Creating Original and Personalized PR Campaign’s

Public Relations
pr campaigns 12.07.21

Most companies these days understand how important personalization is when it comes to their PR and marketing campaigns. Consumers these days prefer to interact with any type of content that’s catering to their needs and fits their specific interests. 

Many consumers have reported that they’re also a lot more likely to make purchases from brands that give them personalized offers and recommendations.

To keep consumers coming back and remaining loyal to a brand, companies have to invest in personalization strategies that will provide consumers with personalized experiences. By using different types of AI tools and technologies, companies can more easily develop personalized messages and experiences for their consumers– as long as they have clean and concise data for audience segmentation.

However, one of the biggest struggles that companies face when it comes to personalization is being able to toe the line between giving audiences useful recommendations and content, and being accurate to a point where the business is considered creepy by its consumers. Since most customers these days tend to leave bits of their own data on every website they visit, companies can utilize that information to get a better idea of the right personalization strategies for their campaigns.

Adding Personalization to PR Campaigns

While it’s not always easy to make consumers feel comfortable and achieve the right degree of personalization, as long as a company is transparent in the type of data it’s collecting and how that data is being used and processed, it should leave audiences at ease about the data they leave behind.

However, after a company is able to precisely pinpoint the sweet spot between creepy and beneficial recommendations for its consumers, there’s the  new challenge of distributing relevant and new content to audiences.

Companies looking to make every piece of content they distribute useful for audiences should be implementing audience segmentation strategies. After learning about their target audience, companies should proceed to analyze the data from consumers in order to identify similarities and differences between them and to categorize those consumers into different groups.

This is what makes personalization a lot more efficient, as different groups of consumers will get different recommendations regarding products, or will even receive different content that more precisely caters to their needs or interests.

Additionally, through social listening strategies, companies can also learn more about their consumers. They can keep track of what consumers say about a brand, and what they say about their likes, and dislikes, and get a better understanding of potential consumer trends for its target audience.

Aside from that, companies can also ask the consumers themselves what they do and don’t like in order to add further personalization. This can be done through  consumer surveys or polls.

In the ideal scenario, all of these tools and strategies can be utilized at the same time in order to create content and ads that will grab the attention of the consumer during the right point of their buying journey. They can then elicit the right emotions that will inspire them to take an action into the next step of that journey.

Developing an Original PR Campaign

These days most news outlets tend to sound so similar that  anyone can open one of the media outlets and immediately figure out what content they’re consuming. Every journalist seems to look alike, talk in the same manner, and cover the same topic, day in, day out.

In fact, the same is true across many other industries, not just news – people look and sound the same, and  talk about the same topics in everything from lifestyle to investing, to healthcare. That’s mainly because every industry has its own set of technical terms that people use, and then reuse, so they all end up sounding the same.

Since there are thousands of hours of content uploaded to the internet every minute, being monotone, boring, and repetitive is not how companies can grab the attention of news outlets or consumers. In fact, all it takes these days to have everyone start talking about a campaign as soon as it has launched is for it to  stand out from the crowd.

While a campaign might be covering the same topics as everyone else in a particular industry niche, as long as it’s fresh and original, it’s going to grab attention.

That’s why it’s important for companies to create and develop original PR campaigns which can truly grab the attention of the right people and generate success for the business. Instead of looking at other brands and how they’re navigating their PR strategies and campaigns, companies should strive to be more original, and it’s fairly easy to achieve that.

Avoiding Clichés

One of the best ways to pursue and develop original PR campaigns is to avoid cliches. Although every single marketer and PR professional is always going on about the importance and the power of storytelling, plenty of businesses tend to ignore that fact.

While it’s a fact that’s important, the fact that it’s been said a million times is probably how it ended up losing meaning for people.

However, the best way to utilize the power of storytelling and avoid clichés is to speak to the audience in a way that they understand. Listening to how audiences communicate and learning about the stories that interest them  are great ways to learn more about them. Companies should use the language that consumers are already using and connecting with.

Empty Statements

No consumer will support a brand that constantly repeats itself and talks in circles about its products or itself. That’s why when it comes to creating original PR campaigns, companies should cut away any unnecessary and empty statements and words, and should narrow down their messages to get to their very core.

Although this isn’t an easy thing to do, as adding more words to anything seems a lot easier than removing them, it’s essential because it’s important for consumers to understand the core message instead of getting lost in long-winded sentences that have no value.

Beauty Marketing is Not One Size Fits All - PR Strategies for Different Generations
Public Relations

Beauty Marketing is Not One Size Fits All – PR Strategies for Different Generations

The beauty industry is like a chameleon, always adapting to the shifting desires of its audience....

Learn More
Pakistani woman in cultural garments
Public Relations

What is Cultural Marketing? Definition & Strategy

In today's diverse and interconnected world, multicultural marketing has become not just a trend...

Learn More
professionals sitting around a table networking
Public Relations

The Importance of Networking in Public Relations

Networking is the lifeblood of public relations. It's the secret sauce that can turn good PR...

Learn More
Related Public Relations