Sept October Issue 2016 1 | Page 9

So what’s happening is you can laser target the consumer from their behavior online and really start giving editorial messaging to that consumer through meaningful content that will interest him or her. You can laser target them on their social media channels, and because today’s consumer is trained to tune off to or avoid ads, reaching them through editorial content on social channels that is relevant to them dramatically increases the chances of converting your target to a customer. So the whole industry has become much more sophisticated as it pertains to reaching the target, and I think public relations and social media have become much more important within the marketing mix. SMM: Why should a business try to integrate their public relations or social media and their sales, what’s the ultimate goal? HG: The ultimate goal is to increase performance in all of these different disciplines, while increasing sales and expanding your customer base. That’s the absolute ultimate goal of almost every business. If you have a fully integrated approach between your sales, public relations and social media, you will see that, through information exchange in those three different disciplines and through integrated programs, you are able to implement more informed and fine-tuned campaigns that will deliver a higher ROI. You’re able to track your results in a much more meaningful way and you’re able to coursecorrect by leveraging the information flow during the implementation of the campaign. For example, if a company is having a certain sales promotion for Mother’s Day, it is crucial to act in an integrated way on all channels to reinforce that messaging. You would be surprised how so many businesses overlook the power of integration and do not communicate effectively between different departments. In particular, larger companies struggle to communicate these sales promotions to their PR agency, their social media agency or to their digital team. Not because they don’t want to, it’s just 5 Strictly Marketing Magazine September/October 2014 because they either have become too big and that conversation stopped happening, they got so busy, carried away, and they just haven’t had time to sit down and talk with the head of marketing or head of PR and say, “Hey, we’re doing this, support us. On social media channels, we can really push sales events and promotions happening at the retail channel locally or nationally. We can create a geo-targeted social/digital campaign to support a local sales promotion event targeting only residents in that area. “ So it’s important that these three different teams talk, especially in bigger organizations. Smaller organizations get this right sometimes and if executed correctly, it is manifested in increased sales and fast growth. There is no big trick here…it is all about integration and communication. The overall yearly calendars should include all these sales promotions and sales events, calendars should be synched in every department, public relations efforts should promote and push these sales events, and social media initiatives should push these events in an integrated way with the traditional PR efforts. Sometimes, information flow goes the other way and public relations and social media tactics or opportunities can also drive some of your sales events while helping increase brand awareness. For example, one of our clients, an international airline company, was not planning any sales promotions during Valentine’s Day - it wasn’t something on their radar. We saw that in the airline industry, Valentine’s Day was not really being leveraged as a PR tactic, and we decided that we can really create this wonderful campaign romanticizing the airline and coupling with sales promotions during Valentine’s Day so that some of the world’s most romantic places could be featured and could be made synonymous with the airline. Creating that emotional tie with the airline and the consumer through this universal theme appealed to the airline. The company loved the idea, loved the concept, and t