It’s a jungle out there: wild, untamed and teeming with a huge number of PR strategy beasts. Some of them are fluffy, smell of freshly baked butterscotch cupcakes, and are begging to be tamed. Others are wilder than the fiercest south-easter whipping the Cape Point fynbos to within an inch of its life. They snarl and snap, have foul-smelling slobbery jowls, and teeth ready to rip you and your communication world to shreds.
Here are 10 shortish and sharpish thoughts that may be helpful as you navigate the perilous swampland of PR strategy.
1. Trust your instincts
Hold on to that very first gut reaction: the one that comes to you like a bolt of lightning while you’re reading through the pages of a brief. It’s the gleaming kernel of pure, honest genius that’s all too often lost in a mountain of clunking communications predictability.
2. Prioritise the market. Always
Your client is a toothpaste-maker. Her product has sorbitol, fluoride, calcium and the rose-scented burps of baby cherubs. But the market doesn’t care. Write a strat for the market. More sexy, kissable mouths. Less sorbitol. Fewer burping cherubs.
3. Segmentation is sexy
You can’t get every person in South Africa loving your client’s offering and swearing eternal brand loyalty to it. But you can get a very carefully defined and ring-fenced audience thinking it’s cool as cucumber ice cream. Segmentation is the magic that makes it happen.
4. Go look at the sky
You see that little two-by-two centimetre bit of blue? That’s for press releases. The rest is for all the other tools you have in your jangling toolbox. The communications world has exploded to include myriad platforms, tools and gadgets. Pick and choose the ones that are going to do the best job for this client, this strat and that target market.
5. Make the news if you have to
Propose things that blast through the clutter. Remember that brilliant strategy that had a scooter brand ticketing cars for being petrol-greedy? Now we’re talking …
6. Know your client
We’re not talking a quick whizz around the client website. Talk to people who know the chief marketing officer. Find out how people experience the brand. Have coffee with a journalist and ask the awkward questions. Be nosy. And let all that intel inform your strat.
7. Making the dream work
Talk to other people. Talk, especially, to people who are different to you: different genders, cultures, ages. Listen to them very carefully. This is not your personal magnum opus. It’s a strat that must reach a market. It’s a big, diverse world out there. It’s bigger and more diverse than little old you.
8. Be original
Get a pair of pliers and rip the “copy/paste” buttons off your computer keyboard. Throw them out the window. Bring fresh, original thought to every single strat you write. Not to is to betray your own intelligence; to defraud your client; and to set yourself up to fail.
9. Walk away
Stop pounding away at the keyboard. Give the mouse a break. Get up and go walk barefoot on the lawn. Take a shower. Bake a batch of ginger snaps. Let your ideas percolate. Wait for the flashes of insight and cleverness. They will come. Promise.
10. Look after number one
Be kind to yourself. Congratulate yourself generously and often on your cleverness. Eat ice cream. And, most of all, don’t take it all too seriously. Sure, it’s a serious business. But the best ideas come to people who have a light and playful heart. Make sure yours is a feather kitten.