Licensing PR
Steve Phenix, author of the Phenix Rising blog, has trotted out the notion of licensing PR practitioners. Distressed by the low regard in which PR is held, Phenix is exploring a number of ways to rehabilitate the profession’s image.
In my nearly 30 years in the business, I’ve seen the licensing idea brought back to life (not unlike a Phoenix) again and again. The outcome of licensing would certainly be beneficial, since the license would be required for PR professionals to be able to ply their trade and all PR professionals would be held to the same standard. Anyone violating the standard could lose his license. Phenix suggests (for the US, anyway) a state-by-state PR version of the bar associations that test, license and censure lawyers.
The testing that results in the license is the biggest problem with the licensing idea. Lawyers are tested on their knowledge of the law. The law is complex, but it’s also well defined in books that record the laws enacted by federal and state legislatures. Accountants also undergo testing to ensure they understand the principles of accounting. There’s just one way to keep books. (Legally, anyway.) Doctors are tested to ensure they know what they need to know to properly diagnose and treat illness. These professions are all very black and white in knowledge and practice. Sure, there’s room for creativity and flexibility, but within some very sharply drawn lines.
Not so in the PR profession. Any communication challenge can be appropached a thousand different ways, and it takes just one creative thinker to come up with a thousand-and-first. What will work with an target audience in Los Angeles may not succeed with one in Mississippi. Culture plays a part. You just can’t test PR the way you can test accounting.
Yes, there are accreditation programs in PRSA and IABC (among other organizations), but these are accreditations instead of certifications for a reason. They tend to be subjective in their approach. While it’s possible to determine someone came up with the wrong approach to a PR assignment, there is simply no one right approach.
Of course, there have always been people on both sides of the issue. Given the news reports of PR malfeasance that just don’t seem to stop (Burson Marstellar is at the center of the most recent), perhaps it’s time to drag out the licensing debate and hash through it one more time. Perhaps something good will come out of the discussion.
02/10/05 | 4 Comments | Licensing PR