By Grant Wright,
CEO
Looking at past trends in an evolving industry can be a poor
predictor of future trends—whether you’re talking about the stock market or the
PR field.
Witness Facebook (a 9-year-old),
Twitter (a 7-year-old), Instagram and Tout (both 2 year olds). These
are among only a few of the game changers that disrupted the publishing
industry. Each is a relative toddler by traditional business standards, and not
that many years before their existence I don’t recall anyone predicting them. But
their global impact on the human condition is already established.
The trend impacting the PR industry, therefore, is not which
new social tool will take off, but that game changers are now the norm. Expect
and anticipate them.
Here are four things (among many) I see near through long term
impacting PR.
The Story Stays
We like a good yarn. Stories have been told throughout human
history and they’re not going away anytime soon. So while the delivery method may
continue to break speed records in the unprecedented data age we’re now in, if
there isn’t a compelling story to whatever the communication is, it won’t leave
the station.
In creating your communications, think about your story. How
compelling is it or could it be, and why should others care? And if you don’t
have one, then either create one or rethink your communication strategy for
most effective resource use.
Multimedia Explosion
We are a sensorial species, and with the written word
there’s a terrible lack of engagement of the senses. True, imagination can help
make up for that. However, the way I imagine Utopia and you do can be very
different, meaning there’s a significant control loss of the intended message.
But what if I could not only tell you a story, but also engage you in it by
your five senses? Instant communication around the planet is now possible with video covering
sight and sound that will only increase.
But I think it’s only a matter of time before technology allows for an online
cook ‘book’ to not only convey with what and how something’s made, but also how
it should look, feel and even smell and taste.
Additive
Manufacturing

Local & Smaller
It’s well established doctrine for good communication to
know thy audience, and reach them where they are. With billions of us now
having our heads buried in our smartphones more than we’d like to admit, guess
where audiences are? Sure, we’re still driving down the freeway ready to notice
a billboard, pouring over that quaint thing called a newspaper at Starbucks
occasionally, and watching commercials whip by as we watch our favorite DVR’d
show. But increasingly we’re more
interested in our immediate environs – our local neighborhood - than otherwise.
So as opposed to a broad shotgun approach, PR will increasingly need a precise
rifle approach tailored to local geography and interests. And in doing so rely
less on large real estate like a full magazine, in-depth television reporting
or a regional newspaper spread, but instead plan for consumption to be
increasingly on a screen just four or five inches wide—that if it’s showing a
picture of a rose, soon enough will probably smell just as sweet.
Twitter: Grant_Wright
Tout: Grant_Wright
LinkedIn: /grantwrightwoc
Twitter: @wrightoncomm
Facebook: /wrightoncomm


No comments:
Post a Comment