1.3. How Public Relations Differs from Advertising
International humorist Stephen Leacock defined advertising
as: "the science of arresting the human
intelligence long enough to get money from it." But
the textbook definition of advertising is: "a
form of persuasion that informs people about the goods and
services they can purchase."
Advertising is very different from public relations. One
key difference is that you always pay for the space and time of
an advertisement (or commercial, which is an insert appearing on
radio, television, or the Internet). By contrast, editorial
coverage generated through public relations is not paid for by
the organization issuing the news release. The media will pick up
and publish the story because they consider it newsworthy, not as
a paid advertisement.
Another crucial difference is that, in advertising, you
have virtually full control over the message. Because you are
paying for advertising, the ad or commercial runs your exact text
(called copy), provided the copy complies with generally
acceptable standards for advertising. In the case of public
relations, the media outlet you are targeting is under no
obligation to run the story in any form. If a media outlet does
decide to run the story, an editor will generally rewrite the
news release, or use pertinent information from the news release
to create the news. (For instance, your news release might be
used as part of a larger story on players in your industry or
profession.) In addition, you have no control over when the
release or news will run. All decisions are made by the
editor.
As you can see, public relations is a cost-effective way of
getting your story out. Taking the trouble to write effective
news releases and to build a relationship with the relevant media
will, in time, pay dividends in the form of exposure and
prestige. Best of all, public relations probably costs less than
a single advertisement.