key target audience? You use communications tactics, or "beasts of burden" as I like to call them. There are a ton of them and their job is to carry your message directly to the attention of key audience members. Tactics range from Internet communications, facility tours, editorial board meetings and press releases to broadcast interviews, promotional contests, brochures, face-to-face meetings and many others. But how do you know whether the effort is Checklists for Africa ne of three
basic strategies: create opinion (perceptions) where none may
exist; change existing opinion; or reinforce it.What the heck are Checklists for AFRICA I can hear you thinking.Well its just a kiwi term for making sure you have EVERYTHING COVERED!!!In selecting an Answer Service you should check the following points:[ ] At least 7 Testimonials that you can ring and speak to[ ] Protocols include, Addresses, phone numbers, contact messages, who to call and when and where, transferring details, special instructions, no call numbers, how to handle clients, how to handle new business, clear job descriptions, times available Take another look at the public relations goal you've established and make certain that the strategy you've selected is a logical match. Which brings you to "the message." Exactly what meaning and what remedial understanding do you want to convey to members of that key target audience? Your message must be crystal-clear about the misconception, rumor, inaccuracy or wrong-minded belief you discovered while interacting with, and gathering information from members of that audience. The corrective message must be persuasive and believable - not aggressive or overbearing - as it outlines in plain language the simple truth of the matter. How do you move messages from your business to the eyes and ears of members of your key target audience? You use communications tactics, or "beasts of burden" as I like to call them. There are a ton of them and their job is to carry your message directly to the attention of key audience members. Tactics range from Internet communications, facility tours, editorial board meetings and press releases to broadcast interviews, promotional contests, brochures, face-to-face meetings and many others. But how do you know whether the effort is Brand Building Across Media Categories believable - not
aggressive or overbearing - as it outlines in plain language the
simple truth of the matter.You decide a particular book will be the perfect holiday gift for Uncle Joe, and you’re surfing the web for a bookseller. Will you visit Amazon.com? Barnesandnoble.com? Ablebooks.com? Powells.com? Addall.com? Or one of thousands of other choices? Chances are, you won’t want to buy from a site you’ve never heard of, so you zero in on Amazon or Barnes & Noble.Such is the power of branding.Branded products and services stand out from the plethora of choices inundating today’s consumers. Branding gives your prospects a “shortcut” How do you move messages from your business to the eyes and ears of members of your key target audience? You use communications tactics, or "beasts of burden" as I like to call them. There are a ton of them and their job is to carry your message directly to the attention of key audience members. Tactics range from Internet communications, facility tours, editorial board meetings and press releases to broadcast interviews, promotional contests, brochures, face-to-face meetings and many others. But how do you know whether the effort is succeeding or not? You remonitor members of that key target audience, watching carefully for signs that perception (opinion) is moving in your direction. In other words, do you see progress towards achieving the public relations goal you established at the beginning of the program? For example, increasing numbers of people appear to understand why the rumor was wrong, or what they believed about your business was simply inaccurate. If your goal and strategy make sense, and if your message is persuasive and your communications tactics aggressive and well-targeted, signs of public understanding and acceptance will steadily increase. In which case minding one's business in this manner will prove especially rewarding as the public relations program achieves success. Please feel free to publish this article and resource box in your ezine, newsletter, offline publication or website. A copy would be appreciated at bobkelly@TNI.net.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Strategic Thinking Applied to Making Winning Presentations to Investors Top 10 Tips To Market & Build Your Professional Practice
|