THE PUBLIC AND ORGANISATIONAL STAKEHOLDERS – ARE THEY THE SAME?
By Dr Irma Meyer and peer reviewed by Terrance Booysen
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When does any member of the public become a stakeholder of an organisation? How would an organisation know when such a public member -- or group of members -- has become a stakeholder? Adding to this important line of thinking, who deserves more attention: public members/groups or the organisation’s traditional stakeholders??Is there a difference between public and organisational stakeholders and if so, what is it?
Clearly organisations and public relations practitioners also battle with these questions and distinctions. Some organisations have a stakeholder relations department and a public relations department, or a well-staffed public relations department, as well as an individual responsible for stakeholder relations. Such organisations arguably view public relations and stakeholder relations as two distinctly different functions, aimed at different outcomes. This being the case, they obviously also make a distinction between publics and stakeholders. However, when questioned, individuals in these organisations responsible for stakeholder relations, find it difficult to articulate the difference between their roles and those of the public relations practitioners. This confusing and seemingly complicated matter of semantics could be resolved if organisations accept that there no longer is a distinction between the public and stakeholders and start to embrace an all-inclusive stakeholder approach.
?“If you work for and eventually lead a company, understand that companies have multiple stakeholders including employees, customers, business partners and the communities within which they operate.”
?Don Tapscott, Co-Founder and Executive Chairman
of the Blockchain Research Institute
Edward Freeman introduced the stakeholder approach to corporate management in 1984 when he suggested that organisations should move away from being shareholder-centric to becoming stakeholder-centric. He defined a stakeholder as “any group or individual who can affect or is affected by the achievement of the organisation’s objectives” (Freeman, 1984:46) and despite many proliferations, Freeman’s definition is still regarded as the standard definition in the literature. However, considering the challenges we are currently facing such as the climate crisis and pandemics, one should probably change the definition slightly to “any group, individual [or thing] who [that] can affect or is affected by the achievement of the organisation’s objectives”, thus making provision for the flora and fauna in this definition.
Freeman’s introduction of the stakeholder concept coincided with Ferguson’s view that relationships should be the main focus of communication management and not the organisation, public or the actual communication process (Ferguson 1984:16). It is concerning that, despite Ferguson’s insight, the uptake of the stakeholder concept and stakeholder theory in the public relations domain has been slow. Numerous stakeholder theory approaches and stakeholder identification strategies followed Freeman’s seminal stakeholder concept, but only a few of these emanated from communication science theorists. A possible explanation of this phenomenon is the birth of Grunig and Grunig’s excellence public relations theory approximately at the same time as Freeman’s stakeholder concept. Despite shortcomings, critique and advanced developments, the excellence theory has remained a dominant and founding theory in public relations, overshadowing stakeholder concepts and theories.
What is equally concerning is the apparent ignorance amongst public relations practitioners of the significant inclusion of the stakeholder concept in the King III Report on Corporate Governance which came into effect on 01 March 2010. For the first time, it dedicated an entire chapter to stakeholder relationships, outlining six principles for governing stakeholder relationships. The subsequent King IV Report on Corporate Governance? (2016) retained this focus on stakeholder relations.
The stakeholder concept, albeit in a confusing and uncertain manner, is slowly surfacing in some public relations areas. At least one South African university now offers a stakeholder relationship management module and a number of organisations have established a stakeholder relationship department or appointed an individual responsible for stakeholder relationships. None, however, has been so brave to replace the terminology public relations with stakeholder relations.
The terms publics and stakeholders are often used interchangeably. Theorists argue that the term stakeholder is found in business literature and used by organisations’ management, whereas publics relations emanate from the public relations literature and is used by public relations practitioners (Rawlins, 2006:1). Some argue that organisations choose their stakeholders, but that “publics arise on their own and choose the organisation for attention” (Grunig & Repper, 1992:128), while others believe that publics are formed when certain stakeholder groups recognise an issue and organise themselves to deal with it (Steyn & Puth, 2000:199 – 200).
However, in our experience in dealing with and training them, public relations practitioners favour stakeholders over publics. They may also refer to the receivers, readers and listeners of their media messages as audiences, but very seldom do they use publics.
Perhaps it is time to end the debate on publics versus stakeholders and accept that a stakeholder is anything, group or individual who can affect or is affected by the achievement of the organisation’s objectives, purpose and/or mission.
Given the current volatility experienced as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, where new stakeholders have been introduced to the business supply chain or known, but previously neglected stakeholders have become very important, executives are quick to agree that organisations now have to operate in a so-called “new-normal” mode. Very few, however, have defined “new-normal” succinctly yet, and structures, processes and policies still reflect a pre-COVID-19 mind-set. To paraphrase freely from Albert Einstein – we cannot solve our new problems with the same old thinking we used when we created them. Organisations now need to start thinking laterally and creatively about the future and how to engage with all their stakeholders.
To this end, organisations should be brave and rename organisational public relations functions to stakeholder relations. A stakeholder relations organisational department could, for instance, comprise of several divisions, such as employee relations, media relations, investor relations, community relations, government relations and consumer relations. Given the importance and role stakeholders fulfil within an organisation, the significance of stakeholder engagement within an organisation’s governance framework, is therefore not surprising. Indeed, it cannot be emphasised enough just how important it is to maintain proper, relevant and two-way communication with the organisation’s stakeholders, moreover, maintaining a high ethical standard with them at all times.
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Perhaps a simple name change is all that is needed to understand that legal compliance is only a small part of corporate governance, and that effective governance has a touchpoint with all areas in the organisation and with all stakeholders, whether they are latent (unaware), active or activists. One can only hope that such a name change would elevate the public relations function from a publicity-seeking, propaganda function, which it sadly still often is, to a communication discipline striving to establish solid relationships with all the organisation’s stakeholders through honest two-way conversations.
ENDS
For further information contact:
Dr Irma Meyer (Executive Engagements: Business Communicator and Owner) - Cell: 082?453 2068 / E-mail: [email protected]??
Executive Engagements: Tel: +27 (11) 678 4167
Terrance Booysen (CGF: Chief Executive Officer) - Cell: 082?373 2249 / E-mail: [email protected]?
CGF Research Institute (Pty) Ltd: Tel: +27 (11) 476 8261
Sources
Ferguson, MA. 1984. Building theory in public relations: Interorganizational relationships. Paper presented at the convention of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, Gainesville, FL.
Freeman, RE. 1984. Strategic management: a stakeholder approach. Boston: Pitman.
Grunig, JE & Repper, FC. 1992. Strategic Management, Publics, and Issues, in Excellence in Public Relations and Communication Management, edited by JE Grunig. New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates:117-157.
Rawlins, BL. 2006. Prioritizing stakeholders for public relations. [O]
https://www.instituteforpr.org/wp-content/uploads/2006_Stakeholders_1.pdf (Accessed 27 March 2016).
Steyn, B & Puth, G. 2000. Corporate Communication Strategy. Sandton: Heinemann.