Propaganda, Edward Bernays, 1928 - ch 5
CHAPTER V
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BUSINESS AND THE PUBLIC
[audio mp3 of this chapter]
THE relationship between business and the public has become
closer in the past few decades. Business to-day is taking the public
into partnership. A number of causes, some economic, others due to the
growing public understanding of business and the public interest in
business, have produced this situation. Business realizes that its
relationship to the public is not confined to the manufacture and sale
of a given product, but includes at the same time the selling of
itself and of all those things for which it stands in the public mind.
Twenty or twenty-five years ago, business sought to run its own
affairs regardless of the public. The reaction was the muck-raking
period, in which a multitude of sins were, justly and unjustly, laid
to the charge of the interests. In the face of an aroused public
conscience the large corporations were obliged to renounce their
contention that their affairs were nobody's business. If to-day big
business were to seek to throttle the public, a new reaction similar
to that of twenty years ago would take place and the public would rise
and try to throttle big business with restrictive laws. Business is
conscious of the public's conscience. This consciousness has led to a
healthy cooperation.
Another cause for the increasing relationship is undoubtedly to
be found in the various phenomena growing out of mass production. Mass
production is only profitable if its rhythm can be maintained-- that
is, if it can continue to sell its product in steady or increasing
quantity. The result is that while, under the handicraft or small-unit
system of production that was typical a century ago, demand created
the supply, to-day supply must actively seek to create its
corresponding demand. A single factory, potentially capable of
supplying a whole continent with its particular product, cannot afford
to wait until the public asks for its product; it must maintain
constant touch, through advertising and propaganda, with the vast
public in order to assure itself the continuous demand which alone
will make its costly plant profitable. This entails a vastly more
complex system of distribution than formerly. To make customers is the
new problem. One must understand not only his own business--the
manufacture of a particular product--but also the structure, the
personality, the prejudices, of a potentially universal public.
Still another reason is to be found in the improvements in the
technique of advertising--as regards both the size of the public which
can be reached by the printed word, and the methods of appeal. The
growth of newspapers and magazines having a circulation of millions of
copies, and the art of the modern advertising expert in making the
printed message attractive and persuasive, have placed the business
man in a personal relation with a vast and diversified public.
Another modern phenomenon, which' influences the general policy
of big business, is the new competition between certain firms and the
remainder of the industry, to which they belong. Another kind of
competition is between whole industries, in their struggle for a share
of the consumer's dollar. When, for example, a soap manufacturer
claims that his product will preserve youth, he is obviously
attempting to change the public's mode of thinking about soap in
general--a thing of grave importance to the whole industry. Or when
the metal furniture industry seeks to convince the public that it is
more desirable to spend its money for metal furniture than for wood
furniture, it is clearly seeking to alter the taste and standards of a
whole generation. In either case, business is seeking to inject itself
into the lives and customs of millions of persons.
Even in a basic sense, business is becoming dependent on public
opinion. With the increasing volume and wider diffusion of wealth in
America, thousands of persons now invest in industrial stocks. New
stock or bond flotations, upon which an expanding business must depend
for its success, can be effected only if the concern has understood
how to gain the confidence and good will of the general public.
Business must express itself and its entire corporate existence so
that the public will understand and accept it. It must dramatize its
personality and interpret its objectives in every particular in which
it comes into contact with the community (or the nation) of which it
is a part.
An oil corporation which truly understands its many-sided
relation to the public, will offer that public not only good oil but a
sound labor policy. A bank will seek to show not only that its
management is sound and conservative, but also that its officers are
honorable both in their public and in their private life. A store
specializing in fashionable men's clothing will express in its
architecture the authenticity of the goods it offers. A bakery will
seek to impress the public with the hygienic care observed in its
manufacturing process, not only by wrapping its loaves in dust-proof
paper and throwing its factory open to public inspection, but also by
the cleanliness and attractiveness of its delivery wagons. A
construction firm will take care that the public knows not only that
its buildings are durable and safe, but also that its employees, when
injured at work, are compensated. At whatever point a business
enterprise impinges on the public consciousness, it must seek to give
its public relations the particular character which will conform to
the objectives which it is pursuing.
Just as the production manager must be familiar with every
element and detail concerning the materials with which he is working,
so the man in charge of a firm's public relations must be familiar
with the structure, the prejudices, and the whims of the general
public, and must handle his problems with the utmost care. The public
has its own standards and demands and habits. You may modify them, but
you dare not run counter to them. You cannot persuade a whole
generation of women to wear long skirts, but you may, by working
through leaders of fashion, persuade them to wear evening dresses
which are long in back. The public is not an amorphous mass which can
be molded at will, or dictated to. Both business and the public have
their own personalities which must somehow be brought into friendly
agreement. Conflict and suspicion are injurious to both. Modern
business must study on what terms the partnership can be made amicable
and mutually beneficial. It must explain itself, its aims, its
objectives, to the public in terms which the public can understand and
is willing to accept.
Business does not willingly accept dictation from the public. It
should not expect that it can dictate to the public. While the public
should appreciate the great economic benefits which business offers,
thanks to mass production and scientific marketing, business should
also appreciate that the public is becoming increasingly
discriminative in its standards and should seek to understand its
demands and meet them. The relationship between business and the
public can be healthy only if it is the relationship of give and take.
It is this condition and necessity which has created the need
for a specialized field of public relations. Business now calls in the
public relations counsel to advise it, to interpret its purpose to the
public, and to suggest those modifications which may make it conform
to the public demand.
The modifications then recommended to make the business conform
to its objectives and to the public demand, may concern the broadest
matters of policy or the apparently most trivial details of execution.
It might in one case be necessary to transform entirely the lines of
goods sold to conform to changing public demands. In another case the
trouble may be found to lie in such small matters as the dress of the
clerks. A jewelry store may complain that its patronage is shrinking
upwards because of its reputation for carrying high-priced goods; in
this case the public relations counsel might suggest the featuring of
medium-priced goods, even at a loss, not because the firm desires a
large medium-price trade as such, but because out of a hundred
medium-price customers acquired to-day a certain percentage will be
well-todo ten years from now. A department store which is seeking to
gather in the high-class trade may be urged to employ college
graduates as clerks or to engage well known modern artists to design
show-windows or special exhibits. A bank may be urged to open a Fifth
Avenue branch, not because the actual business done on Fifth Avenue
warrants the expense, but because a beautiful Fifth Avenue office
correctly expresses the kind of appeal which it wishes to make to
future depositors; and, viewed in this way, it may be as important
that the doorman be polite, or that the floors be kept clean, as that
the branch manager be an able financier. Yet the beneficial effect of
this branch may be canceled, if the wife of the president is involved
in a scandal.
Big business studies every move which may express its true
personality. It seeks to tell the public, in all appropriate ways,--by
the direct advertising message and by the subtlest esthetic
suggestion--the quality of the goods or services which it has to
offer. A store which seeks a large sales volume in cheap goods will
preach prices day in and day out, concentrating its whole appeal on
the ways in which it can save money for its clients. But a store
seeking a high margin of profit on individual sales would try to
associate itself with the distinguished and the elegant, whether by an
exhibition of old masters or through the social activities of the
owner's wife.
The public relations activities of a business cannot be a
protective coloring to hide its real aims. It is bad business as well
as bad morals to feature exclusively a few high-class articles, when
the main stock is of medium grade or cheap, for the general impression
given is a false one. A sound public relations policy will not attempt
to stampede the public with exaggerated claims and false pretenses,
but to interpret the individual business vividly and truly through
every avenue that leads to public opinion. The New York Central
Railroad has for decades sought to appeal to the public not only on
the basis of the speed and safety of its trains, but also on the basis
of their elegance and comfort. It is appropriate that the corporation
should have been personified to the general public in the person of so
suave and ingratiating a gentleman as Chauncey M. Depew--an ideal
window dressing for such an enterprise.
While the concrete recommendations of the public relations
counsel may vary infinitely according to individual circumstances, his
general plan of work may be reduced to two types, which I might term
continuous interpretation and dramatization by highspotting. The two
may be alternative or may be pursued concurrently.
Continuous interpretation is achieved by trying to control every
approach to the public mind in such a manner that the public receives
the desired impression, often without being conscious of it.
High-spotting, on the other hand, vividly seizes the attention of the
public and fixes it upon some detail or aspect which is typical of the
entire enterprise. When a real estate corporation which is erecting a
tall office building makes it ten feet taller than the highest
sky-scraper in existence, that is dramatization.
Which method is indicated, or whether both be indicated
concurrently, can be determined only after a full study of objectives
and specific possibilities.
Another interesting case of focusing public attention on the
virtues of a product was shown in the case of gelatine. Its advantages
in increasing the digestibility and nutritional value of milk were
proven in the Mellon Institute of Industrial Research. The suggestion
was made and carried out that to further this knowledge, gelatine be
used by certain hospitals and school systems, to be tested out there.
The favorable results of such tests were then projected to other
leaders in the field with the result that they followed that group
leadership and utilized gelatine for the scientific purposes which had
been proven to be sound at the research institution. The idea carried
momentum.
The tendency of big business is to get bigger. Through mergers
and monopolies it is constantly increasing the number of persons with
whom it is in direct contact. All this has intensified and multiplied
the public relationships of business.
The responsibilities are of many kinds. There is a
responsibility to the stockholders--numbering perhaps five persons or
five hundred thousand--who have entrusted their money to the concern
and have the right to know how the money is being used. A concern
which is fully aware of its responsibility toward its stockholders,
will furnish them with frequent letters urging them to use the product
in which their money is invested, and use their influence to promote
its sale. It has a responsibility toward the dealer which it may
express by inviting him, at its expense, to visit the home factory. It
has a responsibility toward the industry as a whole which should
restrain it from making exaggerated and unfair selling claims. It has
a responsibility toward the retailer, and will see to it that its
salesmen express the quality of the product which they have to sell.
There is a responsibility toward the consumer, who is impressed by a
clean and well managed factory, open to his inspection. And the
general public, apart from its function as potential consumer, is
influenced in its attitude toward the concern by what it knows of that
concern's financial dealings, its labor policy, even by the
livableness of the houses in which its employees dwell. There is no
detail too trivial to influence the public in a favorable or
unfavorable sense. The personality of the president may be a matter of
importance, for he perhaps dramatizes the whole concern to the public
mind. It may be very important to what charities he contributes, in
what civic societies he holds office. If he is a leader in his
industry, the public may demand that he be a leader in his community.
The business man has become a responsible member of the social group.
It is not a question of ballyhoo, of creating a picturesque fiction
for public consumption. It is merely a question of finding the
appropriate modes of expressing the personality that is to be
dramatized. Some business men can be their own best public relations
counsel. But in the majority of cases knowledge of the public mind and
of the ways in which it will react to an appeal, is a specialized
function which must be undertaken by the professional expert.
Big business, I believe, is realizing this more and more. It is
increasingly availing itself of the services of the specialist in
public relations (whatever may be the title accorded him). And it is
my conviction that as big business becomes bigger the need for expert
manipulation of its innumerable contacts with the public will become
greater.
One reason why the public relations of a business are frequently
placed in the hands of an outside expert, instead of being confided to
an officer of the company, is the fact that the correct approach to a
problem may be indirect. For example, when the luggage industry
attempted to solve some of its problems by a public relations policy,
it was realized that the attitude of railroads, of steamship
companies, and of foreign government-owned railroads was an important
factor in the handling of luggage.
If a railroad and a baggage man, for their own interest, can be
educated to handle baggage with more facility and promptness, with
less damage to the baggage, and less inconvenience to the passenger;
if the steamship company lets down, in its own interests, its
restrictions on luggage; if the foreign government eases up on its
baggage costs and transportation in order to further tourist travel;
then the luggage manufacturers will profit.
The problem then, to increase the sale of their luggage, was to
have these and other forces come over to their point of view. Hence
the public relations campaign was directed not to the public, who were
the ultimate consumers, but to these other elements.
Also, if the luggage manufacturer can educate the general public
on what to wear on trips and when to wear it, he may be increasing the
sale of men's and women's clothing, but he will, at the same time, be
increasing the sale of his luggage.
Propaganda, since it goes to basic causes, can very often be
most effective through the manner of its introduction. A campaign
against unhealthy cosmetics might be waged by fighting for a return to
the wash-cloth and soap--a fight that very logically might be taken up
by health officials all over the country, who would urge the return to
the salutary and helpful wash-cloth and soap, instead of cosmetics.
The development of public opinion for a cause or line of
socially constructive action may very often be the result of a desire
on the part of the propagandist to meet successfully his own problem
which the socially constructive cause would further. And by doing so
he is actually fulfilling a social purpose in the broadest sense.
The soundness of a public relations policy was likewise shown in
the case of a shoe manufacturer who made service shoes for patrolmen,
firemen, letter carriers, and men in similar occupations. He realized
that if he could make acceptable the idea that men in such work ought
to be well-shod, he would sell more shoes and at the same time further
the efficiency of the men.
He organized, as part of his business, a foot protection bureau.
This bureau disseminated scientifically accurate information on the
proper care of the feet, principles which the manufacturer had
incorporated in the construction of the shoes. The result was that
civic bodies, police chiefs, fire chiefs, and others interested in the
welfare and comfort of their men, furthered the ideas his product
stood for and the product itself, with the consequent effect that more
of his shoes were sold more easily.
The application of this principle of a common denominator of
interest between the object that is sold and the public good will can
be carried to infinite degrees.
"It matters not how much capital you may have, how fair the
rates may be, how favorable the conditions of service, if you haven't
behind you a sympathetic public opinion, you are bound to fail." This
is the opinion of Samuel Insull, one the foremost traction magnates of
the country. And the late Judge Gary, of the United States Steel
Corporation, expressed the same idea when he said: "Once you have the
good will of the general public, you can go ahead in the work of
constructive expansion. Too often many try to discount this vague and
intangible element. That way lies destruction."
Public opinion is no longer inclined to be unfavorable to the
large business merger. It resents the censorship of business by the
Federal Trade Commission. It has broken down the anti-trust laws where
it thinks they hinder economic development. It backs great trusts and
mergers which it excoriated a decade ago. The government now permits
large aggregations of producing and distributing units, as evidenced
by mergers among railroads and other public utilities, because
representative government reflects public opinion. Public opinion
itself fosters the growth of mammoth industrial enterprises. In the
opinion of millions of small investors, mergers and trusts are
friendly giants and not ogres, because of the economies, mainly due to
quantity production, which they have effected, and can pass on to the
consumer.
This result has been, to a great extent, obtained by a
deliberate use of propaganda in its broadest sense. It was obtained
not only by modifying the opinion of the public, as the governments
modified and marshaled the opinion of their publics during the war,
but often by modifying the business concern itself. A cement company
may work with road commissions gratuitously to maintain testing
laboratories in order to insure the best-quality roads to the public.
A gas company maintains a free school of cookery.
But it would be rash and unreasonable to take it for granted
that because public opinion has come over to the side of big business,
it will always remain there. Only recently, Prof. W. Z. Ripley of
Harvard University, one of the foremost national authorities on
business organization and practice, exposed certain aspects of big
business which tended to undermine public confidence in large
corporations. He pointed out that the stockholders' supposed voting
power is often illusory; that annual financial statements are
sometimes so brief and summary that to the man in the street they are
downright misleading; that the extension of the system of non-voting
shares often places the effective control of corporations and their
finances in the hands of a small clique of stockholders; and that some
corporations refuse to give out sufficient information to permit the
public to know the true condition of the concern.
Furthermore, no matter how favorably disposed the public may be
toward big business in general, the utilities are always fair game for
public discontent and need to maintain good will with the greatest
care and watchfulness. These and other corporations of a semi-public
character will always have to face a demand for government or
municipal ownership if such attacks as those of Professor Ripley are
continued and are, in the public's opinion, justified, unless
conditions are changed and care is taken to maintain the contact with
the public at all points of their corporate existence.
The public relations counsel should anticipate such trends of
public opinion and advise on how to avert them, either by convincing
the public that its fears or prejudices are unjustified, or in certain
cases by modifying the action of the client to the extent necessary to
remove the cause of complaint. In such a case public opinion might be
surveyed and the points of irreducible opposition discovered. The
aspects of the situation which are susceptible of logical explanation;
to what extent the criticism or prejudice is a habitual emotional
reaction and what factors are dominated by accepted cliches, might be
disclosed. In each instance he would advise some action or
modification of policy calculated to make the readjustment.
While government ownership is in most instances only varyingly a
remote possibility, public ownership of big business through the
increasing popular investment in stocks and bonds, is becoming more
and more a fact. The importance of public relations from this
standpoint is to be judged by the fact that practically all prosperous
corporations expect at some time to enlarge operations, and will need
to float new stock or bond issues. The success of such issues depends
upon the general record of the concern in the business world, and also
upon the good will which it has been able to create in the general
public. When the Victor Talking Machine Company was recently offered
to the public, millions of dollars' worth of stock were sold
overnight. On the other hand, there are certain companies which,
although they are financially sound and commercially prosperous, would
be unable to float a large stock issue, because public opinion is not
conscious of them, or has some unanalyzed prejudice against them.
To such an extent is the successful floating of stocks and bonds
dependent upon the public favor that the success of a new merger may
stand or fall upon the public acceptance which is created for it. A
merger may bring into existence huge new resources, and these
resources, perhaps amounting to millions of dollars in a single
operation, can often fairly be said to have been created by the expert
manipulation of public opinion. It must be repeated that I am not
speaking of artificial value given to a stock by dishonest propaganda
or stock manipulation, but of the real economic values which are
created when genuine public acceptance is gained for an industrial
enterprise and becomes a real partner in it.
The growth of big business is so rapid that in some lines
ownership is more international than national. It is necessary to
reach ever larger groups of people if modern industry and commerce are
to be financed. Americans have purchased billions of dollars of
foreign industrial securities since the war, and Europeans own, it is
estimated, between one and two billion dollars' worth of ours. In each
case public acceptance must be obtained for the issue and the
enterprise behind it.
Public loans, state or municipal, to foreign countries depend
upon the good will which those countries have been able to create for
themselves here. An attempted issue by an east European country is now
faring badly largely because of unfavorable public reaction to the
behavior of members of its ruling family. But other countries have no
difficulty in placing any issue because the public is already
convinced of the prosperity of these nations and the stability of
their governments.
The new technique of public relations counsel is serving a very
useful purpose in business by acting as a complement to legitimate
advertisers and advertising in helping to break down unfair
competitive exaggerated and overemphatic advertising by reaching the
public with the truth through other channels than advertising. Where
two competitors in a field are fighting each other with this type of
advertising, they are undermining that particular industry to a point
where the public may lose confidence in the whole industry. The only
way to combat such unethical methods, is for ethical members of the
industry to use the weapon of propaganda in order to bring out the
basic truths of the situation.
Take the case of tooth paste, for instance. Here is a highly
competitive field in which the preponderance of public acceptance of
one product over another can very legitimately rest in inherent
values. However, what has happened in this field?
One or two of the large manufacturers have asserted advantages
for their tooth pastes which no single tooth paste discovered up to
the present time can possibly have. The competing manufacturer is put
in the position either of overemphasizing an already exaggerated
emphasis or of letting the overemphasis of his competitor take away
his markets. He turns to the weapon of propaganda which can
effectively, through various channels of approach to the public--the
dental clinics, the schools, the women's clubs, the medical colleges,
the dental press and even the daily press--bring to the public the
truth of what a tooth paste can do. This will, of course, have its
effect in making the honestly advertised tooth paste get to its real
public.
Propaganda is potent in meeting unethical or unfair advertising.
Effective advertising has become more costly than ever before. Years
ago, when the country was smaller and there was no tremendous
advertising machinery, it was comparatively easy to get country-wide
recognition for a product. A corps of traveling salesmen might
persuade the retailers, with a few cigars and a repertory of funny
stories, to display and recommend their article on a nationwide scale.
To-day, a small industry is swamped unless it can find appropriate and
relatively inexpensive means of making known the special virtues of
its product, while larger industries have sought to overcome the
difficulty by cooperative advertising, in which associations of
industries compete with other associations.
Mass advertising has produced new kinds of competition.
Competition between rival products in the same line is, of course, as
old as economic life itself. In recent years much has been said of the
new competition, we have discussed it in a previous chapter, between
one group of products and another. Stone competes against wood for
building; linoleum against carpets; oranges against apples; tin
against asbestos for roofing.
This type of competition has been humorously illustrated by Mr.
O. H. Cheney, Vice-President of the American Exchange and Irving Trust
Company of New York, in a speech before the Chicago Business
Secretaries Forum.
"Do you represent the millinery trades?" said Mr. Cheney. "The
man at your side may serve the fur industry, and by promoting the
style of big fur collars on women's coats he is ruining the hat
business by forcing women to wear small and inexpensive hats. You may
be interested in the ankles of the fair sex--I mean, you may represent
the silk hosiery industry. You have two brave rivals who are ready to
fight to the death--to spend millions in the fight --for the glory of
those ankles--the leather industry, which has suffered from the
low-shoe vogue, and the fabrics manufacturers, who yearn for the good
old days when skirts were skirts.
"If you represent the plumbing and heating business, you are the
mortal enemy of the textile industry, because warmer homes mean
lighter clothes. If you represent the printers, how can you shake
hands with the radio equipment man? . . .
"These are really only obvious forms of what I have called the
new competition. The old competition was that between the members of
each trade organization. One phase of the new competition is that
between the trade associations themselves--between you gentlemen who
represent those industries. Inter-commodity competition is the new
competition between products used alternatively for the same purpose.
Inter-industrial competition is the new competition between apparently
unrelated industries which affect each other or between such
industries as compete for the consumer's dollar--and that means
practically all industries. . . .
"Inter-commodity competition is, of course, the most spectacular
of all. It is the one which seems most of all to have caught the
business imagination of the country. More and more business men are
beginning to appreciate what inter-commodity competition means to
them. More and more they are calling upon their trade associations to
help them-- because inter-commodity competition cannot be fought
single-handed.
"Take the great war on the dining-room table, for instance.
Three times a day practically every diningroom table in the country is
the scene of a fierce battle in the new competition. Shall we have
prunes for breakfast? No, cry the embattled orange-growers and the
massed legions of pineapple canners. Shall we eat sauerkraut? Why not
eat green olives? is the answer of the Spaniards. Eat macaroni as a
change from potatoes, says one advertiser--and will the potato growers
take this challenge lying down?
"The doctors and dietitians tell us that a normal hard-working
man needs only about two or three thousand calories of food a day. A
banker, I suppose, needs a little less. But what am I to do? The fruit
growers, the wheat raisers, the meat packers, the milk producers, the
fishermen--all want me to eat more of their products--and are spending
millions of dollars a year to convince me. Am I to eat to the point of
exhaustion, or am I to obey the doctor and let the farmer and the food
packer and the retailer go broke! Am I to balance my diet in
proportion to the advertising appropriations of the various producers?
Or am I to balance my diet scientifically and let those who
overproduce go bankrupt? The new competition is probably keenest in
the food industries because there we have a very real limitation on
what we can consume--in spite of higher incomes and higher living
standards, we cannot eat more than we can eat."
I believe that competition in the future will not be only an
advertising competition between individual products or between big
associations, but that it will in addition be a competition of
propaganda. The business man and advertising man is realizing that he
must not discard entirely the methods of Barnum in reaching the
public. An example in the annals of George Harrison Phelps, of the
successful utilization of this type of appeal was the nation-wide
hook-up which announced the launching of the Dodge Victory Six car.
Millions of people, it is estimated, listened in to this program
broadcast over 47 stations. The expense was more than $60,000. The
arrangements involved an additional telephonic hook-up of 20,000 miles
of wire, and included transmission from Los Angeles, Chicago, Detroit,
New Orleans, and New York. Al Jolson did his bit from New Orleans,
Will Rogers from Beverly Hills, Fred and Dorothy Stone from Chicago,
and Paul Whiteman from New York, at an aggregate artists' fee of
$25,000. And there was included a four-minute address by the president
of Dodge Brothers announcing the new car, which gave him access in
four minutes to an estimated audience of thirty million Americans, the
largest number, unquestionably, ever to concentrate their attention on
a given commercial product at a given moment. It was a sugar-coated
sales message.
Modern sales technicians will object: "What you say of this
method of appeal is true. But it increases the cost of getting the
manufacturer's message across. The modern tendency has been to reduce
this cost (for example, the elimination of premiums) and concentrate
on getting full efficiency from the advertising expenditure. If you
hire a Galli-Curci to sing for bacon you increase the cost of the
bacon by the amount of her very large fee. Her voice adds nothing to
the product but it adds to its cost."
Undoubtedly. But all modes of sales appeal require the spending
of money to make the appeal attractive. The advertiser in print adds
to the cost of his message by the use of pictures or by the cost of
getting distinguished endorsements.
There is another kind of difficulty, created in the process of
big business getting bigger, which calls for new modes of establishing
contact with the public. Quantity production offers a standardized
product the cost of which tends to diminish with the quantity sold. If
low price is the only basis of competition with rival products,
similarly produced, there ensues a cut-throat competition which can
end only by taking all the profit and incentive out of the industry.
The logical way out of this dilemma is for the manufacturer to
develop some sales appeal other than mere cheapness, to give the
product, in the public mind, some other attraction, some idea that
will modify the product slightly, some element of originality that
will distinguish it from products in the same line. Thus, a
manufacturer of typewriters paints his machines in cheerful hues.
These special types of appeal can be popularized by the manipulation
of the principles familiar to the propagandist-- the principles of
gregariousness, obedience to authority, emulation, and the like. A
minor element can be made to assume economic importance by being
established in the public mind as a matter of style. Mass production
can be split up. Big business will still leave room for small
business. Next to a huge department store there may be located a tiny
specialty shop which makes a very good living.
The problem of bringing large hats back into fashion was
undertaken by a propagandist. The millinery industry two years ago was
menaced by the prevalence of the simple felt hat which was crowding
out the manufacture of all other kinds of hats and hat ornaments. It
was found that hats could roughly be classified in six types. It was
found too that four groups might help to change hat fashions: the
society leader, the style expert, the fashion editor and writer, the
artist who might give artistic approval to the styles, and beautiful
mannequins. The problem, then, was to bring these groups together
before an audience of hat buyers.
A committee of prominent artists was organized to choose the
most beautiful girls in New York to wear, in a series of tableaux, the
most beautiful hats in the style classifications, at a fashion fete at
a leading hotel.
A committee was formed of distinguished American women who, on
the basis of their interest in the development of an American
industry, were willing to add the authority of their names to the
idea. A style committee was formed of editors of fashion magazines and
other prominent fashion authorities who were willing to support the
idea. The girls in their lovely hats and costumes paraded on the
running-board before an audience of the entire trade.
The news of the event affected the buying habits not only of the
onlookers, but also of the women throughout the country. The story of
the event was flashed to the consumer by her newspaper as well as by
the advertisements of her favorite store. Broadsides went to the
millinery buyer from the manufacturer. One manufacturer stated that
whereas before the show he had not sold any large trimmed hats, after
it he had sold thousands.
Often the public relations counsel is called in to handle an
emergency situation. A false rumor, for instance, may occasion an
enormous loss in prestige and money if not handled promptly and
effectively. An incident such as the one described in the New York
American of Friday, May 21, 1926, shows what the lack of proper
technical handling of public relations might result in.
$1,000,000 LOST BY FALSE RUMOR ON
HUDSON STOCK
Hudson Motor Company stock fluctuated widely around noon
yesterday and losses estimated at $500,000 to $1,000,000 were
suffered as a result of the widespread flotation of false news
regarding dividend action.
The directors met in Detroit at 12:30, New York time, to act
on a dividend. Almost immediately a false report that only the
regular dividend had been declared was circulated.
At 12:46 the Dow, Jones & Co. ticker service received the
report from the Stock Exchange firm and its publication resulted in
further drop in the stock.
Shortly after 1 o'clock the ticker services received official
news that the dividend had been increased and a 20 per cent stock
distribution authorized. They rushed the correct news out on their
tickers and Hudson stock immediately jumped more than 6 points.
A clipping from the Journal of Commerce of April 4, 1925, is
reproduced here as an interesting example of a method to counteract a
false rumor:
BEECH-NUT HEAD HOME TOWN GUEST
Bartlett Arkell Signally Honored by
Communities of Mohawk Valley
{Special to The Journal of Commerce)
CANAJOHARIE, N. Y., April 3.--To-day was 'Beech-Nut Day' in
this town; in fact, for the whole Mohawk Valley. Business men and
practically the whole community of this region joined in a personal
testimonial to Bartlett Arkell of New York City, president of the
Beech-Nut Packing Company of this city, in honor of his firm
refusal to consider selling his company to other financial
interests to move elsewhere.
When Mr. Arkell publicly denied recent rumors that he was to
sell his company to the Postum Cereal Company for $17,000,000,
which would have resulted in taking the industry from its
birthplace, he did so in terms conspicuously loyal to his boyhood
home, which he has built up into a prosperous industrial community
through thirty years' management of his Beech-Nut Company.
He absolutely controls the business and flatly, stated that
he would never sell it during his lifetime 'to any one at any
price,' since it would be disloyal to his friends and fellow
workers. And the whole Mohawk Valley spontaneously decided that
such spirit deserved public recognition. Hence, to-day's
festivities.
More than 3,000 people participated, headed by a committee
comprising W. J. Roser, chairman; B. F. Spraker, H. V. Bush, B. F.
Diefendorf and J. H. Cook. They were backed by the Canajoharie and
the Mohawk Valley Chambers of Business Men's Associations.
Of course, every one realized after this that there was no truth
in the rumor that the Beech-Nut Company was in the market. A denial
would not have carried as much conviction.
Amusement, too, is a business--one of the largest in America. It
was the amusement business--first the circus and the medicine show,
then the theater-- which taught the rudiments of advertising to
industry and commerce. The latter adopted the ballyhoo of the show
business. But under the stress of practical experience it adapted and
refined these crude advertising methods to the precise ends it sought
to obtain. The theater has, in its turn, learned from business, and
has refined its publicity methods to the point where the old
stentorian methods are in the discard.
The modern publicity director of a theater syndicate or a motion
picture trust is a business man, responsible for the security of tens
or hundreds of millions of dollars of invested capital. He cannot
afford to be a stunt artist or a free-lance adventurer in publicity.
He must know his public accurately and modify its thoughts and actions
by means of the methods which the amusement world has learned from its
old pupil, big business. As public knowledge increases and public
taste improves, business must be ready to meet them halfway.
Modern business must have its finger continuously on the public
pulse. It must understand the changes in the public mind and be
prepared to interpret itself fairly and eloquently to changing
opinion.
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