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Great lessons from the kiddies!

Posted On: 10/20/2009

For PR pros and everyone else: 9 rules taken directly from kindergarten
By Richie Escovedo

How the ‘do unto others’ standard applies in the classroom and the conference room

This year marks a new chapter in my life as a parent of a school-age child. In the first couple of weeks of school, my daughter's kindergarten class collaborated to establish a set of rules for how to treat one another. When I saw these rules hanging up in her classroom, I was struck by how simple and honest these rules are as well as how they translated as rules for public relations professionals.

9 PR rules

  1. Say please
  2. Say I'm sorry
  3. Be friendly
  4. Share
  5. Play fair
  6. Don't litter
  7. Never hurt others
  8. Say excuse me
  9. Listen to others

1. Say please. This rule speaks to a sense of decency and politeness. Some days we get so caught up in our work and we forget to be thoughtful with our co-workers, clients and, unfortunately, other members in our community. Forgetting this rule can cause tragic disconnections that are sometimes difficult to mend.

2. Say I'm sorry. If you screw up, own up to it. The sooner, the better. This is true for individuals as well as organizations when things go wrong. Your community will be more likely to forgive mistakes and missteps if you can express honest remorse when needed.

3. Be friendly. Public relations professionals had better like people. I don't mean the "I'm a people-person" platitudes that so easily get thrown around. I mean PR people need to have others' interests in mind when planning, preparing and implementing in order to be the stewards of information and counsel that our community expects us to be.

4. Share. I appreciate this rule for the facets it represents in the professional life of a PR person. Sharing is another word for communicating. Being effective communicators is in my opinion the basis for the work we do. The share rule can be the difference in being a part of a community and being apart from the community.

5. Play fair. The PRSA Code of Ethics includes fairness as part of the core values: "We deal fairly with clients, employers, competitors, peers, vendors, the media and the general public. We respect all opinions and support the right of free expression."

6. Don't litter. I'll be honest, I wasn't exactly sure at first how I was going to fit in this rule as a relevant rule for public relations. However, then I thought about what litter was: trash. So for PR people, this rule is simply to not leave your garbage lying around. Clean up after yourselves. If you make a mess of things, clean it up. Not every idea is a winner. That's OK. If your idea gets turned down, learn from it. That's how we grow.

7. Never hurt others. You might think that this is just an extension of being friendly and saying you’re sorry. In reality, this rule is different. Hurting others takes a certain level of intention. What this rule is saying is never proceed with plans that you know will do widespread harm.

8. Say excuse me. In addition to fairness, PR people should be held to a standard of advocacy: "We serve the public interest by acting as responsible advocates for those we represent. We provide a voice in the marketplace of ideas, facts, and viewpoints to aid informed public debate." Sometimes I think we need to add the word polite to this notion of public debate. Being civil is never out of style.

9. Listen to others. There is an interesting duality to this rule:

A) You don't know all there is to know about public relations. You need to continue to learn and hone your skills through discussion, research and professional development. PR is an ever-evolving field, and being able to adapt and change is what will make you stand out.

B) You don't know all there is to know about your organization or clients. Active listening within your work environment, on behalf of your organization and through monitoring, will mean the difference between taking shots in the dark and making educated and informed communication decisions.

What would you add to the list?

Richie Escovedo is the director of media and communications for Mansfield Independent School District in Texas. He blogs at Next Communications.

Article comments:
Tuesday, October 20, 2009 9:59:30 AM by Lila
Don't liter should mean, don't spam journalists and bloggers.

http://LilaBrownPR.blogspot.com

Tuesday, October 20, 2009 10:44:45 AM by Jayme Soulati
10. Return messages! Just tweeted today about "Got-a-Message Etiquette." Seems people do not feel compelled to return phone calls in a timely fashion. Goes hand in hand with the overall theme of your above rules common courtesy. ~@Soulati
Tuesday, October 20, 2009 11:37:15 AM by Verone Travis
Richie, I love the simplicity yet each one is a life-long standard that we all can strive to live up to.
Tuesday, October 20, 2009 12:12:43 PM by Corin Ramos
"Be helpful" - as PR folks, we should keep in mind what "the other guy" needs. What's the reporter's beat? what can I pitch her that would make her(my) story interesting for her readers? When's her deadline?

P.S. as a former "room mom helper" for years, I absolutely love this article! Thanks!

Tuesday, October 20, 2009 12:23:4
1 PM by Rich
Additional food for thought can be found in "All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten: Uncommon Thoughts on Common Things," by Robert. Fulghum. It's as timely today as it was 20 years ago when it was first published.
Tuesday, October 20, 2009 12:46:16 PM by Jenny Pratt
Love this article! With #6 - I would also suggest littering could be sending your stuff too much. The same release four days in a row is littering. The exact same twitter message every 15 minutes is littering. At least change up the headline or the pitch or the suggestion a little.

And, of course, never run with scissors! )

Tuesday, October 20, 2009 3:02:42 PM by Padraig McKeon
I agree with Lila - sending rubbish content is the PR equivalent of litter.

Jenny - sending "the same release four days in a row... [and] The exact same twitter message every 15 minutes" - that's spamming, plain and simple.

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