The future of PR

(picture taken from:
http://mashable.com/2012/06/12/social-media-beginners-guide/)
When looking at the future of PR it’s impossible not to look
at where it started and how it has grown already. The use of Public Relations
has been at work for thousands of years, as Professor Larry Litwin noted, dating
back to Julius Caesar trying to convince the Roman people he would make the
best head of state. But PR has evolved and become the recognised industry it is
today in the last 100 years and continues to thrive.
With that said, where is PR heading? What does the future
hold? Have these developments been positive or a detriment to the industry?
In the last 10 to 15 years we have seen PR become as integral
to the mass media market that we the audience indulge in every day, as any
other aspect of the “media”. As technology continues to advance the role of PR
and its importance is even more evident. However established writer, EricGoldman noticed negative trends in the industry starting in the first half of
the 20th Century that continued to develop in the 50’s and 60’s and
many of which continue to hold true today. He suggested that communication
developed through three stages:
1.
Spin aimed at duping the
audience
2.
Publicity aimed to build
awareness through hype
3.
Two-way communication
aimed at building engagement
Many of the developments have actually sent the industry
back in time, where it is once again becoming a two way relationship between
the brand and the public. With television and other forms of media, the
information and “relations” were one way. The producers created the product and
the audience consumed however with the influx of social media, search engines,
comments sections etc. the relationship has become increasingly reciprocal. As
such, and with the new avenues to engage with the audience, practitioners,
corporations and celebrities alike look to exploit this new dynamic.
Many celebrities now have Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and
other social networking profiles to engage with their fans, the public. But is
it the actual celebrity writing on these pages? Or is this where PR comes in?
Well I suppose it depends on the celebrity but many are
making use of their PR team on these pages. For example, global celebrity and
brand Britney Spears uses her PR team to handle her tweets. Is this an issue or
part of the ever evolving relationship where brand control has become so
difficult through the ubiquity of public response that using a PR team is the only rational way to communicate as a celebrity or corporation?
(picture taken from
http://www.thepicky.com/internet/top-celebrity-twitter-accounts-list/)





