Pickard sees rapid changes in PR
In an exclusive interview with exchange4media’s Preeti Hoon, Pickard speaks about the rapid changes in the communications industry in view of the changing needs of companies. “Clients are now looking to PR agencies for ‘big brain’ consulting in a way that I’ve never seen before,” he says. “As the digital media revolution gathers momentum, PR firms have earned a seat at the table and we are being given every opportunity to showcase an agility and nimble nature that is perfectly suited to mastering the relationship imperative on social networks. Clients are also looking for more tangible proof of PR’s contribution to business success, and that’s good news for us, because digital is by its very nature so measurable. Now, we can showcase the value that PR adds as never before.”
According to Pickard, PR is no longer about “communicating key messages top-down along a vertical axis from corporations to a mass consumer audience by earning editorial coverage. Now, PR is also about stimulating conversations between stakeholders on a peer-to-peer basis, where brands are co-created horizontally. PR these days really stands for ‘Public Relationships’, where we apply our traditional skills with journalists to many more communities of interest. These days, we are increasingly becoming ‘digital storytellers’, where we are becoming content providers, programming information for news streams that scroll on people’s computer and mobile screens.”
As for the biggest challenge facing the PR industry in Asia, Pickard says, “There is a rising tide of expectations for compensation among PR agency workforces, which client budgets are not currently increasing rapidly enough to support. Therefore, to avoid the kind of staff turnover that such a problem presents, PR firms need to focus on the quality of their training and the quality of their service to earn higher demand for professional time that is worth more because clients come to agree that it has a higher value. At the same time, PR firms need to reduce the gigantic generation gaps between digital generation newcomers and analogue generation veterans so that clients benefit from the best blend of traditional and emerging consulting skills.”