Executives are rarely enthused about allocating precious dollars into public relations when they create their annual marketing budgets.

C-level stakeholders (especially at B2Bs in tech-driven sectors) often perceive PR as an expensive cost center. They don't link PR to the business development and sales functions of the organization—and instead cling to the idea that good publicity is a byproduct of good business.

The reality is that tangible business results are (or should be) the outcome of quality PR efforts. Positive publicity is a boon to any business but not the end game of B2B PR.

Worthwhile B2B PR is all about earning results that change perceptions, shape opinions, drive brand preferences, and create new business opportunities. B2B PR should not focus only on impressions and other vanity metrics that our industry still uses.

Those positive results can only be earned from a PR strategy aligned and integrated with the entire business and in sync with the changing media landscape, the evolving expectations of B2B buyers and enterprises, and the new rules and best-practices in the industry.

Rule 1: A complex industry is a good thing

Entrenched in the complex standards, regulations, and market forces of "unsexy" sectors, B2B executives are highly attached to their industry acronyms and jargon.

So when communicating with new audiences, B2B marketers often dumb down what their businesses do and rely on trite messaging about their "cutting-edge" solutions or "leading-edge" technology.

Even worse, some executives stay in their product-focused wheelhouse and dodge media outreach altogether.

That "unsexy" factor often contributes to B2B stakeholders' aversion to PR. "My [company/industry/product] is [technical/complex/boring]. Who would want to hear about this stuff?"

Lots of people.

The rise of online media has created an unending appetite for information across every industry.

For example, before online media, just a few trade magazines covering trends and developments in payments processing existed. Today, dozens of blogs and online media outlets publish news and thought leadership on payments processing.

A B2B should tap into the complexity of its industry—deploying engaging, industry-specific messaging that doesn't water down its value. A B2B can use PR to showcase its sector-specific insights. In doing so, a B2B broadens its online visibility and bolsters credibility as a subject matter expert.

Rule 2: Always drive the narrative

Traditional PR pushed a company's message (via press release or pitch) and waited for a reporter to seize that opportunity and schedule an interview.

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The New Rules of B2B Public Relations

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Vanessa Horwell

Vanessa Horwell is chief strategy officer at ThinkInk, a specialist agency serving companies across the advertising, airline, loyalty, mobile, payments, and travel sectors.

LinkedIn: Vanessa Horwell