You are here

Disable VAT on Taiwan

Unfortunately, as of 1 January 2020 SAGE Ltd is no longer able to support sales of electronically supplied services to Taiwan customers that are not Taiwan VAT registered. We apologise for any inconvenience. For more information or to place a print-only order, please contact uk.customerservices@sagepub.co.uk.

Introducing Public Relations
Share
Share

Introducing Public Relations
Theory and Practice



February 2011 | 240 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
Introducing Public Relations is your guide to the basics of public relations: where it came from, what it means and what issues the industry faces today. It takes readers from the origins of PR all the way to the newest theoretical debates, explaining along the way the changes and development of the role of the PR practitioner.

With interviews and 'day in the life' examples from a wide range of professionals in the industry students will learn what PR practitioners do, what they think and how the industry really works. Putting the student first, this book:
  • Gives a grounded, critical coverage of the history and theory of PR, so students understand not just the what but the how and why
  • Covers all aspects of PR in practice, from in-house and consultancies to government, sport, NGO and corporate PR
  • Packs each chapter with case studies, anecdotes from the field and career advice from expert PR professionals
  • Helps easy revision with exercises, summaries and checklist.

Highly accessible and engaging, there is no better headstart to understanding what PR is all about. It is the perfect text for any students encountering public relations theory and practice for the first time.

 
PART ONE: PUBLIC RELATIONS IN THEORY
 
Introducing the Theory
 
Chapter 1: The Origins of Public Relations
Public Relations: One or Many Definitions?

 
Where PR Comes From and Why History Matters

 
The Early Years: Ivy Lee and Edward Bernays

 
International Growth

 
The History of PR in the UK

 
Theory: Why Some Campaigns Work and Some Don't

 
Communication Theory

 
Laswell's Communication Model

 
Linear Model

 
Two-Step Communication Model

 
Mass Audience

 
Target Audience

 
Publics

 
The Four Models of Grunig and Hunt

 
The Press Agentry/Publicity Model

 
The Public Information Model

 
The Two-Way Asymmetric Model

 
The Two-Way Symmetric Model

 
The Excellence Project

 
 
Chapter 2: Marketing, Advertising and Public Relations - Similarities and Differences Explored and Explained
Why Marketing Matters

 
Market-Led Companies

 
Product-Led Companies

 
The Marketing Mix

 
Social Marketing

 
New Forms of Marketing

 
Advertising: Good or Evil?

 
How is PR Different to Advertising?

 
Advertising Agents and PR Consultants

 
Marketing PR

 
 
Chapter 3: Reputation Management
What is a Good Reputation?

 
The Relationship between PR and Reputation

 
Advocating Reputation Management

 
Acquiring a Good Reputation

 
Factors Involved in Developing Good Reputation

 
Online Reputation Management

 
Against Reputation Management

 
A 'Wrong' Industry: How an Industry's Reputation Affects Businesses

 
 
Chapter 4: Crisis Management - Public Relations Centre Stage
What Is a Crisis?

 
The Crisis Communication Plan

 
The Plan

 
The Management Team

 
The Communication Process

 
The Post-Crisis Evaluation

 
Handling a Crisis

 
The 2005 London Bombings

 
The Buncefield Fire

 
Issues Management

 
 
Chapter 5: Corporate Social Responsibility and Ethics
Front Organisations

 
Why Ethics is Becoming More Important to PR

 
Advocacy and the Adviser-Client Relationship

 
Does PR Corrupt the Media?

 
The Ethics of Individuals

 
Codes and Conducts

 
The Ethics of Businesses

 
Four Traditions

 
Moral Evaluations

 
Ethics and the Multinational Company

 
Business is Business: Is CSR Welcome at All?

 
Business is Business: Is it Worth the Hype?

 
Social Corporate Responsibility

 
Environmental Corporate Responsibility

 
Sustainable Objectives

 
Is Corporate Social Responsibility Just PR in Disguise?

 
Delivering CSR

 
 
PART TWO: PUBLIC RELATIONS IN PRACTICE
 
Chapter 6: Introducing the Practice
Public Relations Practice in the UK

 
The Business of PR

 
The People in PR

 
Recruiting and Keeping Staff

 
 
Chapter 7: Public Relations In-House
Who Does What?

 
The PR Practitioner as Gatekeeper

 
Comparing In-House and External Consultants

 
Internal Communications

 
Organizational Culture: Who Are 'the Company'?

 
Channels of Communication

 
Measuring the Effect of Communications

 
 
Chapter 8: Public Relations Consultancies
Types of Consultancy

 
Categories of Consultancy

 
'Agency' or 'Consultancy': Does it Matter?

 
Professionalisation of the Industry

 
Services Offered by Consultancies

 
Winning New Business

 
The Brief

 
The Pitch

 
Managing the Account: Who Does What?

 
Client Satisfaction

 
Over-Servicing

 
Charging

 
 
Chapter 9: Strategy, Research, Measurement and Evaluation
Structuring a PR Programme

 
Research

 
Defining PR Problems and Issues

 
SWOT and PEST Analyses

 
Strategy

 
Measurement and Evaluation

 
Pseudo-Measurement

 
Opportunities to See (OTS)

 
Advertising Value Equivalence (AVE)

 
Payment by Results (PBR)

 
Electronic Evaluation

 
 
Chapter 10: Putting Effective PR Campaigns into Practice
Tactics: The Building Blocks of PR Campaigns

 
Journalists and Public Relations: Hacks and Flacks

 
Media Relations in the PR Campaign

 
Writing the News Release

 
Distributing the News Release

 
Targeting the Right People

 
Managing the Data

 
Ensuring Media Coverage

 
Dealing with the Media

 
The Features List

 
Media Training

 
Press Conferences

 
Electronic Channels of Communication

 
Online Media

 
Blogs: Are They the Future of PR?

 
Events

 
 
Chapter 11: Corporate Communications and Financial PR
What Is Corporate Communications?

 
The History of Financial PR

 
Financial PR Consultancies

 
Financial Calendar Work

 
Profit Warnings and the Unexpected

 
Investor Relations

 
Initial Public Offerings

 
Financial Audiences

 
Analysts

 
The Financial Media

 
 
Chapter 12: Government and the Public Sector
Social Marketing

 
Government Communications

 
Local Government

 
Restricting or Helping? Public Sector PR as Gatekeeper

 
Central Government Communication

 
Spin

 
How Political Parties are Changing Political Communication

 
Political Lobbying

 
The Origins of Lobbying

 
Lobbying Companies

 
Is Lobbying Effective?

 
Is Lobbying Ethical?

 
 
Chapter 13: From Charities to Celebrities - The Variety and Diversity of PR Practice
Charities and Campaigning Organisations

 
How Charities Campaign

 
Celebrities

 
Sport

 
Sponsorship

 
Media Relations in Sport

 
Channels of Communication

 
Community Relations in Sport

 
 
Chapter 14: Where PR (and You) Can Go Next
The Changing PR Landscape

 
Industry Challenges and Opportunities

 
Getting Started in PR

 

I found the book interesting but perhaps based a bit too much on anglo-saxon theories, models and examples for extensive use in my classroom. However, I recommend it to my students as a supplement because of the fine explanations given for some complicated matters.

Dr Rutger De Graaf
Department of Communication Science, University of Amsterdam
November 10, 2011

Comprehensive and accessible range of theory and practical approaches

Nick Mosdell
JOMEC, Cardiff University
September 3, 2011

A clearly laid out and informative book that gives a solid introduction to some of the key areas of public relations. A balanced approach to both theory and practice with good examples to help reinforce those ideas.

Mr Matt Grimes
Birmingham School of Media, Birmingham City University
June 30, 2011

This is a good introductory text, with excellent examples of professional PR practice.

Written well and accessible for all students.

Mr Robbie Smyth
Journalism and Media Communications, Griffith College Dublin
April 22, 2011

Extremely clear and well structured book. Ideal for undergraduates approaching PR for the first time.

Dr Mafalda Stasi
Department of Media and Communication, Coventry University
April 19, 2011

A fabulous, fresh, readable introduction to the subject with lots of applied information; perfect for new undergraduates.

Ms Susan Kinnear
Communications , Chester University
March 4, 2011
  •  

Sample Materials & Chapters

Chapter 2


For instructors

Please select a format:

Select a Purchasing Option


Paperback
ISBN: 9781412921152
£42.99

Hardcover
ISBN: 9781412921145
£126.00