Like his policies or not, Donald Trump has given a masterclass on public perception management which holds lessons for all business owners. I use the SPEAK|pr framework to interpret the actions of this billionaire NY property developer who managed to build a following which would storm the US Capitol buildings on the 6th November. I break down how Trump and his cohort took a leaf out of Joseph Goebbels, master orator and propagandist generally accounted responsible for presenting a favourable image of the Nazi regime to the German people.
However, his process and approach can be a model not least the power of owned media. I try not to be political just analytical, so that we can learn from Trump how he built a following around a cause; some of the best practices should be used to undo the damage done to the fabric of the nation but also the reputation of America worldwide.
Read the article version of this episode - https://theunnoticed.cc/episode/donald-trump-has-given-a-free-masterclass-on-public-relations-and-here-are-5-key-lessons-for-business-owners-anywhere
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Hello, and welcome to this episode of speed PR. What a week it's been this is the week that has seen the storming of Capitol Hill, which has many implications. And again, this podcast is not about politics but about public relations and communications. And it's fair to say, the optics on the events of the sixth of October are not good for Donald Trump. But also, they're not good for United States either. Now, what I'm interested in on this show is how we, as business owners, can learn from events, learn from best practice, and learn from technologies on how to get noticed. And I want to share today, some of the lessons of what we can learn by how Donald Trump has accomplished from a PR point of view, an amazing accomplishment, like it or not, believe him or not, he has done an amazing job in building a brand. Now, of course, you could also argue that he's done a great job in destroying a brand too, but we get onto that later. So I thought, we could just have a look at some of the lessons that we can learn from Donald Trump on how to build a brand and how to communicate. And I thought I could use the five stage methodology that we have here of speak PR to create a structure for that conversation. We talk about Storify, personalize, engage, amplify and to know. Now, if we look at Storify. And what Donald Trump has managed to do is to convince a sizable amount of the American population, that they are victims of a plot to remove their well being when they're right, and guns. So he has managed to tap into a a an anxiety that exists within a certain group of people in America, that their well being is already under threat. So under Storify, Donald Trump has managed to take an underlying narrative, and to build on that. And when you're thinking about building a story for your own business, and looking at how you can tap in to a narrative that already exists, it's much easier to flow with the water than to swim upstream. Donald Trump has done that he's tapped into the Zeitgeist that was already in America, in certain sections, and he has made a story of that. Now, under personalization trumpers clearly understood the avatar that he's talking to. We do avatars you do about a personification we talked about a character profile. And what seems to be interesting is that one would think that Donald Trump a white Anglo Saxon mail from the northeast, from New New York, New York, would really be appealing to white men, that she seems to be appealing to white men who are less educated audiences, one would think in rural areas. But this alone wouldn't justify the volume of votes that he obtained. Now, it was interesting to read in the newspapers and to see online, young Americans, I read a very young female graduate talk about moving out of Washington, DC because now she's afraid of what the democrats will do to make the city into a communist run den of iniquity. So it seems that some of Trumps avatars, the ones that we saw roaming the halls of Capitol Hill, the Q anon group wearing the horns and the tattoos and waving the Confederate flag. Some of those avatars obviously are bonded to him. But it seems that some avatars the female population, and intelligence have people like Mitch McConnell, who may or may not be bonded to him, but they've certainly allowed themselves to be led by him perhaps had a self interest. But the the personalization of the story understanding that these people want leadership want to believe in being great again, has obviously resonated deep and wide across America, and obviously, certainly in the Midwest. Now, in the third part, we have engage. Now what Trump has managed to do is to create engaging content, we talked about the need to create compelling content, which has three simple elements in order to be shared widely. And this is in our speak PR course. We talked about the first need is that Information is new. Secondly, that it's simple to understand. And thirdly, that it's relevant or context sensitive. So let's just look at those three different elements. Now on the concept of being new, what Trump did was to talk about draining the swamp. So he didn't introduce a new narrative. But what he did do was introduced something new, which was to basically start again, throw out all those corrupt and unscrupulous, self interested politicians. And that was new. In the past, politicians went to Washington, DC to kind of carry on the work of politics. So the narrative that he created, which was new, was that he was going to get all these old crocodiles to leave the swamp. Now, that was a genius, because here we have a billionaire, who had rarely left New York other than to fly to Mar a Lago managed to convince working class white voters and some Latino and some African Americans, it must be said that a billionaire would understand their position and would defend their rights. Now a second is the concept of simple to understand, this is where the Make America Great or mega, is a classic example of an advertising slogan, which is at once evocative, and simple and universal. Now, the use of colors of white on red and red on white, much like the St. George's flag for England, or even Coca Cola, the use of primary colors contrasting together with this central theme of making America great and restoring people to their former fortunes, was very, very powerful, but also very, very simple. In fact, it was so simple, you could fit it on a hat. Now, the third element of making content to be powerful is that it is irrelevant, or context sensitive. Now, in this time mentioned, Trump played on the growing anxiety amongst white people in America, at the loss of jobs, and the loss of their domestic and international prestige. We talk about the Black Lives Matter campaign, for example, and how that's creating threats across American society to the entrenched interests of certain groups of society, predominantly white Anglo Saxon men. So Trump identified that these people are actually going backwards in socio economic terms and political terms. So his message about making America great again, really was about helping the average white American male reestablish the position that they'd enjoy in the 50s. and saw a fade, actually through the 60s and 70s and 80s. So the halcyon days of the 1950s have been slowly eroded through legislation, through for example, schooling act, and through the Vietnam War, and through the hollowing out of the Midwest, and the rust belt, through either export of jobs, but also through the automation of jobs. So this is why the wall to be built, and the confrontation with China, we're all about being offensive, offensive strategies to protect those working class Americans who are losing their jobs and their livelihoods. As we know, the tragedy is that these jobs were not being lost, due to foreign powers, but to automation, and to companies, American companies like Amazon, who have leveraged the internet, much more than international companies, or immigration labor. But it's an easier narrative, just as it was for Hitler to blame the Jewish diaspora for the woes of the German poor in the 1930s than it was for their geographical location, and the lack of industry after the First World War. So now, let's look at amplification the next part of our speak PR program. Now in this section, this is where Trump really showed some mastery, he took control with a Twitter following of over 80 million and ignored traditional media. Now, that in itself was fairly radical, but what he managed to do was to go one step further, and called the traditional media the enemy of the people. Obviously, as we all know, freedom of speech and the independent press are enshrined in the American Constitution. But what Trump managed to do was to de legitimize the independent media with the simple term fake news. Hundreds of years of history and editorial intent Haggerty were destroyed by these two words, fake news. So in this way, Trump's genius has been to label his competitors, with these very simple and targeted jibes and play to this audience that has got a natural fear and alloy them together around a common enemy. Sounds pretty familiar, really. It's just what gurbles did in the 1930s. Now, in bypassing traditional media, Trump was able to install his own message of mega directly into the hearts and the minds of his avatars, his followers, his base, as the Americans like to call it. Without any filtering, which would normally take place through journalists and editors and publishers, with or without Rupert Murdoch's assistant. Now, Trump has understood through Twitter, he has a direct channel to people. He also is used Facebook, Instagram, and Twitch, for example. And it's this ability to go direct, that is a learning for all of us, that are involved in marketing now that businesses now can own their own media channels. And those can become as powerful as the traditional earned media coverage, as long as one can build a community, which follows their own media channel. So I say that again, as long as you can build your own media channel, that so compelling, that people actually encourage and invite other people to come and join that you've got some mechanism to actually get people to join and follow you. You can have an amazingly powerful tool. Now, finally, to the fifth stage of our process, which in our east west, public relations speak PR. And we talk about the knowing that the measurement. Now, the measurement in the speak PR is what we call the active communications index, which is how much work is being done by the team on a day to day basis, to communicate. And the case of Trump, his own metric has been political polling, of course, he's got vanity metrics about followers and so on. But because of his own media, and his own audiences, reflecting to only the successes that he believed he was enjoying, it was impossible for him to comprehend the failure at the polls. So the lesson here then is that everybody who's a business leader must look at their own numbers, with objectivity, but also to expose themselves expose ourselves and our teams, to the numbers that we don't like. So in our active communications index evaluator, which I built at speak behind.co, we have an evaluation tool, where we ask companies to complete a survey on how much activity they undertake each week. And then this is benchmarked against other companies, which have undertaken activity in the same time period. And of the same scale. I believe this is important because our absolute numbers are important, but our relative numbers are even more important. How much work I do in public relations is important. But the question is, is it as much or more or less than the competition, I might be doing a lot. But if my competition is doing more, my a lot doesn't really count. So comparing our own activity with the activity of our competitors is key. And of course, the hubris of Trump was that he wasn't looking at anybody else's numbers other than straight polling. But he had bought into his own his own parameters and his own content, and his own guidance. So ultimately, the population in America, but in our less, maybe glamorous lives, our consumers, and our staff have a choice. They don't vote or come to work or buy according to the absolute number that I put out. They buy according to the relative amount, how much work I do compared to my competitors. So in the active communications index, we need to look at how much work we do ourselves, but we must also look at what our competitors are doing. Because if we fail to monitor our competitors, then our own victory isn't guaranteed. So the Trump episode and the tragedy on Capitol Hill this week plays into this big PR narrative of stratification, personalization, engagement, amplify, and to know, and just like Joseph Goebbels had led the Nazi PR campaign of the 1930s, which convinced their population to become slavish in the following of the Nazi mindset, and Hitler, with all the terrible implications that that brought for society and for the world. Donald Trump and his architects have understood that a sustained focus and a simple message shared to a receptive audience consistently, can carry tremendous weight. As you think about your own company, and its public relations as a marketing, it's worth looking at the skills that Trump and his team have brought to bear on American politics, in fact, on the global political stage, but also at the way they've transformed traditional communications. And whilst we may not like what Trump and his cohort have used these skills, for, one has to recognize that they've been extremely effective, a man with no political office became president, and had just under half of the popular vote in America. It's a pretty stunning attainment, whether or not you like what he's done with it. So, indeed, Trump hasn't just managed to change the perception of the Trump brand, but also of the brand of America. And this could be his greatest PR coup, following Of course, on from his aborted coup of Capitol Hill. So I'm sharing today, like everybody in the world that has witnessed the events this week in America, with large measures of sadness, and surprise, but also with some learning that can come out of this. So for all of us that are engaged in marketing our own businesses, or organizations or or countries, Trump and his associates have taught us many lessons. And the speak PR program creates a structure for us to all evaluate those practices. So I hope you find this abuse and maybe some interest. So thank you to you for listening for this episode of speak PR. My name is Jim James. If you like this, please do subscribe. Leave a comment really helps. If you would like to talk with us about the speed PR program, to please come to speakPR.co. And if you'd like o find out more about what we o as a PR firm, come to EastW stpr.com and even subscribe to our weekly newsletter. Thank yo once again and Till we meet ag in, I wish you the best of he lth, a safe, sustainable bu iness, that if you're co municating, maybe look at wh t Trump has done. Maybe not do why he's done it. But look at some of the successful tools an tips that he's given us all on one how to get noticed and ho to how to lead a following. Ok y, thank you so much.

