ICCO World PR Report 2022/23
Richard Bagnall, Hon FCIPR, FPRCA, FAMEC
PR Measurement Expert | Co-Founder of CommsClarity Consulting | Media Intelligence and Insights Leader | Former AMEC Chair | CIPR President’s medal | AMEC Don Bartholomew Award | Provoke Media Lifetime Achievement Sabre
Today ICCO - the International Communications Consultancy Organisation releases its 2022/2023 World PR Report.
Always a fascinating read, this year's edition is particularly worthy of note. The report provides #publicrelations agency leaders with vital information on the composition and direction of the #PR industry. It provides an analysis of where the global PR and #communications industry stands today; how it has been performing over the past year; and what it predicts will happen over the next few years.
I was pleased to have the opportunity to write my thoughts on the state of agency #measurement and #evaluation in the report.
Agencies approach to measurement is not globally consistent.
The report does not paint a reassuring picture of a global industry that is leaning in and paying attention to the importance of getting evaluation right. Agencies are trying to elevate their businesses higher up the value-chain within their client base and yet they continue to mainly rely on flawed metrics and non robust activity driven numbers. This needs to change urgently. Here are my thoughts from the report:
"This year’s report serves as a strong reminder that our industry is experiencing rapid growth, deserved recognition, and growing demand for PR and communications services. However, challenges persist, and progress requires?hard?work, dedication, and investment.
"It is essential that we continue to upskill, embrace technology and analytics, be authentic and create an environment that will attract and retain?talent in order?to meet the challenges ahead. Keeping this focus in mind will help PR and communications professionals meet the increased demand, and in turn, raise the standards of clients.
"Coming hot on the heels of two years of Covid related business disruption, 2022 has not been the year for which we had hoped. Just as things began to look more promising and organisations were emerging with increasing confidence, the world has once again been rocked. War in Ukraine, logistics / supply chain issues, and labour shortages have led to a resulting cost of living crisis, spiralling inflation, and economic uncertainty. As I type, there is no respite in sight, and organisations around the world are buttoning down the hatches and preparing for a looming recession and a very challenging 2023.
"The human costs on our colleagues have been stark and are clearly called out in this report’s section on mental health. As an industry, we are becoming better at offering the right support to these human challenges. But are we getting better at looking after the health of our agencies? It would appear not.
"Right now, all around the world, finance directors are reviewing budgets and financial plans.
"In this unprecedented era of uncertainty, discretionary spending is being done away with. Any activity that doesn’t drive organisational value is seen as a luxury, not a necessity. Any marketing discipline that conducts activity without demonstrating the organisational value of that work is being seen for what it is – a waste of time and money. And the people and agencies providing it as busy fools, not value creators.
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"According to this report, what do organisations require from their PR agencies? Well, the research shows that the top three client objectives are improving corporate reputation, increasing sales and building brand purpose.
"Yet when we come to look at the metrics that agencies are providing, none of the top five speak to these simple business objectives. Engagement metrics, media clips, AVEs, sentiment analysis and media summaries do not demonstrate how comms supports and drives reputation, increases sales or builds brand purpose. They are all metrics that point to activity, not effectiveness. It’s only when we get to the lowly sixth and below positions that we see any attempt to link outputs to outcomes – with web traffic, awareness, business results, advocacy and sales all listed.
This is a wake up call. It is time to lean in and take action.
"For comms to remain relevant it has?to start demonstrating how its work supports organisational objectives. It has to go beyond the ‘counts and amounts’ of activity driven metrics and point to the value it creates.
"It may appear hard, but lots of help is at hand. ICCO’s strategic partner AMEC has been driving global best practice in measurement of comms and provides a multitude of free tools and resources to help the industry. They are all available on AMEC’s website in multiple languages.
"I urge you to join the 43% of the global PR agency industry that do use these meaningful measurement techniques. Help is at hand from international AMEC members, not least ICCO’s global and exclusive partner CARMA, where I am proud to work."
Thank you to ICCO for giving me the opportunity to contribute to the report alongside other specialist experts and thought leaders including:
Chief Media Analyst
2 年The real question is “Are they ready to make the shift” knowing the outcome can be positive or negative -having the mindset of improvement is very vital in doing it right. Thank you Richard for sharing your thoughts.
Consultant and Author focused on Communications Analytics, Insights and Advisory Services. Open to Board positions.
2 年Hear! Hear!
Managing Editor
2 年Excellent post Richard and completely agree with the sentiment
Communication, Research, Data Analyst Professional | Expert in Project Management, Predictive Analytics & Customer Experience Metrics | PhD in Political Science | Excel ? AI & Data ? Power BI ? Python |
2 年Read your thoughts, excited to see clients are asking now more engagement metrics than media clippings.
Experienced Media Reputation/AccountManager/Consultant
2 年Have you addressed these issues with the PR agencies that are AMEC members, surely they should be championing proper measurement to their peers? Or maybe they are scared of what real measurment might reveal