A Message To Non-PR Folks: We’re Not All Like This

Black Sheep

John Biggs at CrunchGear and Michael Arrington at TechCrunch both wrote in the last day about a nasty encounter they had with a public relations person (I would normally say professional, but…). I’m not naming the person here – that’s not my style – but I’m disgusted enough to link to posts where you can find their name.

The Biggs and Arrington documented a laundry list of bad practices by the culprit, some of which have also been documented previously on the bad pitch blog and other sites including the Freakonomics blog:

  • Off-topic pitches;
  • BCC’d spam pitches;
  • Relentless phone calls to people throughout publishing organizations, even while acknowledging that it’s wrong;
  • Abusive replies to people who complain about the pitches.

I’m not going to go to town on that person. Others have done that enough.

I’m directing this post to anyone who reads this site:

Not all public relations professionals are like this.

This is important. People need to know this.

We do the background work

My colleagues and I spend hours creating and refining our media lists when we begin working with clients, and we refine those lists on an ongoing basis. Occasionally we’ll land off-base; when we realize that’s happened we fix our lists.

We contact people individually

When I send email pitches, they begin with the recipient’s name. Next!

We build relationships

As far as I’m concerned, public relations is a two-way business. Our clients have their objectives; journalists have theirs. We do our jobs best when we help both sides. That means building relationships with journalists so we know what they’re after and can help them with that. It takes time and effort, and it certainly doesn’t involve spam or insults.

We target

We might approach a couple of people within a certain organization if they’ve both written about our client or their subject area. We certainly won’t leave messages for 45 people at two publications. 

Caveat: We’re human

I’m not going to pretend we’re perfect. Sometimes we screw up and contact someone who’s completely uninterested in the subject. Anyone who says they don’t is a liar. However, when that happens we apologize and try to make sure it doesn’t happen again.

Don’t let black sheep make you think we’re all like this person. We’re not.

(Image credit: s-s via sxc.hu)

5 Comments

  1. Chamika Ailapperuma
    Posted December 19, 2008 at 8:44 am | Permalink

    Great post Dave — that particular PR person reminded me of another person in Ottawa who somehow got my email and started sending creepy pseudo-personal email newsletters about herself. When I called her out, I got a really nasty series of replies with the actual line of “well, if I was an incompetent government worker like you with a big salary, I would not have to do this” (!). I sent her links to your blog, Mitch Joel’s blog and Seth Godin’s blog and told her to educate herself on professionalism. Never heard back from her, but hope she followed through on the suggestion!!!

  2. Posted December 19, 2008 at 2:58 pm | Permalink

    Good read Dave. A few bad PR people should not spoil it for the rest of us who vette contacts very carefully with highly appropriate pitches. Leaving message after message for reporters is not only ineffective, it’s harassment.

  3. Posted December 21, 2008 at 9:25 pm | Permalink

    Greatpost – it’s such a shame that so many good PRs get let down by the minority bad ones.

    There’s been a few posts recently talking about bad PR practice, Dennis Howlett’s in particular was pretty angry – http://accmanpro.com/2008/12/03/pr-is-so-over/

    Jen Mitch has suggested a Good Pitch PR blog..http://socialmediapr.wordpress.com/ grand idea I think.

  4. Posted December 24, 2008 at 11:15 pm | Permalink

    Twitter Comment by @PRupdates (PRupdates)

    A Message To Non-PR Folks: We’re Not All Like This [link to post]

    http://twitter.com/PRupdates/statuses/1077457924

    – Posted using Chat Catcher

  5. PaulH
    Posted January 31, 2009 at 12:30 am | Permalink

    Found you via Techcrunch. Jason Calanis IS on to something. PR has changed, and not necessarily for the better. While there are still plenty of classy guys around (like yourself) the industry is getting reconfigured by a bunch of kids whose idea of PR success is getting lots of followers on Twitter, flirting with “influencers” and acting out. My teenaged daughter has a thousand friends in Facebook. Does that mean you should hire her to manage your Toyota client? These kinds of people are giving your industry a bad name and inspiring people like me to hit the “block” feature more and more often.

9 Trackbacks

  1. By MattDickman on December 18, 2008 at 1:19 pm

    Twitter Comment by @MattDickman (Matt Dickman)…

    RT @davefleet: A Message To Non-PR Folks: We\’re Not All Like This [link to post] – http://twitter.com/MattDickman/statuses/1065410982 – Posted using Chat Catcher (http://www.chatcatcher.com/) …

  2. By krisfrancisco on December 18, 2008 at 2:31 pm

    Twitter Comment by @krisfrancisco (Kris Francisco)…

    RT @mattdickman @davefleet: A Message To Non-PR Folks: We\’re Not All Like This [link to post] – http://twitter.com/krisfrancisco/statuses/1065544625 – Posted using Chat Catcher (http://www.chatcatcher.com/) …

  3. By prmaria on December 18, 2008 at 2:52 pm

    Twitter Comment by @prmaria (Maria Olsson-Tysor)…

    RT @davefleet A Message To Non-PR Folks: We\’re Not All Like This [link to post] Scary how a few can bring so many down.. – http://twitter.com/prmaria/statuses/1065585885 – Posted using Chat Catcher (http://www.chatcatcher.com/) …

  4. By conosco on December 18, 2008 at 4:21 pm

    Twitter Comment by @conosco (conosco)…

    #LINK PR-Leute wehren sich: Nicht alle sind schwarze Schafe (via Blog) [link to post] – http://twitter.com/conosco/statuses/1065748537 – Posted using Chat Catcher (http://www.chatcatcher.com/) …

  5. By CathyWebSavvyPR on December 18, 2008 at 7:24 pm

    Twitter Comment by @CathyWebSavvyPR (Cathy Larkin)…

    Great post on what constitutes good PR – don\’t judge all PR folks by a few bad apples [link to post] – http://twitter.com/CathyWebSavvyPR/statuses/1066074153 – Posted using Chat Catcher (http://www.chatcatcher.com/) …

  6. By randimason on December 19, 2008 at 3:22 pm

    Twitter Comment by @randimason (Randi Mason, MLS)…

    Reading Dave Fleet\’s posts on Techcrunch ignoring news embargoes & what PR should be: [link to post] – http://twitter.com/randimason/statuses/1067785853 – Posted using Chat Catcher (http://www.chatcatcher.com/) …

  7. By NmymindCarolina on December 19, 2008 at 3:43 pm

    Twitter Comment by @NmymindCarolina (Sarah Ann Walters)…

    in case you hadn\’t read @davefleet response yet…we\’re really not all like this [link to post] always quality blog posts here – http://twitter.com/NmymindCarolina/statuses/1067822509 – Posted using Chat Catcher (http://www.chatcatcher.com/) …

  8. By csalomonlee on December 23, 2008 at 3:45 pm

    Twitter Comment by @csalomonlee (csalomonlee)…

    @davefleet – thank you for pointing out what good PR folks do – check out post at: [link to post] – http://twitter.com/csalomonlee/statuses/1074994603 – Posted using Chat Catcher …

  9. [...] That’s when things like this happen.       Print This Post This entry was posted on March 26, 2009 at 8:00 am, filed under communications, pitching, public relations and tagged communications, pitching, public relations. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post. Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL. « Don’t Like What You See? Fix It [...]

Post a Comment

Your email is never shared. Required fields are marked *

*
*