Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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Journalism ethics guidelines that PR should consider adopting

Journalism ethics guidelines that PR should consider adopting | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

The Public Relations Society of America’s ethical guidelines are perhaps the industry’s most widely recognized code for ethics. They cover the necessity for honesty, accuracy, integrity, and confidentiality. The Professional Standards Advisories (PSAs), designed to keep the PRSA code timely, address PR-specific areas and modern practices, including recording conversations, use of interns, video news releases, pay-for-play journalism, and disclosure guidelines. 

Both codes are quite comprehensive and benefit PR agencies and companies when followed. But are they comprehensive enough? Perhaps it’s time for PR to adopt some of journalism’s ethical guidelines. PR inherently serves the public (it’s in the name), and PR practitioners are functioning more as journalists; more PR content is now reaching the public directly without review and without editing by independent journalists. 

With this in mind, we’ve examined some principles from The Society of Professional Journalists’ Code of Ethics, not (yet) covered in PRSA’s code, that PR pros ought to consider adopting....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Bill Comcovich opens up a lively debate though some PR purists will take have a bird. 

Jade Nicole Burman's curator insight, October 16, 2014 8:44 PM

I personally don't agree with this. The CMA code of ethics for pr are thorough enough. They demonstrate honesty, accuracy and integrity and much other things, all of which relate to situations your most likely to be bound in as a pr practitioner. There is a significant difference between journalism and PR, and personally, our code of ethics are just right and cover enough.

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RepMan: Bait and switch with a twist: The Sequel

I was very pleased to see the PRSA's Board of Ethics and Professional Standards held a discussion to address the issue I raised in a previous Repman blog entitled: 'Bait and switch with a twist.' 

 

The blog concerned a new twist on the large agency world's propensity to bait-and-switch team members in order to win a piece of business. The wrinkle in this particular case was the agency's failure to tell the unsuspecting client that each and every team member was a freelancer! The client, frustrated by her inability to reach team members, finally called the large agency's HQs and was told “...no one by those names worked at the firm.” The client was appalled, and so was I....

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