Before we dive into what a public relations audit is … public relations is a term many know, but a few truly understand, and so much falls under it. One of my favorite definitions of PR is from the Public Relations Society of America (PRSA); they define PR as “a strategic communication process that builds mutually beneficial relationships between organizations and their publics.”
So what does this mean? It means that as many channels as there are to communicate with your publics (stakeholders) is the number of channels that must be addressed in your PR plan. This includes everything from earned media to owned media, social media to events, analyst relations to influencer relations, thought leadership to internal relations, and everything in between.
With so many channels to monitor and ensure they are all feeding into the overall strategy, it is essential to conduct regular public relations audits to be confident that all the moving parts are still on course to achieve your primary goal. A public relations audit takes a deep dive into your PR strategy and evaluates its effectiveness in achieving its objectives, i.e., increasing brand awareness, establishing industry leadership, or generating more leads.
There is a multitude of reasons why it is vital to conduct a public relations audit annually – here are the top three from our B2B healthcare public relations agency.
Objectives alignment
Sometimes we have a million things we want to achieve with PR – it could be getting the CEO that big shiny cover of Forbes or seeing your product mentioned in the top ten of a CRN list – and while those are outstanding achievements, do they have an impact on the main objective of the PR strategy? Furthermore, does your PR strategy’s primary goal align with your organizational objectives?
A public relations audit allows you to step back and see if all the coverage you’ve received is conducive to your objective. If the main goal is to increase brand awareness, is your organization’s name being brought up organically outside your owned/earned content? If the objective is to increase leads, have the articles driven more traffic to your website and converted into serious inquiries?