Settling the Eternal Argument: Advertising vs. PR (Part 2)

We talked about making communications viral in a previous post which met with much approval.  A simple, but distinct, difference between advertising and PR is the degree of viral success.  How many ads do you forward to your friends or colleagues?  Maybe two or three a year, and those have to really catch your eye because they are funny, or dumb, or applicable to something else. 

Now think how many times A WEEK you might forward articles to the same number of people.  We forward articles to share thoughts, stay in touch, and basically to start and engage in meaningful conversations with people who we respect.  We also do it to spread news to others, sometimes for the purpose of influencing opinions, thinking and developing new ideas on a topic. 

PR has been viral since the first news story was written.  Prior to the internet, we used to clip articles or make copies and mail/fax them to friends and colleagues to stay in touch, make a point, reconnect.  With the presence of the web, the viral component of PR continues to grow steadily.  Now with social media, viral messaging is growing exponentially.  Not sure how reliable the actual messaging is, but the viral component is certainly growing faster than messages are created.

Advertising will always hold the back seat on this one.  Paying for placements may grab attention and raise awareness in the long run, but unless it is an ad campaign that is exceptionally creative, it will not hold much viral value.

Tags: , , , ,

One Response to “Settling the Eternal Argument: Advertising vs. PR (Part 2)”

  1. I think Advertorials are going to become more common now than ever before.
    We have been promoting them through Hotelexecutive.com with much interest in
    the past few months.
    I have seen this trend ever since we started publishing best-practice
    articles in the Hotel Business Review in 1996, http://www.hotelexecutive.com, although we ensure the HBR
    remains void of any self-promotion or advertising so that our readers are
    confident the publication is not selling to them. Even so, there remains a
    very fine line between what is advertising and what is a best-practice
    article.
    But it wasn’t until recently we caught on that this is the direction
    providing information on the internet is headed. Advertorials first started
    around the 1960’s, but have evolved a lot since then!
    A very effective Advertorial does not sound like an advertising pitch at
    all. It can read like very informative news, and leave an effective
    impression on the reader. It is in print what Coca Cola has been doing in
    the movies for years.

Leave a Reply

Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree