PR for People Monthly September 2014 | Page 33

5. Pay Your PR Person on Time

Most PR deals are monthly retainer deals. When you pay slowly or are habitually late with your payments, PR people are reluctant to work on your account. As long as you are under contract, your PR firm will hit all your deadlines, just like a law firm, but if you pay slowly, they will pull back on the workload. The reason for the work slow-down? PR people are paid for their service — the time they actually spend servicing your account. Slow, late or non-payment is theft of professional service that cannot be recovered.

6. Provide Incentives, but Don’t Replace Cash

Don’t ask your PR professional to render professional service without payment. In lieu of cash, PR professionals are routinely offered trade and barter agreements or stock options. Some of the gifts offered include works of art, cosmetic services, spa services, gourmet treats, event tickets, or free restaurant and bar tabs, which are fine as incentives, but not considered payment-in-full for professional services. Cash is the best incentive. Pay the person what she is worth. Would you skimp on the price of hiring a good surgeon? More importantly, stick to the financial terms of the contract that you have negotiated with your PR person.

7. Understand PR Scope of Service

The terms of the proposal should specify exactly what you are paying for in the monthly retainer. The lower your retainer, then the longer it will take to get you results. Do not — I repeat DO NOT — ask for deliverables that are not in the scope of service without negotiating a new contract or an addendum to an existing contract, and without understanding that you will be charged for extra time (billable hours). This is the rule, but there is a major exception. See PR loyalty.

8. Respect Loyalty

PR Professionals pride longevity in their client relationships and will spend extra hours working for clients who have demonstrated long-term loyalty and have consistently paid promptly. Over the course of years of service, retainer fees will not be increased and the long-term client can expect great service for much lower than the current market rate.

9. Don’t Poach Intellectual Property

Don’t ask your PR firm for their proprietary lists of influencers, investors, or media. Your PR person will always give you direct access to specific individuals when it is the right thing to do for both the client and the PR Professional’s rolodex of resources. But don’t ask for a well-documented core dump. It‘s a deal breaker.

In summary, while PR people are articulate, affable, socially charming and persuasive, always remember the PR person is not your friend. Now genuine friendships do emerge from business relationships, but they are the exception, not the rule.

A PR person/client relationship is only productive so long as the PR person continues to offer you benefits and you continue to pay your bills on time. Do not feign charisma, charm or likeability. Getting the PR person to like you is not essential to ensure success of a campaign.

Success is contingent on a whole array of external factors that are out of the PR firm’s control. Yet as long as you pay on time, your PR firm will perform to peak capacity and deliver results.

How to Manage Your PR Firm on a Monthly Basis

1. Stay in close communication with your PR person by phone and email.

2. At the beginning of each month, ask for a schedule of deliverables. The schedule is what the firm will do to implement a successful program for that month.

3. Review the schedule and make any changes that are needed so it is clear what the scope of PR duties will be for the month.

4. Make certain that the monthly deliverables are consistent with the long-term goal of the PR program and the PR contract.

5. Make adjustments to the long-term goal of the PR program that reflect what is going in your industry or in the current political or economic landscape.

6. At the close of each month, review the deliverables and get a complete update on what has been accomplished to date and what will roll over until the next month.

7. No one knows your business as well as you do. Make certain your PR person is well-informed.

8. No one knows PR as well as your PR professional. Make certain your PR firm has made you well-informed so you can make good business decisions.

For questions or comments, please reply to [email protected]

Published by Xanthus Communications LLC and PR for People®