Title: Ethics and Professionalism
1Ethics and Professionalism
2Ethics Defined
- Ethics is concerned with how we should live our
lives. It focuses on questions about what is
right or wrong, fair or unfair, caring or
uncaring, good or bad, responsible or
irresponsible, and the like. (Jaksa and
Pritchard, Methods of Analysis)
3Four-Way Test for Ethical Decision Making (from
Rotary International)
- Is it the truth?
- Is it fair to all concerned?
- Will it build goodwill and better friendships?
- Will it be beneficial to all concerned?
4PR professionals have the burden of making
ethical decisions that satisfy
- The public interest
- Their employers (or clients) self interest
- The standards of the PR profession
- Their personal values
- In an ideal world, these four areas would not
conflict but in reality they often do. - How many PR people have beenasked to
over-represent a product? How many agencies have
been asked to take sides on issues that conflict
with a healthy environment? The answer is that
many of us participate in areas where ethical
standards are vague at best. (comments from a
senior PR executive in PRSAs The Strategist)
5Public Expectations of PR?
- Society, in general, expects public relations
people to be advocates, just as they expect
advertising copywriters to make a product sound
attractive, journalists to be objective, and
attorneys to defend someone in court - But communication efforts will not attempt, for
example to present false/deceptive/misleading
information under the guise of literal truth no
matter how strongly the practitioners want to
convince others of the merits of a particular
clients/organizations position/cause(from
Martinson, Florida International University)
6Professional Codes of Ethics in PR
- The Public Relations Society of America (PRSSA)
Code of Ethics (page 78) - PRSA Code (more detailed) online at
http//www.prssa.org/downloads/codeofethics.pdf - The Codes core values
- Advocacy Independence
- Honesty Loyalty
- Expertise Fairness
- PRSA, with 22,000 members in 110 U.S chapters, is
the worlds largest national PR organization - South Carolina PRSA Chapter http//www.scprsa.or
g/ - In second and third place (size-wise) are the
International Association of Business
Communicators (IABC) and the International Public
Relations Association (IPRA)
7Professionalism, Licensing and Accreditation
- ProfessionalismIn PR there are differences of
opinion about whether PR is a craft, skill, or a
developing profession - Licensingthe debate continues over whether
public relations should require professional
licensing (such as the medical, legal and real
estate fields have). There are strong pros and
cons on each side - Accreditationprofessional development
certification programs help improve standards and
professionalism in the field
8Personal Ethics
- Be honest at all times
- Convey a sense of business ethics based on your
own standards and those of society - Respect the integrity and position of your
opponents and audiences - Develop trust by emphasizing substance over
triviality - Present all sides of an issue
- Strive for a balance between loyalty to the
organization and duty to the public - Dont sacrifice long-term objectives for
short-term gains
9PR Professionalism Act like a professional in
the field, by having
- A sense of independence
- A sense of responsibility to society and the
public interest - Be concerned about the competence and honor of
the profession as a whole - A higher loyalty to the standards of the
profession and fellow professionals than to the
employer/client of the moment. - The reference point in all PR activity must be
the standards of the profession and not those of
the client or the employer
10Ethical Concerns includeEach involve possible
deceptive omission of who or what is truly behind
the PR initiative.
- Front Groups (p.88) concerns about groups that
disguise or obscure the true identities of their
members as they seek to influence public policy
or opinion - Video News Releases (VNRs)viewers may not know
or may be confused about a VNRs source.
Guidelines have been established for ethical VNR
usage (p.80) - Internet Public Relationsshould PR people try to
manipulate public opinions or create a buzz
about an issue/product/service by anonymously
touting things online? (local examplesee web
posting) - PR Internet Guidelines (p.81)
11Ethical Dealings with News Media
- The idea that, in dealing with the media,
anything less than total honesty will destroy
credibility and, with it, the PR practitioners
usefulness to an employer. - However, honesty doesnt automatically mean that
you need to answer every question that a reporter
might ask - Often discretion is used because you also have an
obligation to represent the best interests of
your client or employer - Gifts, of any kind, according to the PRSA, can
contaminate the free flow of accurate/truthful
information to the public. - PR people should not undermine the trust of the
media by providing junkets of doubtful news
value, extravagent parties, expensive gifts, and
personal favors for media reps - Journalists may think you are trying to bribe
them to get favorable coverage - But different countries have different ethics in
this area! (p.90 and p.91)
12Shades of Gray in the News Business Examples
- The relationship between automotive writers and
car manufacturers, for example (on payroll at car
company as a consultant) - Magazines are increasingly blurring the line
between news features and advertisements - Celebrities appearing on talks shows and
endorsing products
- Product placement on TV and in movies is
growing and growing - Microsoft example p.90-1
- Inexpensive items such as coffee mugs, T-shirts,
key chains, etc. that may be part of promotional
packets/events are not considered gifts in this
sense. - But some news organizations have strict policies
that ban reporters/editors from taking even
inexpensive items