18mbahr401 M2 - PR
18mbahr401 M2 - PR
18mbahr401 M2 - PR
Module - 2
Theories of Relationships
Both systems theory and situational theory are considered theories of
Relationship.
Systems Theory:
System theory is useful PR because it gives us a way to think about
relationships.
Generally Systems Theory looks at organization as made up of interrelated
parts, adapting and adjusting to changes in the political, economic and social
environment in which they operate.
Organization with open systems use PR people to bring back information on
how productive their relationships are with clients, customers and other
stakeholders.
Organization with closed system do not seek new information. The decision
makers operate on what happened in the past or their personal preferences.
Through Systems Theory, we think of PR People as Boundary Spanners
(developing external relationships in order to accomplish your business
objectives)
Govt.
Media
Company -
XYZ
Financial
Neighbors Institution
Customers
Situational Theory
Not all stakeholders groups would be equally likely to communicate with the
organization.
Grunig and Hunt proposed Situational Theory of Publics to give us more specific
information about their communication needs.
Active Public vs Passive Public
According to Gruning and Hunt, three variables predict when publics will seek
and process information about an issue:
Problem Recognition
Constraint Recognition
Level of Involvement
Those Publics who have high problem recognition, low constraint recognition, and high
level of involvement in an issue are more likely to actively engage in communication
about it.
Theories of Persuasion and Social Influence
Social Exchange Theory:
It assumes that individuals and groups choose strategies based on perceived
rewards and cost.
People want to keep their cost low and their rewards high
Example:
A company becomes aware of defects in a product that has already been shipped
to customers. The defect may mean that the product will need repairs sooner
than a promised three-year guarantee.
Diffusion Theory
Diffusion theory is another way to look at how people process and accept
information. Diffusion theory says that people adopt an idea only after going
through the following 5 discrete steps:
Social Psychologist Albert Bandura says that we can learn new behaviors
merely by observing others.
When we see behavior that interests us, we note whether that behavior
seems rewarding to the actor. These rewards can be external, as in praise, or
internal as in “it looks cool” .
The more positive and rewarding the consequences, the more likely the
behavior will occur.
Elaborated Likelihood Theory
Richard Petty and John Cacioppo describe the first route as the “central
route” – the situation in which people actively think about an idea.
Relying on this route presumes people are interested in your message, have
the time to attend to your arguments, and can evaluate your evidence with
an open mind.
Papers, TV, radio are called as mass media, but each person choses how and when
to use media.
Uses and gratification theory asserts that people are active users of media and
select how they will use it. Researchers have found that people use media in the
following ways:
They found that a strong positive relationship existed between what voters said
was important and what media were reporting as important.
More interestingly voters were more likely to agree with the composite media
agenda than with the position of the candidate they claimed they favored.
Media can set the agenda for what we can think and talk about.
Public Relations Roles
The role of practitioners in organizational life, some of the roles are
managerial and some are marketing.
There are communication demands from the human resource functional. Even
the legal department influences public relations activities when there is an
organizational crisis.
PR people produce the right programs, influence strategic planning and affect
the short-range (bottom-line) and long-range (survival) goals of organizations.
The two broad roles consistently emerge in PR; the technician and the
manager.
Contd….
The technician role represents the craft side of PR – writing, editing, taking
photos, handling communication, production, running special events, and
making telephone calls to the media
The manager role focuses on activities that help identify and solve PR
problems.
The first three models reflect a practice of public relations that attempts
through persuasion to achieve the organization’s goal. The fourth focuses on
balancing self-interests and the interests of the other group or people.
Press Agentry
Information moves one way- from the organization to its publics.
They don not conduct much research about their publics, beyond “counting the
house”.
This model includes propaganda tactics such as use of celebrity names and
attention-gaining device such as giveaways, parades, and grand opening.
The louder the noise, the more attention-getting the story, whether true or
false, the better they are doing their jobs.
Public Information
Public information differs from press agentry because the intent is to inform
rather than to press for promotion and publicity, but still the communication
is essentially one-way.
Little research about the audience beyond the testing the clarity of their
messages.
Although feedback is built into the process, the organization is much more
interested in having publics adjust to the organization than the reverse.
Two-way Symmetrical Model
Depicts a PR orientation in which organizations and their publics adjust to each other.
James E Gruning argued that this model was the most ethical because all groups were
part of the resolution of the problem.
In 1995 David M Dozier, Larissa A Grunig and James E Grunig presented a new model of
PR that came from their research on excellence in PR and Communication
Management.
From their study which included 321 organizations in three countries that PR
practioners who exhibited the most effective PR practices used the “new model of
symmetry as two-way practice”.
PR practioners and their supervisors reported using both two-way symmetrical and
asymmetrical methods
The middle of the continuum is the ‘win-win’ zone in which the organizations and
the public use communication to achieve decision acceptable to both sides.
This new model advances our thinking about the practice of PR because it
considers both parties in the public relations situation.
Approaches to Conflict Resolution
Conflict involves an individual or group actively opposing another’s values or
goals.
When conflict occurs, PR professionals must often move the organization and its
public towards resolution.
Plowman, Briggs, and Huang identified nine types of conflict resolution strategies
and linked them to the motives of organization and public.
Accommodation. One party partially yields on its position and lowers its
aspirations.
Compromise. An alternative agreement that stands part way between the parties
preferred positions.
Win-Win or No Deal. Both parties hold off on any agreement until they are ready
for the deal to be struck.
Clearly, not all of these strategies will result in mutually satisfied parties. The
conflict may be resolved, but the PR practioners job is far from over.