The marginalization of Rolodex PR
I was interviewing for a job about 15 years ago, a PR position with a high-tech startup. It only took the person interviewing me—he was the president or the CEO, if memory serves—to ask about my Rolodex.
For the uninitiated, I wasn’t being asked about the rotary card index loaded with removable cards where I kept contact information. (I still have a paper Rolodex which, in addition to my digital contact lists, I use frequently.) I was being asked specifically about how many industry media contacts I had. Truth be told, I didn’t have too many contacts, and the interview ended shortly afterward. No matter how much I tried to explain that good PR isn’t about quantity of contacts, this company wasn’t interested in anything but.
They’re hardly alone. In another job, I was constantly asked to “get out your Rolodex” and had to remind the boss that I didn’t practice Rolodex PR.
Good PR is not, in fact, about the number of relationships you have developed with media contacts. It never has been and, as we navigate our way through the shifting media seas, it is less important than it ever was. Getting people to tell your story is not about the relationships you have with reporters. It’s about the quality of the story and how well it aligns with the reporter’s beat and interests.
I tried explaining this to the startup exec: If I have a great story to tell, I can get it placed without having ever spoken to any given reporter. On the other hand, if the story sucks no amount of time invested in building a close relationship will get a reporter to cover it.
Getting a great story placed also requires finding the reporters who have reported on similar subjects in the past. Fifteen or 20 years ago, Lexis-Nexis was an ideal tool for finding reporters who have shown interest in your topic. (It was also a great way to check the work of reporters calling you to find out to learn how they have covered companies like the ones you represent.)
Media relations-focused PR professionals who practiced Rolodex PR are finding even less value in their connections today. The composition of a publication’s editorial staff has always been fluid—particularly on smaller papers and trade publications—but the shakeout in the journalism business means a lot of those well-established contactds aren’t working in the business at all any more.
The changing nature of journalism, including the rise of blogging and citizen journalism, has even further marginalized the value of the Rolodex. In a post on Rebooting the News, Dave Winer suggests that journalism training could become part of everybody’s education, not just those who enroll in journalism school:
In the future everyone can be a journalist, and the people who will be most valuable are those who are experts in areas outside journalism. That means, to me, that everyone should get a basic journalism education, in the same way it???s a good idea for us to take a semester of math, English lit, chemistry or physics.
My own recent experience speaking with a journalism department faculty proved (to me, at least) that the future of journalism is up in the air. Hundreds of models are being proposed and experimented with. But Dave’s view (that everyone can be a journalist, not necessarily that universities will embrace journalism-as-core-curriculum) should serve as a shake-up call for PR practitioners who have relied on the Rolodex.
First of all, I have experience with journalists who become experts in other fields. A good friend with whom I attended journalism school decided he wanted to cover law, so he went to law school in order to improve his depth of knowledge. He grew so close to the field that he could no longer report effectively to people who didn’t have his own level of understanding. (He eventually gave up journalism and has been a public defender for the better part of 30 years.)
One of the goals of journalism training is helping reporters learn to translate complex topics so lay readers can understand them. As experts in their field become journalists in an everyone-can-publish world, PR can help them make their messages understandable to outsiders…that is, we can help them tell their stories.
But more important is finding those journalists—professional or citizen—who would be genuinely interested in telling our companies’ or clients’ stories. And when everyone is conceivably a reporter, you’d either need the world’s biggest Rolodex, and more relationships than any one person can possibly maintain, or a different approach to getting your story out.
Practitioners who have always found the right outlet and pitched a great story have a leg up in this environment over those who build relationships with a diminishing pool of professional journalists. And assuming Dave’s vision is accurate, we’ll also help our clients—the experts in their fields—be their own journalists.
As with all things, this isn’t an either/or proposition. Some solid relationships with important journalists will always be important. (Having that relationship with Walt Mossberg or David Pogue, for example, would be invaluable when representing tech clients.) That is, I’m not about to fall into the trap of proclaiming Rolodex PR dead. In general, though, Rolodex PR is fast becoming a niche activity rather than a core PR practice.
12/06/09 | 11 Comments | The marginalization of Rolodex PR