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What is Public Relations?
These are activities and policies used to create public interest in a person, idea, product, institution, or business
establishment. By its nature, public relations is devoted to serving particular interests by presenting them to the public
in the most favorable light. Thus, the goal of the public relations consultant is to create, through the organization of news
and advertising, an advantageous image for his client, be it a business corporation, cultural institution, or private or public
individual; toward this end–the making of favorable public opinion–many research techniques and communications
media are used. Although many of the same methods are employed, public relations differs from propaganda, which is generally
government supported, international in scope, and political in nature. The earliest form of public relations and still the
most widely practiced is publicity. The principal instrument of publicity is the press release, which provides the mass media
with the raw material and background for a news story. The growth of modern public relations is generally attributed to the
development of the mass media, which accelerated the spread of ideas and increased the importance of public opinion by giving
more people access to current events. Public relations as a field can be traced to the early 20th cent., when American businessmen
found it necessary to respond to attacks by social reformers. A milestone in the industry was the opening (1904) of Ivy Lee's
publicity office in New York City. Soon there were other firms in the field, and by World War I the concept of public relations
had gained general acceptance. Public relations techniques have been widely used in politics and political campaigns. By the
1960s the public relations agency had become a fact in American life, numbering among its clients branches of national, state,
and local government, industry, labor, professional and religious groups, and some foreign countries.
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