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Being Fired Could Be An Advantage (Part One) re more interested in whether your communications tactics have moved perceptions in your direction.Okay so you are called into the boss’s office. You are fired. No reason. No antagonism. You are stunned and are suddenly out of a job. What do you do now? The fact is that you are not alone. In today’s competitive business economy, major corporations and small businesses alike are announcing layoffs and individual dismissals in record numbers across Australia. This is a terrible blow, especially for men and women who have families to support. This situation also results in many displaced workers who have nowhere to go.Many people say you should look at Do the new responses show signs that your were successful in changing that inaccurate belief? Or correcting that misconception? Or killing that dangerous rumor for good? Not enough movement? Take another look at your message to see if it is really compelling. Is it honestly persuasive? Are your facts supportive of your goal and strategy? Is it written clearly enough? I want to reemphasize that what you are looking for at this stage is a strong indication that your efforts have clearly moved perceptions and target audience behaviors in the desired direction. When this second monitoring drill allows that conclusion, you will have good reason to value highly your public relations goal, strateg How To Become A Life Coach If you do, it means:If you’re serious about making a career as a life coach, you need to know the reality of how to become a life coach.I’ve been a professional coach for over 10 years and I’ve earned a good living. So I feel qualified to comment on this subject.There are four essentials in my book.First, you must have a deep-seated need to be of service to other people. This is the on-going motor or motivator that drives you on week in and week out. I would tend to believe that this is something you’re born with.Second, you need the ability to connect
Man, that’s risky and an awful lot not to care about! Actually, I don’t believe you don’t care, and I don’t believe you’re really ignoring public relations. If you were, by now your organization would be on its last legs, Kaput!, Morto! In fact, you may be a closet PR person who knows better. Why you may even buy the fundamental premise of public relations: “People act on their own perception of the facts before them, which leads to predictable behaviors about which something can be done. When we create, change or reinforce that opinion by reaching, persuading and moving-to-desired-action those people whose behaviors affect the organization, the public relations mission is accomplished.” I’ll bet you’re also pretty darn good at monitoring what that #1 external audience thinks about you and your organization. And that you regularly interact with them asking questions like What do you think of us? Why? while watching for negative undertones, wrong-headed beliefs or misconceptions. And that means you’ll be anxious to create a public relations goal that corrects such misconceptions because they can lead directly to negative behaviors that will hurt you. In practice, your goal may be focused on pacifying an activist group, reinforcing prospect interest in your product or service, or even countering a painful rumor. You’re probably ahead of me in forming the strategy you need to reach that goal. For better or worse, there are only three ways to deal with opinion or perception problems. Create some all-new opinion where none exists, change existing opinion, or reinforce it. With goal and strategy both in hand, you now have some real work to do. What will you need to say to your key audience members to persuade them to your way of thinking? You must be clear about what should be corrected or clarified. You must also be persuasive, and your facts and figures believable. And if appropriate, try to be compelling, perhaps with a certain sense of urgency. Your “foot soldiers” – communications tactics – can now carry that hard-won message to the attention of your #1 target audience, and there are scads of them just waiting for you to send them into action. For example, speeches, news releases, brochures, special events, radio interviews and one-on-one meetings. One question remains. How do you tell whether or not you are making any headway with your public relations effort? You again interact with members of that key audience of yours. And yes, with questions very similar to those you asked during your original information gathering exercise at the start of the program. Only this time, you are more interested in whether your communications tactics have moved perceptions in your direction. Do the new responses show signs that your were successful in changing that inaccurate belief? Or correcting that misconception? Or killing that dangerous rumor for good? Not enough movement? Take another look at your message to see if it is really compelling. Is it honestly persuasive? Are your facts supportive of your goal and strategy? Is it written clearly enough? I want to reemphasize that what you are looking for at this stage is a strong indication that your efforts have clearly moved perceptions and target audience behaviors in the desired direction. When this second monitoring drill allows that conclusion, you will have good reason to value highly your public relations goal, strategy How Can You Tell When Change Management Commeth? t legs, Kaput!, Morto!Have you ever watched a corporate executive on the financial news and the gentleman says something and you think to yourself why is he running that company anyway? Indeed this was my thought when I watched the President of HP, who happened to be at Davos with all the World Leaders say something really silly and she was serious enough that I almost did not believe it.I said to myself why on Earth is she running this company, surely she is smart enough not to say such things or smart enough to know the reality of the situation. She was canned about 3-weeks In fact, you may be a closet PR person who knows better. Why you may even buy the fundamental premise of public relations: “People act on their own perception of the facts before them, which leads to predictable behaviors about which something can be done. When we create, change or reinforce that opinion by reaching, persuading and moving-to-desired-action those people whose behaviors affect the organization, the public relations mission is accomplished.” I’ll bet you’re also pretty darn good at monitoring what that #1 external audience thinks about you and your organization. And that you regularly interact with them asking questions like What do you think of us? Why? while watching for negative undertones, wrong-headed beliefs or misconceptions. And that means you’ll be anxious to create a public relations goal that corrects such misconceptions because they can lead directly to negative behaviors that will hurt you. In practice, your goal may be focused on pacifying an activist group, reinforcing prospect interest in your product or service, or even countering a painful rumor. You’re probably ahead of me in forming the strategy you need to reach that goal. For better or worse, there are only three ways to deal with opinion or perception problems. Create some all-new opinion where none exists, change existing opinion, or reinforce it. With goal and strategy both in hand, you now have some real work to do. What will you need to say to your key audience members to persuade them to your way of thinking? You must be clear about what should be corrected or clarified. You must also be persuasive, and your facts and figures believable. And if appropriate, try to be compelling, perhaps with a certain sense of urgency. Your “foot soldiers” – communications tactics – can now carry that hard-won message to the attention of your #1 target audience, and there are scads of them just waiting for you to send them into action. For example, speeches, news releases, brochures, special events, radio interviews and one-on-one meetings. One question remains. How do you tell whether or not you are making any headway with your public relations effort? You again interact with members of that key audience of yours. And yes, with questions very similar to those you asked during your original information gathering exercise at the start of the program. Only this time, you are more interested in whether your communications tactics have moved perceptions in your direction. Do the new responses show signs that your were successful in changing that inaccurate belief? Or correcting that misconception? Or killing that dangerous rumor for good? Not enough movement? Take another look at your message to see if it is really compelling. Is it honestly persuasive? Are your facts supportive of your goal and strategy? Is it written clearly enough? I want to reemphasize that what you are looking for at this stage is a strong indication that your efforts have clearly moved perceptions and target audience behaviors in the desired direction. When this second monitoring drill allows that conclusion, you will have good reason to value highly your public relations goal, strateg 3 Reasons Why A Workflow Documentation Is The Way To More Productivity! ll be anxious to create a public relations goal that corrects such misconceptions because they can lead directly to negative behaviors that will hurt you.Every time you want to improve your productivity - you will find help in setting up a workflow documentation or simply called system for the task you want to improve.1) Designing a system makes things clearerAs soon as you start to think how to make a system out of any task you start to analyse the task think about the outcome you want and all the steps that need to be taken to reach the outcome. This process will make the whole process of your task easier to follow.2) It makes your task measurableA system has the advantage that you In practice, your goal may be focused on pacifying an activist group, reinforcing prospect interest in your product or service, or even countering a painful rumor. You’re probably ahead of me in forming the strategy you need to reach that goal. For better or worse, there are only three ways to deal with opinion or perception problems. Create some all-new opinion where none exists, change existing opinion, or reinforce it. With goal and strategy both in hand, you now have some real work to do. What will you need to say to your key audience members to persuade them to your way of thinking? You must be clear about what should be corrected or clarified. You must also be persuasive, and your facts and figures believable. And if appropriate, try to be compelling, perhaps with a certain sense of urgency. Your “foot soldiers” – communications tactics – can now carry that hard-won message to the attention of your #1 target audience, and there are scads of them just waiting for you to send them into action. For example, speeches, news releases, brochures, special events, radio interviews and one-on-one meetings. One question remains. How do you tell whether or not you are making any headway with your public relations effort? You again interact with members of that key audience of yours. And yes, with questions very similar to those you asked during your original information gathering exercise at the start of the program. Only this time, you are more interested in whether your communications tactics have moved perceptions in your direction. Do the new responses show signs that your were successful in changing that inaccurate belief? Or correcting that misconception? Or killing that dangerous rumor for good? Not enough movement? Take another look at your message to see if it is really compelling. Is it honestly persuasive? Are your facts supportive of your goal and strategy? Is it written clearly enough? I want to reemphasize that what you are looking for at this stage is a strong indication that your efforts have clearly moved perceptions and target audience behaviors in the desired direction. When this second monitoring drill allows that conclusion, you will have good reason to value highly your public relations goal, strateg The Only Bad Advertising Is No Advertising - Or Is It? ified. You must also be persuasive, and your facts and figures believable. And if appropriate, try to be compelling, perhaps with a certain sense of urgency.Depending on whom you ask, you will get told many “truths” about advertising. The question I have for you today is this – “Is the only bad advertising, no advertising?”Before we begin, it might help us to agree on what advertising is, so here’s one definition:“Advertising is the non-personal communication of an individual’s paid persuasive information regarding products, and or services via various media.”In other words, someone is trying to “sell” us on something – be it a product, or a service, or just picking up the phone. Advertising is Your “foot soldiers” – communications tactics – can now carry that hard-won message to the attention of your #1 target audience, and there are scads of them just waiting for you to send them into action. For example, speeches, news releases, brochures, special events, radio interviews and one-on-one meetings. One question remains. How do you tell whether or not you are making any headway with your public relations effort? You again interact with members of that key audience of yours. And yes, with questions very similar to those you asked during your original information gathering exercise at the start of the program. Only this time, you are more interested in whether your communications tactics have moved perceptions in your direction. Do the new responses show signs that your were successful in changing that inaccurate belief? Or correcting that misconception? Or killing that dangerous rumor for good? Not enough movement? Take another look at your message to see if it is really compelling. Is it honestly persuasive? Are your facts supportive of your goal and strategy? Is it written clearly enough? I want to reemphasize that what you are looking for at this stage is a strong indication that your efforts have clearly moved perceptions and target audience behaviors in the desired direction. When this second monitoring drill allows that conclusion, you will have good reason to value highly your public relations goal, strateg 5 Signs You Selected an Incompetent Professional re more interested in whether your communications tactics have moved perceptions in your direction.How can you be sure that the chiropractor, plastic surgeon, psychologist, or attorney that you’ve selected is professionally competent, that he or she is likely to handle your case with skill and due care?The short answer is you can’t.In his book, THE TAO OF NEGOTIATION, author Joel Edelman, a mediation specialist and law professor, says 90% or more of the professionals he has encountered he’d consider so inept that he would not personally use their services.People who seem to have some of the best credentials staring down from their high-r Do the new responses show signs that your were successful in changing that inaccurate belief? Or correcting that misconception? Or killing that dangerous rumor for good? Not enough movement? Take another look at your message to see if it is really compelling. Is it honestly persuasive? Are your facts supportive of your goal and strategy? Is it written clearly enough? I want to reemphasize that what you are looking for at this stage is a strong indication that your efforts have clearly moved perceptions and target audience behaviors in the desired direction. When this second monitoring drill allows that conclusion, you will have good reason to value highly your public relations goal, strategy, message and communications tactics. Together, they will have made it possible for you to say, as promised in the fundamental premise,“My public relations mission is accomplished.” Please feel free to publish this article and resource box in your ezine, newsletter, offline publication or website. A copy would be appreciated at Robert A. Kelly © 2003
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