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Theoretical Underpinnings for PR

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Chapter 5 Theoretical Underpinnings for PR This is PR 11th Edition Newsom, Turk and Kruckeberg – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Theoretical Underpinnings for PR


1
Chapter 5
  • Theoretical Underpinnings for PR

2
PR Theory
  • Borrowed from
  • Organizational and management theory
  • Political theory
  • Communication theory
  • Persuasion theory
  • All have roots in sociology and psychology with
    some connection to math, biology and physics

3
Four Sociological Theories
  • Help us understand how people respond to mass and
    specialized communication
  • Structural functionalism
  • Evolutionary perspective
  • Social conflict
  • Symbolic interactionism

4
Five Psychological Approaches
  • Often used in studies on the effects of mass
    communication
  • Neurobiological
  • Comparative
  • Behavioral
  • Psychoanalytic
  • Cognitive

5
Two Persuasion Models
  • Help us to understand how people interpret
    messages
  • Sociocultural paradigm
  • Psychodynamic

6
Organizational Theory
  • Based on general systems theory parts of system
    are interrelated function as a whole that is
    greater than the sum of its parts
  • Theoretical concept can be found in works of
    Hegel
  • Cultural approach looks at development, impact of
    organizations culture
  • Critical approach examines sources of power and
    control in an organization
  • Postmodern approach focuses on post 1960s

7
Communication and Behavioral Theory
  • Behavioral models, theories replacing
    communication models and theories as core
    underpinning of PR
  • Behavioral models suggest PR is social science
  • Behavioral models suggest PR communication must
    focus on direct, personal and not mass appeals
  • Behavioral models shift objective and focus away
    from communication models emphasis on creating
    or retaining awareness to creating and retaining
    a behavioral response
  • Behavioral models really asymmetrical even though
    PR best practices are symmetrical

8
Symmetrical Behavioral Model
  • Gauge existing levels of awareness
  • Investigate responses in attempt to create, raise
    or sustain awareness
  • Measure latent readiness to act
  • Monitor responses to triggering event
  • Evaluate behavior to determine why particular
    action was taken

9
Winning People Over
  • Three basic ways to get people to do what you
    want
  • Power use authority, implied or overt threat of
    compulsion
  • Patronage as crude as bribery, as delicate as
    celebrity endorsement
  • Persuasion using communication to win people over

10
Steps in Persuasion Process
  • Presenting
  • Attending
  • Comprehending
  • Yielding
  • Retaining
  • Acting

11
PR and Persuasion
  • Frequently used to change opinions
  • Most critical factor in opinion change is
    information or the lack thereof
  • Critical how information is presented or withheld
  • Access to information and selective use of it
    combines tools of power and persuasion

12
Personal Persuaders
  • Organizations and significant others who exercise
    leverage over others
  • Involves recognition and acceptance of their
    authority

13
Impersonal Persuaders
  • Less potent and influential than personal
    persuaders
  • Mass media editorials and advertisements
  • Information disseminated by educational and
    government institutions
  • Content of entertainment

14
Framing
  • Sometimes attributed to art
  • Definitions abound
  • Agreement focuses on three elements selection,
    emphasis, connection of information to lead
    readers/viewers to a particular conclusion
  • PR practitioners frame issues

15
Opinion Makers and News Managers
  • May be someone who creates an event that becomes
    news when it happens and is covered
  • May be someone who focuses media attention on an
    event that might be otherwise overlooked

16
Propaganda and Persuasion Appeals
  • Name calling
  • Glittering generalities
  • Transfer
  • Testimonials
  • Plain folks
  • Bandwagon
  • Card stacking
  • Emotional stereotypes
  • Illicit silence
  • Subversive rhetoric

17
Propaganda
  • Not necessarily negative
  • Nothing inherent about propaganda that prevents
    it from being used to change attitudes and
    behavior constructively
  • Propagandists try to teach people what to think,
    while educators try to teach people how to think

18
Cantrils Laws
  • Events affect opinion
  • Demands for action are a common response once
    opinion is formed
  • People will become involved out of self interest
  • People seek leaders for issues around which
    opinion develops
  • Reliability is difficult to assess

19
Cialdinis Self-Persuasion Elements
  • Consistency once they commit to a position,
    people are more likely to perform behaviors
    consistent with that position
  • Draws on Festingers theory of cognitive
    dissonance
  • Draws on Rokeachs theory of beliefs, attitudes
    and values
  • Reciprocity people are influenced by a sense
    that they owe or are beholden to others
  • Social validation people are more influenced to
    behave in a certain way

20
Cialdinis Self-Persuasion Elements (cont.)
  • Authority people are more willing to follow the
    suggestions of someone considered a legitimate
    authority
  • Scarcity people want items and opportunities
    that are viewed as scarce or dwindling

21
Earl Newsoms Persuasion Principles
  • Identification people will relate to an idea or
    opinion if they see it having a direct effect on
    them
  • Suggestion of action people will respond to
    ideas that are accompanied by a proposed action
    by the sponsor of the idea or if the recipients
    themselves propose it

22
Earl Newsoms Persuasion Principles (cont.)
  • Familiarity and trust people are unwilling to
    accept ideas from sources if they dont trust or
    know them
  • Clarity people need to clearly understand the
    meaning of an idea before they can be persuaded
    to accept it

23
Opinion Leaders
  • Vocal activists
  • Opinion leaders, both mass media and individuals
  • Power leaders government officials, legislators,
    others who have power to take actions
  • Increasingly it is the power leaders who have the
    most influence

24
Persuasion Strategies
  • Stimulus-response
  • Cognitive
  • Motivational
  • Social appeal
  • Personality appeal

25
Impediments to Persuasion
  • Cognitive dissonance could occur sometimes less
    social persuasion produces more attitude change
    because people feel they have freely chosen a
    particular opinion or behavior
  • Truth is personal much truth is
    circumstantial, subjective so the same truth
    may be interpreted differently by different
    individuals

26
Media Theories
  • Lasswells Theory who says what in which
    channels to whom with what effect
  • Ignores feedback
  • Source is the who
  • Credibility, expertise generally important
  • People tend to believe sources that are like them
    or who they want to be like
  • People also tend to seek authority in sources
  • Source characteristics can be negated if a
    message lacks quality, plausibility

27
Media Theories (cont.)
  • Messages are the what
  • The content has consequences
  • So does the way it is presented (telling both
    sides, linking the familiar to the unfamiliar)
  • Repetition generally increases learning
  • Always tell people what they are expected to
    think or do
  • Present something of value to the public and be
    compatible with the publics mindset
  • Each message needs a purpose

28
Media Theories (cont.)
  • Each message should appeal to some need or
    interest in the audience such as Maslows
    hierarchy of needs
  • physical needs
  • safety
  • love
  • self-esteem
  • self-actualization

29
Media Theories (cont.)
  • Each message needs texture color, design,
    movement, sound that appeal to the intended
    audience
  • Message language must mean the same thing to the
    audience as it does to the source and must have
    maximum impact on the viewer or listener no
    jargon, maximum clarity, maximum emotional impact
  • Messages are increasingly globally accessible,
    cultural considerations, different values are
    increasingly important

30
Media Theories (cont.)
  • Media are the channels
  • Complexity of message influences choice print
    handles complexity best, video best for simple
    messages
  • Some messages involve their audiences more
    computers interactively involve, TV passively
    involves
  • Media orientation of public most critical factor
    to consider in choosing a channel uses and
    gratifications research essential
  • Knowing not just who receives the channel but who
    pays attention to it and remembers it is
    important
  • Knowing which channels are considered credible
    also should be a factor in choosing the right
    medium

31
Media Theories (cont.)
  • Receivers are the to whom
  • Sometimes messages must be adjusted to minimize
    differences between the source and receivers
  • If messages are tuned out they are not really
    received
  • Messages must be encoded into something
    personally meaningful to an intended receiver
  • Distortions, distractions, noise must be taken
    into account
  • Symbols must be chosen carefully to be sure they
    have intended meaning to the receivers
  • Receiver stereotypes must be taken into account
    both in terms of how they influence encoding and
    decoding of messages

32
Media Theories (cont.)
  • Response to a message is the with what effect
  • How people respond is a function of anticipation,
    expectations and assumptions
  • Comprehension and acceptance of messages must
    occur before a receiver can fashion a response
  • Some receivers will respond to group dynamics in
    fashioning their response
  • Others will strive to reduce discrepancies or
    cognitive dissonance
  • Some people take behavior cues from external
    causes, while others respond to internal causes
  • All opinions, attitudes and actions are affected
    by family, friends, informal work groups and
    formal groups, so no message works in isolation
    from these influences

33
Models of Information Processing
  • Information processing is critical in
    communication models that predict behavior
    successfully are especially useful in a public
    relations communications campaign
  • Grunigs model of publics and how they seek and
    process information is significant
  • Publics range from active to inactive, and their
    behavior ranges from seeking information to just
    processing it

34
Models of Information Processing (cont.)
  • Individuals are more likely to seek and process
    information if they think it will help them solve
    a problem and if they are personally involved
  • Those who are constrained are less likely to
    either seek or process information

35
Diffusion Process
  • Awareness (presenting)
  • Information( attending)
  • Evaluation (comprehending)
  • Trial (yielding)
  • Adoption (retaining)
  • Reinforcement ( retaining)
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