Exhibits and Special Events
Most of the activity of public relations practitioners, especially those who are communication technicians, is office work: writing, editing, conferring with clients, and attending internal meetings to plan information programs. But their assignments and projects occasionally take them out of the office to do non-routine tasks such as arranging a lobby display, setting up a booth for a trade show, planning an open house, or running the firm's annual meeting.
All of these special events require conducting site inspections, working with designers and other artists, anticipating logistical problems, and dealing with emergencies far from home base. Most practitioners consider these challenges a rewarding change of pace.
Today we’ll talk about several formal ways you can make person-to-person contact with members of your publics: displays and exhibits, open houses, tours, and the annual meeting.
Placing a display in the lobby of your organization's building is a good way of commemorating a special occasion, calling attention to a new program, or soliciting employee involvement in a worthwhile project.
But only rarely does a display booth stand alone. Usually, along with the other exhibits at a trade show, career day, or information fair, it is assigned a standard space of so much front footage and depth. Unless a desirable freestanding center or corner space is obtained, it most likely will be jammed in between two other booths.
Each year in the United States there are more than two thousand fairs, ranging from huge state fairs attracting more than a million visitors to trade fairs that target special-interest audiences.
All fairs, even those famous for their midways, grandstand concerts, and stock car races, have education as a main objective. In addition to commercial exhibitors showing their wares, most fairs and exhibitions also have booths sponsored by organizations desiring to get a social message across to their publics. MADD and SADD—Mothers and Students Against Drunk Driving—find fairs an effective place to get their literature into the hands of ordinary citizens. Conservation and environmental groups recruit members and demonstrate "earth-friendly" habits and behaviors to interested passers-by.
There are several problem arising along with the favor of establishing your glamorous booth in a fair. One of the keys to deciding whether to place a booth at a fair is whether your exhibit will be in a high-traffic area or stuck in an information ghetto far from the churning crowds. Literature costs also have to be weighed: Will the thousands of visitors who willingly take your brochures really read them or merely toss them away with the sticks from their cotton candy and taffy apples? Let’s look closer at the procedure.
The first task is to obtain from those in charge of running the show a detailed outline of rules for displays, the available services (including electric power), and the precise dimensions of the space. Will back and side walls be provided, will there be curtain separators, or does the space consist merely of marked-off floor space? Convention and trade-show facilities are fairly standardized in terms of services, but hotels, motels, and government agencies often leave it to you to figure out what to do.
Before designing the display, decide whether it will be used once only or reused as a standard exhibit. Single-use means the display can be built to the specifications of the one place and the one message. The multiple-use display must be adaptable to various spaces and applications. Because durable display materials are so costly, the display should be designed so that it can be updated and modified easily.
Most organizations that pack displays around to several locations spend anywhere from $5,000 for basic booth materials to $50,000 for custom-designed displays that can stand the transportation and yet be simple enough for a small team of workers to assemble in a few hours.
- Why Organizations Need Public Relations
- Defining Public Relations
- Confusion with Other Organizational Communication Functions
- Directions and history General pr Directions As you have probably understood pr is a very broad field of activity, it includes not only advertisement, as you might think, but many other spheres.
- History
- Attitudes and Opinions
- Building Public Opinion
- Receiver
- Men’s perception of information
- Public Relations and Public Responsibility
- Models of Public Relations
- Warner-lambert creed
- Planning and executing a public relations campaign
- Surveys
- Focus Group Interviews
- Analysis of Data
- Audience Message
- Audience Message
- Strategic management
- The Stakeholder Stage
- The Issues Stage
- The Objectives Stage
- The Planning Stage
- The Implementation Stage
- The Evaluation Stage
- Outlining
- Sentences and Paragraphs
- Word Length
- Word choice
- Errors to avoid
- Spelling
- Gobbledygook and Jargon
- Poor Sentence Structure
- Wrong Words
- "Sound-alike" Words
- Redundancies
- Too Many Words
- Too Many Numbers
- Too Many Capitals
- Politically Incorrect Language
- Persuasive Writing
- Audience Analysis
- Source Credibility
- Appeal to Self-interest
- Clarity of the Message
- Timing and Context
- Symbols, Slogans, and Acronyms
- Semantics
- Suggestions for Action
- Content and Structure
- Preparing News Releases
- Editors Depend on Releases
- Flyers Aren't Releases
- Paper and Typeface
- "News" Flag
- Release Date
- Contact Person
- Serial Number
- Headline
- Wheeling Steel Appoints Jones To Head Pittsville Foundries
- Health Fairs to Explain Benefits
- Slugline, Continuations, and End Sign
- The Summary Lead
- Handling Quotes
- Feature Style
- Sidebars
- Varied Names
- Research
- What's the "Big Idea"?
- Organizing and Outlining
- How Much to Say?
- Working with the Speaker
- Provide Coaching
- Polish During Rehearsal
- Misuse of Visual Aids
- Evaluation
- Dealing with Brushfire Topics
- Checklist • Ten Tips for Surviving a Media Interview
- Exhibits and Special Events
- Visual Impression
- Traffic Pattern and Lighting
- Furniture and Floor Covering
- Audiovisual Equipment
- Maintaining the Display
- Hospitality Suites
- Catering to the Press. Press Conferences
- Avoid Embarrassing Silences
- How to Issue the Invitation
- Dealing with Journalistic Ethics
- Check the Facilities Representatives of the pr department should make at least one on-site inspection, accompanied by a sales representative of the facility, to check for items such as:
- Offer Helpful Handouts
- Pr Staff Relations with the Press
- Using Radio
- Paid Advertisements
- Public Service Announcements
- Talk Shows
- Getting It Timed Right
- The spot lacks a local angle
- Live Announcer or Taped Spot?
- Psa: 30 seconds
- Psa: 30 seconds
- Television and Cable
- Target vnRs Carefully
- The Story Conference
- Preparing the Script and Storyboard
- Getting on the Talk Shows
- Cnn Provides Placement Opportunities
- Approaching Your Local Cable Operator
- Internet in Public Relations
- International Public Relations
- Culture
- Examples of Legal Problem
- Libel and Slander
- Invasion of Privacy
- Releases for Advertising and Promotion
- Regulations of Government agencies
- Copyright Law
- Fair Use and Infringement
- Guidelines for Using Copyrighted Materials
- Trademark Law
- Contract Considerations
- Client Contracts
- Freelancer Contracts
- Facilities Contracts
- Working with Lawyers
- Ethics and Professionalism
- What is public relations. Definitions ans aims
- Public relations (pr) – Паблик рилэйшнс, связи с общественностью
- Field of study – наука, поле деятельности
- Pr scholars – основатели науки, исследователи pr
- Strategic planning
- Planning and executing a public relations campaign
- Preparing News Releases
- Preparing Brochures
- Meeting – встреча
- Exhibits and Special Events
- Catering to the Press. Press Conferences
- Using Radio
- Television and Cable
- Internet in Public Relations
- Legal Requirements
- Puffery – навязчивая, дутая реклама
- Appendix b what is public relations. Definitions and aims
- Directions and history
- Strategic planning
- Planning and executing a public relations campaign
- Preparing News Releases
- Preparing Brochures
- Exhibits and Special Events
- Catering to the Press. Press Conferences
- Using Radio
- Television and Cable
- Internet in Public Relations
- International Public Relations
- Legal Requirements
- Appendix c public relations’ websites Public Relations Society of America – www.Prsa.Org
- International Public Relations Association – www.Ipranet.Org
- Pr in Press Through Internet pr Week (London) – www.Prweek.Com
- News and Inquiries Sources