Doing It All and Then Some as a New Public Relations Professional

1397056226-10-ways-entrepreneurs-achieve-work-life-balance-2In the world of public relations it’s hard to find time to sleep. New stories always need to be pitched, thought-provoking tweets need to be sent and time-sensitive crises need to be extinguished. Learning to build and maintain an image, whether it’s for a brand, organization or individual can consume your life if you let it. As new professionals we feel like we have something to prove. Just the thought of turning off our phones might make us feel like we are going to miss the PR opportunity of a lifetime. I have good news! Another opportunity will come along.

As a new professional in the PR industry, finding a work-life balance can be challenging. We want to over deliver and work long hours to earn our spot at the meeting table. Also, our job is fun, which makes it hard to stop. In what other industry do you get to create engaging news stories, take over the social media world and throw memorable parties? Time flies in the PR industry and I often find myself begging the clock for a few extra hours.

Despite your love of the job, the hours and intensity will eventually catch up with you and your life outside of work will want to take center stage. So, how do we “do it all”?

  • Race Against the Clock – With limited hours in the day it is extremely important to manage your time. First, make a list of your tasks. Next, prioritize them by deadline and importance. This may seem obvious, but do the items with a tight deadline or items that need multiple approvals first. If you are at a standstill with an individual project, bounce ideas off a colleague or mentor. When booking meetings or after work socials, make sure you have a little time to breathe between each event. Rushing from one thing to the next will wear you out.
  • Divide and Conquer – You have a team surrounding you for a reason. If you need a press release reviewed, a few social media posts written or brainstorming support, don’t hesitate to delegate to an intern or co-worker on your team. Even if you work solo on a daily basis, you still have a network of PR professionals (i.e. PRSA) surrounding you to lend a hand. Using others around you as a resource will help you accomplish more within your work hours.
  • Learn The Art of Being Selective – With professional organizations, recreational sports, social events and service projects, when do we say no? Building networks, professionally and personally is extremely important, but be mindful of which organizations suck time and which ones add value. Join a select few organizations where you can commit and truly engage. Don’t join everything just to say you did.
  • Unplug – When the workday is over, disconnect from your electronics. We all need time to reboot. It has taken three years in the industry for me to realize doing this is okay. Our clients take vacations and our bosses sleep at night. We can too. Being without an iPhone, laptop or Wi-Fi can be scary, but take that time to enjoy the world around you. I promise you won’t regret it and your quality of work will show for it. 

hannahwilsonHannah Wilson works as an Account Executive at Spark Strategic Ideas. As a leader on the account management team she oversees the daily actives of over 50 Moe’s Southwest Grill locations, international toy manufacturer Schleich and North Carolina-based restaurant Hubee D’s. Hannah graduated with a B.A. in Communication with a concentration in public relations from Virginia Tech. She is a member of the PRSA Charlotte New Professionals board.

Book Review: Improvise: Unconventional Career Advice from an Unlikely CEO

This post is part of The Edge monthly series of book reviews on books relevant to new PR professionals.

51rpj75I2fL“He has worked with some of the country’s most fabled business leaders, such as Apple’s Steve Jobs, Disney’s Michael Eisner, and Amazon’s Jeff Bezos. He has helped introduce the world to Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Pokémon, and the seedless watermelon,” states a blurb about Fred Cook on the back of his latest book Improvise: Unconventional Career Advice from an Unlikely CEO.

If a description like that doesn’t inspire you to read a book then I don’t know what will.

This isn’t your average career development publication. It’s an entertaining education on leadership, creativity, business and getting ahead of your competition rooted in the very thing that propelled Cook to CEO of Golin—his unique experiences.

His outrageous stories catalog his adventures as a cabin boy on a Norwegian ship, a salesmen of leather goods in Italy, a doorman at a four-star hotel, traveling across the world, starting his own PR firm and many other experiences. These narratives, however, aren’t random. They all have a specific purpose: to keep you eagerly reading along and easily transferring otherwise complex lessons.

Much like the book’s title suggests, Cook puts a great deal of emphasis on the power of improvising. Employing his above-mentioned stories and wit, he details logical steps to embracing your weird thinking and harnessing it to advance your career. A consistent theme is the importance of gaining a variety of experiences to synthesize to your advantage.

The importance is showcased as Cook describes the very moments that equipped him to effectively maintain client relations and think outside the box to gain new business like Starbucks (before they were huge).

With so many qualified young professionals entering the marketplace, you’re going to be required to stand out. This book will help you do just that and is a must-read for the new pro as well as the seasoned veteran.

So start expanding your perspective and varying your experiences—pick up Cook’s Improvise, and I promise that your career will never be the same.

profile-benBen Butler is the founder and president of Top Hat IMC—an integrated marketing communications firm in Wexford and Pittsburgh, PA. You can connect with him on LinkedIn and on Twitter (@BenButlerPR).

Build Brand Buzz through Blogger Relations

Person-BloggingIn a PR pro’s world, what’s better than a group of thought leaders spreading the positive word about your brand?

Besides this summer’s World Cup-gone-social case study, I’d lean toward nothing.

To achieve that ultimate brand buzz dream, you need a thorough, targeted blogger-relations strategy. When executed well, blogger engagement will give your brand third-party credibility among its target consumer audience.

But unlike Clint Dempsey, PR pros can’t score big within the first 30 seconds of a blogger-outreach campaign. It requires research, patience, engagement and an overall good product or service for blogger relations to succeed. Here’s how to start:

1. Find your niche bloggers. Fight the urge to mass distribute to a media list; opt for quality instead. Complement a database media list with hands-on research. Tools like Twitter’s Advanced Search can help you find niche bloggers with a substantial social following. Let’s say, for example, you’re a cheese brand. Search “cheese AND blog” in the Advanced Search words section, and you’ll get a list of hundreds of people who blog and have a special place in their heart for cheese. Bingo.

2. Read their content. Before pitching, take time to read each blogger’s content to see how your brand fits, then reference specific posts during outreach. Let’s go back to that delicious cheese example. If you’re pitching a food blogger, point out some cheese-specific posts and tie in why he/she would love your brand. Did he/she write about a new Gouda dish? Share a tasty recipe that makes your specific cheese irresistible. By using this approach, you 1) prove you read their blog, 2) highlight your cheese’s unique attributes, and 3) illustrate how your product can be repurposed for content beyond that initial review post.

3. Set reasonable expectations up front. As new PR pros, we’re under tight, demanding deadlines every day. But, keep in mind that most bloggers write in their spare time, and they’re under similar pressures during their day jobs, too. From the beginning, set reasonable deadlines you both agree on for product reviews, tweeting, etc. And always remember: It’s the blogger’s site – not yours. It’s his/her prerogative to stick to blog guidelines and write about what best serves the audience.

4. Engage regularly. Have your solid group of bloggers secured? Nice work. Now it’s time to prove you’re a good partner. Share their content, +1 their updates, comment on their posts or tag them in tweets they’d find interesting (within reason, of course). When executed well, a blogger-relations campaign is mutually beneficial: They help your brand reach new audiences, and you help their blog reach new readers.

5. Have a good product. Cue the “duh” reaction here – of course your product is wonderful – but hear me out. Sometimes PR pros are asked to promote an unfamiliar product. Because it’s new, they may not know or recognize the product’s flaws – but the blogger will. And, depending on the blogger, this could result in a severed relationship or, worse, a negative review (followed by a “good riddance”). If you’re uncertain about a product, test it out firsthand, or see what the review sites say. By doing your homework, you could save your brand’s reputation while helping improve its product.

As you embark on your blogger relations journey, remember that quality trumps quantity. And, while time consuming, this thorough strategy will have reputable thought leaders building powerful brand buzz among your target audience. Now that deserves a hashflag raise, don’t you think?

Do you work with bloggers? What tips do you have for a successful blogger-relations campaign?

Stephanie Vermillion headshotStephanie Vermillion is a senior account executive at Wordsworth Communications, a public relations agency in Cincinnati. She is on the PRSA Cincinnati Leadership Team and is part of the PRSA Cincinnati New Pros Committee. Connect with Stephanie on LinkedIn and Twitter (@SMVermillion).

Spinning Millennial Stereotypes Into Professional Positives

hbo-GIRLSMillennials are taking America and its workforce by storm. We’re a generation 80 million strong and make up the largest age group in our nation’s history. We represent one in every three U.S. employees and will comprise 75 percent of the global workforce by 2025.

As we’ve grown in number and professional rank, sohave the stereotypes surrounding us. I’m here to show how our supposedly lazy, entitled and self-involved generation can debunk these misnomers and spin them into positives in our professional lives.

First and foremost, Millennials are anything but lazy. Multiple internships are all but expected to get any kind of job after college, which was certainly the case for me. Since many of us are unwilling to settle for a job outside of our industry, we’re often forced to complete free and sometimes prolonged post-graduate internships in order to land that full-time gig. (We’ve all watched GIRLS, right?) Frankly, I know few people in this field who have gotten where they are without doing one.

Doing these kinds of internships have taught us the value of hard work, sacrifice and building the all-important connections required to work our way up. After getting our foot in the door, we have learned how to effectively network and can now more fully appreciate finally landing that full-time position.

And besides, if we were so ambivalent about our futures, would young pros like me be taking the time to contribute to this blog?

Millennials have often found that there’s no one direct path to full-time work either. Our peers are taking on post-grad teaching and volunteer experiences like never before. As I can personally attest to, whether it’s the Peace Corps or Teach for America, many of us are giving back and in the process honing valuable life skills like adaptability, integrity and resilience that employers are demanding these days.

It’s this type of altruism that helps discredit the “selfish” label that’s habitually applied to our generation. Sure, taking that next step in our careers is always top of mind, but that doesn’t mean that we’re focused so fully on ourselves that we’re incapable of working with our colleagues. In fact, we thrive in collaboration, particularly as a result of our variety of internship experiences and the many group projects we completed during our college years.

Millennials actually make up a relationship generation in the sense that we’re concerned less about ourselves than building connections with those around us in the workplace. And yes, many of us are still living under our parents’ roofs (nothing wrong with saving some money and paying off those student loans!), but we’re often nowhere near college friends and many of us have moved away altogether, so finding a work family and the right fit culture-wise are foremost concerns. Playing up these values, which lead us to remain at our respective workplaces for longer than we’re given credit, and our ability to collaborate are key when marketing ourselves to potential employers.

A sense of entitlement is often associated with our generation as well. While we’re confident and many times precocious, we can at the same time acknowledge that we’re not likely to land our dream job right out of college, or in our twenties or thirties for that matter. As evidenced by our years spent as interns and entry-level employees, we recognize the reality of working our way up the professional ladder.

And while career advancement is important to us, money isn’t always the most significant factor in climbing the ladder. As mentioned earlier, we know how to network and clearly understand the power of leveraging professional connections. In fact, according to a recent report by Bentley University, 84 percent of us are willing to make a lateral move for more experience or better connections and 53 percent would take a lower-paying or even unpaid position to attain the same.

We Millennials aren’t impatient or money hungry so much as simply eager to advance our careers and cognizant of how to do it. And while we have definitive professional ambitions and are determined to work ardently to fulfill them, we still hold strong personal values such as time allocation and cultivating non-work relationships that help us stay equally as focused on maintaining a life beyond our office walls. In this light, we would be wise to keep perspective and remain willing to take different paths to higher-level or leadership positions than senior members in our offices who had to make significant sacrifices like long hours and time away from their families to get to where they are today.

So with all this said, Millennials must not feed into the many stereotypes out there about us, but instead embrace the positive aspects of our increasingly influential generation. We have to remain assiduous yet assured and continue striving to find that balance between tackling professional goals and living out our personal values. Focusing on the qualities that make us uniquely “Millennial” is a definite step in making this life a reality.

0aebbecZach Burrus is a marketing analyst at SHIFT Communications, a public relations agency based in Boston. He is an active member of PRSA Boston and the PRSA New Professionals Section. Connect with Zach on Twitter and LinkedIn.

Why You Need a Mentor

mentorWe have always been told that mentoring is important. As new professionals, it is critical that we find “that” person just as our careers are embarking. I was lucky enough to have mentors fit into my life as a student — admittedly, without much effort on my part. Yet, no one really sat me down to explain the true benefits derived from being a mentee.

While there is no formula to “get” a mentor, here are some reasons why you should consider having one:

It’s someone to ask those questions.

“How do you write a cover letter?” “Should I format my resume this way?” “What do I need to do to advance in the agency?”

A mentor is there so you can ask questions. At your job, you may not want to ask your supervisor something, and it may be easier to broach the subject with your mentor. From the student perspective, your mentor has certainly been through the ringer applying for internships and can serve as a resource once you receive that first email about a phone interview.

A mentor of mine, who at the time was an upperclassman at college, was always happy to help answer my questions. Looking back, I know I would not have been as successful applying for internships, and later jobs, if it were not for her help.

Mentors usually have similar interests.

But it’s not the end of the world if they don’t. In fact, it works to your advantage to get an additional perspective outside your normal course of work. If you work in healthcare PR, find a mentor who works in food, politics, etc.

On the other hand, a mentor who works in a similar job (or even above you in your company or agency) is also going to be a big help. They will tell you how to advance because they have already made it through.

It goes both ways.

As great as having a mentor is for the mentee, the advice you can give your mentor may even be more rewarding. That’s why many large corporations and agencies have instituted reverse mentoring programs. Keep in mind that this is across all business functions, not just communications. It illustrates how companies can be on the cutting edge by empowering new professionals and newly minted graduates to share their native skills (e.g., social, apps, data, etc.)  with older (er, more seasoned) colleagues.

Don’t know how to get started? Begin with the PRSA College of Fellows Mentoring Program here. You can get paired up with elite PR professionals. For more information on the program, check out this page.

flippy3Mike DeFilippis is an Assistant Project Manager at Direct Impact, a wholly owned subsidiary of Burson-Marsteller and a member of the WPP family that specializes in grassroots mobilization and outreach. He is fiercely passionate about public affairs, politics, government, public relations and technology. You can find him with a cup of coffee (or espresso) in hand while listening to country music.