Wednesday, November 25, 2015

[New Post] PR’s Role in Promoting Your Corporate Social Responsibility Program

 

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PR’s Role in Promoting Your Corporate Social Responsibility Program

Victoria Harres

Corporate Social Responsibility Public Relations Tips

Businesses used to revolve primarily around growth, revenue, and costs – the economic bottom line.

However, today's customers want to know that the organizations they buy products from or do business with share their values, leading many businesses to embrace corporate social responsibility (CSR) as a way of life.

The triple bottom line – one that demonstrates a company's positive impact on its finances, the communities it does business with, and the environments it affects – is a must in a healthy business model.

The role of marketing and public relations in these CSR initiatives is to make sure customers are aware of a brand's programs and efforts. This calls for well-planned campaigns that build relationships and demonstrate a company's commitment in an authentic manner.

Engaging established and respected CSR influencers, whether they are journalists, bloggers, or key stakeholders, can be critical to communications success. Although owned and paid media shouldn't be ignored, earned media from key CSR influencers has the potential of spreading your message much further.

Familiarize Yourself with CSR Trends and Practices

Before launching any communications, it's important to have a strong understanding of the overall CSR landscape. If you're not already familiar with the topic, you'll want to start your research with keyword searches on social media and Google, then go deeper by reading articles, blog posts, white papers, and perhaps some books.

Get familiar with new websites and publications that may come up. If you have access to a PR targeting tool, use it to identify CSR-related publications that you can add to your reading list.

See What Others are Doing

Don't forget the value of seeing how other organizations are talking about their social and sustainability initiatives. Research what other brands are doing by reading press releases or following PR Newswire's Twitter account @TotalCSR.

Use search engines to find stories that succeeded in getting earned media, then look at how the organization communicated their efforts.

You don't want to copy a successful CSR communications plan, but you certainly want to learn from it and leverage methodologies that align with your own initiatives.

best practices for public relations growth

Get to Know Your Audience

Authenticity is key to CSR outreach, so make sure your understanding of it is more than cursory.

Although you may already have an understanding of your brand or industry's overall CSR audience, you'll have to dig deeper to isolate the contingency speaking out about the social causes related to your activities. If you have access to a monitoring platform, you'll want to add keywords around the programs you're running, such as: environment, social good, or sustainability.

Identify Your Influencers

Your research will help you identify some key CSR influencers in your industry. Start making a list. Follow them on Twitter, subscribe to their blogs, and bookmark publications they regularly write for.

You should also use a media targeting tool to build your list of influencers beyond the bloggers, journalists, and industry stakeholders you've identified in your own network.

However, don't just run a list based on a couple of keywords and call it a day. Any good media list is well-researched and pruned.

You waste the influencer's time and your own by trying to get them to cover something that is not of interest to them.

You have to read their work and understand what they write or speak publicly about. Yes, it means more research, but it will be well worth it when you get genuine coverage for your story. Earned media is still the best way to influence potential buyers.

Build Relationships on Social

A relationship can start with something as simple as a handshake or a retweet. In-person meetings aside, you'll definitely want to leverage Twitter to make your brand and its initiatives known in the CSR space.

If your brand is small, you might use your main Twitter account, but if your flagship account already has a lot going on, it might be wise to have a separate Twitter profile for your CSR efforts.

Follow, retweet, and engage in conversations started by the influencers you've identified. Share others' content. Don't be pushy and certainly don't make these interactions all about you.

You also want to make sure your understanding of the topics you comment on is current. This means going back to step one over and over to do more research.

Don't Forget Your Internal Influencers

It's easy to overlook some very important influencers: Your employees!

At their heart, CSR programs are grassroots efforts. You have to get company buy-in by empowering the internal influencers who can motivate change across your organization. A top-down approach doesn't work as well.

The collective online reach of your workforce would be a huge miss to ignore. Think of how many Facebook friends, Twitter followers, LinkedIn connections, etc. that each employee has – it starts to add up.

Whether it's charitable giving, an office volunteer day, or a long-term CSR program, you want to tell people about it. Encourage your employees to share – with photos and videos – what they're doing. Then amplify their posts by curating and re-sharing some of them on your own channels.

Doing so can have a significant effect on staff morale. People want to feel good about what they do and who they work for.

A well-communicated CSR program will make a positive impact not only on the environment and community, but also on sales, recruiting, and employee retention. It's a win all the way around.

If you’re not leveraging your CSR initiatives and other company enrichment programs in your public relations strategy, you’re not taking full advantage of PR’s power.

Download Best Practices for Growth: Aligning PR Programs to Corporate Strategy to learn more about using public relations to influence everything from your company's web traffic and lead generation to buyer and investor decisions.

Victoria Harres is vice president, strategic communications and content at PR Newswire. She was the original twitterer on @PRNewswire and continues as part of that team. If she's not at her desk, you'll find her in the garden.

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Tuesday, November 24, 2015

[New Post] Grammar Hammer: Stuffing vs. Dressing and Content Localization’s Importance

 

Blogs

Grammar Hammer: Stuffing vs. Dressing and Content Localization’s Importance

Catherine Spicer

Stuffing vs Dressing Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving turkeys are being brined or defrosted. The Butterball Turkey Talk-Line® is up and running. Millions are either making travel plans to head over the river and through the woods to grandmother's house, or preparing for the onslaught of family and friends to arrive at their doorstep, ready for the big meal.

When someone talks about turkey with all the trimmings, I'm always curious to hear what they call the dish that accompanies the bird.

Is it stuffing or is it dressing?

People land squarely in one camp or the other on this topic; there isn't much middle ground.

If you stuff the bird, you call it stuffing. If you serve it as a dish on the side, it's a dressing. If you are south of the Mason-Dixon line, it's dressing no matter where it goes (either inside the bird or next to it). Northern states call it stuffing.

Historically, you can trace this dish's origins to the 16th century where you can find recipes for a "forcemeat or other seasoned mixture used to fill the body of a fowl before cooking."

Regardless of what goes in your bird or next to it, how you refer to it is influenced by regionalization.

Although the stuffing/dressing debate makes for amusing holiday dinner conversation, language regionalization and content localization are important topics to keep in mind throughout the year.

Writing Tips for Press Releases in a Digital Age

Consider the content you create and the products you promote for your brand. Are your products and services only available in certain markets or can they be shipped anywhere in the world? Are you talking to a specific regional audience or do you need to tailor your message for a broader appeal?

I remember one of the first times I went to see a show at Second City Theater in Chicago with my visiting parents. I was laughing hysterically at jokes that they didn't get since they weren't local to Chicago.

Content you want to send to a specific geographic region should be developed and managed with the local level in mind. You or the distribution partner you work with should have an established network of local contacts who will get your information to your intended audience. Your content also can be personalized for even more effective outreach.

When we work with customers who are sending press releases outside of the U.S., our translators localize the translations. This is because the direct translation of a word or phrase doesn't always translate, literally.

Understanding a language's regional variations is crucial to getting your story out to a global audience. Not doing so can result in your message falling flat. Even worse, doing it incorrectly can lead to embarrassment for your brand..

If you are wading into a new market, help them see why your story matters. Download our white paper Setting the Record Straight: Press Releases that Stand Out in the Digital Age for more tips on writing content that hits the right audience in the right way.

Author Catherine Spicer is a manager of customer content services with more than 20 years' experience counseling brands on their content. She also authors Beyond PR's long-running Grammar Hammer series. Follow Cathy on Twitter @cathyspicer and tweet her your #grammargripes. For those who are interested, she will be serving her grandmother's cornbread dressing at Thanksgiving.

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