Help Yourself to Help Your Clients

Un cop de màThere’s a great scene in the movie Jerry MaGuire . In it, Tom Cruise’s sports agent character has finally lost it with his one client (a football player brilliantly played by Cuba Gooding Jr.).

Frustrated by Gooding Jr.’s frosty relationship with the media, Cruise implores, “Help me to help you.” It’s a pivotal moment in the movie for both characters – and it’s one that we could (should) use more in the PR industry.

Although it’s true of many industries, public relations is at a pivotal stage in its history.

New media sources and resources have changed the way PR is handled – and if it hasn’t made your agency change with it, then perhaps questions should be asked why.

So how can you help yourself to help your clients?

Use the Tools Effectively

We continuously tell each other how great social media is for PR. Yet are we doing the same to our clients? More to the point, are we showing our clients why social media is so effective?

Try this experiment. The next time you have a promotional campaign, organize a pre-determined Twitter Q+A session between your client and users of that brand. Use a hashtag to keep the conversation separate and set up a Twitter username for that particular discussion.

Let your client see how he or she can immediately engage with their consumer base. They get both positive and constructive criticism in the open, and the customer feels appreciated because their brand is listening. Relationship building like that is priceless and if your client doesn’t get social media’s benefits then, they probably never will.

Encourage Greatness

I’ve met a lot of PR agency bosses (corporate and boutique) that seem to have their head stuck in the sand when it comes to growing their agency. They seem to feel that they’re the only ones that have something of value to say, or offer. Get over yourself.

Some of the brightest voices are being unheard because of the way you think. The industry is changing and new blood is heading the rush. Instead of trying to hold that back, embrace it.

Do you have team meetings? Hand over the floor to a junior executive or intern and see what they have to say. While their ideas might not all be gold, what happens if you discover that one nugget that blows you away so much you wonder why you weren’t doing it in the first place? Greatness is in everyone – allow it to shine and it can only benefit you and your client in the long run.

Share the Accolades

There’s nothing better than seeing a carefully crafted PR campaign come to fruition and be a major success. You’re cock-a-hoop because it shows your agency knows its stuff and your client is over the moon with the resultant interest in his or her company. So why not share the success?

Suggest a fun agency/client get-together where everyone from both companies can get to know each other better away from a corporate environment. Your team feels more involved, and they should – after all, they were an integral part of the success as well, weren’t they? And your client sees you’re appreciative of their involvement in helping your campaign, therefore strengthening the relationship. It’s a win-win.

Change is all around us. Are you keeping up?

Creative Commons License photo credit: Jose Téllez

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15 Responses to Help Yourself to Help Your Clients
  1. Ari Herzog
    Twitter:
    January 27, 2010 | 1:51 am

    Kudos for telling CEOs to stop acting like asses and get over their assumptions that they know more than the people who want to work with them. Will they listen? I can only hope.
    Ari Herzog´s most recent blog post …Boost Corporate Branding and Add That Blog Comment

    • Danny
      January 27, 2010 | 8:37 pm

      Doubtful. But hey, stranger things have happened, so you never know.

  2. John Haydon
    Twitter:
    January 27, 2010 | 8:54 am

    Danny – I love the Twitter Q&A idea! It’s a practical way to hold hands with your clients as they jump into the “social media pond”. It might even be a good idea to project this Q&A session on the board room wall while other execs observe.
    John Haydon´s most recent blog post …How To Use The Q&A Section on LinkedIn to Promote Your Blog (Day 26)

    • Danny
      January 27, 2010 | 8:38 pm

      Nice addition, John – that way, anyone attached to the company can also watch if they’re not involved in the interview session, and share with their contacts, increasing the eyeballs even more.

  3. Lesli
    January 27, 2010 | 3:53 pm

    I agree that telling is hot air, but some clients don’t even understand social media enough to make showing impactful.

    My firm recently held a “brainstorming” meeting with a client who is on the brink of a re-branding transition. We used a familiar tool, PowerPoint, and linked slides to various social media outlets through screen shots. By giving them the opportunity to see the format in a static capacity first made the transition to a live demonstration (by hyperlink) much more effective.

    For as much as we need to “nudge” clients toward the ever-expanding social media pond, I think we also need to be considerate of their apprehension. Sometimes those CEO asses aren’t asses, but merely scared of something they dont’s understand or, worse yet, afraid of feeling obsolete.

    • Danny
      January 27, 2010 | 8:39 pm

      Agreed, if it’s a misunderstanding of the medium, that’s down to education from either a consultant or agency. If it’s just determined ignorance… well, then that’s another story.

  4. markclayson
    January 28, 2010 | 2:10 am

    Thanks so much. That is a good post.
    markclayson´s most recent blog post …Get Your Child’s Twitter Background on MY Twitter Page

  5. Tim Jahn
    Twitter:
    January 28, 2010 | 10:19 am

    “Suggest a fun agency/client get-together where everyone from both companies can get to know each other better away from a corporate environment.”

    I think that’s a great suggestion, Danny. Anytime we can bring people together for further collaboration, it’s a win win.

    At the end of the day, humans need community. So why not work that into our business and other activities whenever possible?
    Tim Jahn´s most recent blog post …Zacuto

    • Danny
      January 30, 2010 | 11:16 am

      Right, Tim. We get so wrapped up in the budget, timing, accountability, etc, of a project that we often forget there are human beings behind the campaign(s).

      Friends will go out on a limb for each other – imagine the magic you could create if business projects and collaborations were made up of a network of friends?

  6. Mark Clayson
    January 29, 2010 | 8:01 pm

    Social media is an excellent place for drug companies to utilize online support groups, as well as discuss treatments and medications with patients online, this trend will only continue to grow.
    Mark Clayson ´s most recent blog post …Get Your Child’s Twitter Background on MY Twitter Page

    • Danny
      January 30, 2010 | 11:18 am

      Pharma is definitely an area that social can offer many benefits, Mark. We’re working with a roster of pharma companies at the minute. The main sticking point is the legal aspect of what can and can’t be said, which can hinder a proper social approach. But it’s fun trying to work out how to get round that :)

  7. Jamei Favreau
    Twitter:
    January 30, 2010 | 4:25 am

    I loved the tweet chat suggestion. This is a great one! I have a potential client who knows the value of social media but is having a hard time selling it to his father.

    Time will tell what will happen.
    Jamei Favreau´s most recent blog post …Social Media to Save the NHL (Last installment a bit late)

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