Brand and deliver?
I attended an industry awards dinner last week and, as is customary with these events, much alcohol was consumed and much debate was had. I’m writing this because one of these debates struck me as more interesting than most. Can Brand PR really deliver?
The question was posed by the head of marketing for a global company with a long list of well known brands, so he’s well placed to make such an assertion. His exact comment (obviously filtered through the hazy fog one tends to have following such an event) was this; “if it is a choice between spending 100K on Brand PR or buying a 100Ks worth of additional media, I would take the media spend every time.”
His point I thought was incredibly valid. Here’s an in-house marketing person who is judged on sales and sales alone and who must ask himself always; “is this money well spent and will it deliver increased brand awareness and therefore increased sales?”
This got me thinking. Is there truly a place for Brand PR in these current gloomy economic times? Can we all put our hand on our hearts and say Brand PR has delivered time and time again? I thought not. The bottom line is Brand PR is difficult. Trying to get your brand intrinsically linked to a story is no mean feat. Why? Because Editors don’t want your brand there and certainly not if it is saying anything positive. They can smell a PR story a mile off and want your brand forcibly removed from it.
Can Brand PR, and I’m being specific here, no one is questioning whether other types of PR e.g. crisis, financial PR etc work, but specifically can Brand PR, show value against other, more guaranteed, forms of marketing.
The answer is categorically, Yes…sort of.
The classic PR answer, I know. But I say ‘sort of’ for a reason. It can work but provided it is undertaken in the right way and, more importantly, for the right reasons.
So the first of these is the right way. I see two fundamentals to Brand PR:
1) Through the line campaign themes - If you don’t have one consistent theme that is running through every aspect of your campaign it is hard to get good Brand PR.
2) The brand must be integral to the story - If you have 1), it makes 2) much easier.
If you have a consistent marketing theme running through your campaign and a creative angle that intrinsically links your brand to that theme, and therefore the core of the story, you can get great Brand PR. Most importantly you can get Brand awareness above and beyond that which a straightforward advert could achieve.
Two great examples of this. The first is the recent ‘Take a Benylin day‘ campaign. A campaign that was clearly helped by a complaint from the Federation of Small Businesses which rocketed it on to the 10 o’clock news. Either way it can’t be denied that it was based on a solid and creative idea that ran through the line. It also boasted a link up with the British Chambers of Commerce which helped provide credibility for the campaign when the criticisms started flying.
Another example is the comparethemarket.com campaign ‘compare the meerkat‘. No one would deny these are clever adverts but this theme is carried all the way through the communications. The meerkat even posts on Twitter and has a Facebook site! This raises a further important point. With the diversity of communication mediums at a PR practitioners disposal there is so much that can be achieved with a good creative theme. A creative theme, I hasten to add, that doesn’t have to be driven by advertising but can start from any one of the marketing disciplines.
So if the first consideration is the ‘right way’ the second is the ‘right reason’. The big question to ask, and this is my final point, is why are you doing this? That should really drive whether you undertake Brand PR or not. If it is to get a simple brand message to a hard to reach audience, then a bit more media spend might be the answer. However, if it is to educate consumers / professionals about a broader issue relating to your brand, demonstrate 3rd party endorsement or create a brand experience over and above that which can be achieved in a simple advert, then Brand PR should definitely form part of your marketing mix.
So can Brand PR deliver? Yes it can.
Tags: Benylin, brand PR, compare the market, compare the meerkat, Facebook, Twitter
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