Explosive PR. Secrets of Outrageous PR-Stunts from Russia with Love for Positive News. Igor Szucs

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Explosive PR. Secrets of Outrageous PR-Stunts from Russia with Love for Positive News - Igor Szucs


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osive PR

      Secrets of Outrageous PR-Stunts from Russia with Love for Positive News

      Igor Szucs

      Roman Maslennikov

      © Igor Szucs, 2017

      © Roman Maslennikov, 2017

      ISBN 978-5-4490-1254-8

      Created with Ridero smart publishing system

      This looks interesting and energetic.

      Douglas Rushkoff, “Media Virus”

      Book’s Hashtags

      #PR #spindoctors #communications_directors #PRaides #propagandists #MalcolmTucker #TheThickof It #IntheLoop #Kasper #Borgen #TobyZiegler #TheWestWing #Scandal #crisis_management #Olivia_Pope #AbsolutePower #public_relations #propaganda #Alternative_facts #Big_lie #Doublespeak #Euphemistic #misspeaking #Euromyth #Fake_news #Half_truth #Ideological_framing #Internet_manipulation #Media_manipulation #Post_truth #Propaganda #Scientific_fabrication #Yellow_journalism #manipulation #Misinformation #disinformation #business #entrepreneurship #balls #cool #news_tornado #Wag_the_Dog

      #atomic_news #buzz #pr_stunt #Stampede_PR #media_virus #PR_hook

      Contents

      Preface

      This book could be written by my Russian friends (including Kremlin-based spin doctors), PR people from IT companies and start-ups. Occasionally, I see messages in my Facebook feed: “I could tell you so many things, but I’ll never do it, not even in memoirs.”

      I’d be delighted to read such stories with you and with law enforcement officers, but my friends would never write a book like that and certainly not because of their respect for the law. In fact, there is no PR and lobbying regulation in Russia. This is just the PR ethic: if the client says “no” you should please him/her, no matter what.

      I take high risks publishing this book, telling how things are done, and how explosive PR campaigns are concocted.

      Want to know why it is risky to publish or even to read this book?

      To begin with, I did not ask the permission of all my clients about whether I could publish their cases. I feel the moral right to do this without their permission. For instance, the budgets of some PR campaigns were so low (based on mutual agreement) it did not seem possible to do them only for the sake of money or pleasure (which is equally important). But if I enjoy the process of telling about this experience and thereby attract more clients to well-paid projects, it can be justified. First, I wanted to use the phrase “serious projects,” but then it dawned on me that my projects are more like laughing gas, so “well-paid” sounds better.

      Regarding one project, the client said to me, “Please do not expose this was a PR stunt.” I ignored this request. Well, frankly, there’s nothing special to scheme against anybody. I’ll never write about really dangerous PR cases since my self-preservation instinct is sharp.

      Secondly, a common opinion is that it’s difficult to repeat something known to all. Many entrepreneurs and business consultants used to tell me: “Why expose these tricks? How are you going to make a nickel? You unveil loaded dice.” My rebuttal comes down to my two convictions: let competition and the level of PR campaigns rise as a result of strenuous effort and PR people overreaching themselves. I earned my first degree in journalism, and this explains a lot. You cannot hide an owl in a sack – this is what people normally say about the likes of me.

      In the final analysis, the outcome is similar to that of John Godfrey, a friend of Ian Fleming (author of James Bond novels). In prewar years, he published The Trout Memo1, where he described 51 ways to mislead the enemy, and then brilliantly backed Ewen Montegu.

      That story is described in Operation Mincemeat. They did in real life what was described in the memo, despite it being thoroughly studied by enemies. Nevertheless, they succeeded.

      Rear Admiral John Godfrey

      The operation’s result: a passport for the man who never lived

      Or take the US government which started more than one war after the release of Wag the Dog in 1997, which was the screening of Larry Beinhart’s American Hero (1993).

      Not all wars were launched to smother up a sex scandal, but some provocations definitely took place.

      For instance, it’s not clear if there was a real chemical attack in Syria before Trump smashed the Syrian forces with tomahawks. Maybe that attack was provoked or staged or could be seen only in a video and photos. I am not 100% sure, but smoke screens are always used to trigger a war machine.

      This book is about business, not war.

      Let me share several cases with you. If you are interested to know how we reached these results, continue reading this book.

      Crazy News. Made in Russia

      What are other ways to describe our news? Crazy PR? Shock PR? Spin Doctoring? Grass Roots Lobbying? Close indeed, and yet they do not hit the mark. On one occasion, my PR specialization was translated as “stampede”. Yet I’d prefer the phrase “explosive PR”. Hopefully, I’ve invented something new. This is what creative director of the Leo Burnett advertising agency, Jay Conrad Levinson, once did with the phrase “Guerrilla marketing”.

      Now, let’s move to cases. All of them are planned by my explosive PR-campaigns.

      Raccoons Ransack an IT shop

      We trained raccoons and used an alleged candid camera to film them moving our client’s boxes over the office with Internet boosters. We placed our client’s logo in the frame: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZnuE9IhQYjk

      After that, we sent an animal tamer to the shop while broadcasting the news that raccoons had ransacked the shop, spoiled the products, and it was a real nightmare. The animal tamer learned about our interpretation of events from the news and seemed to be a bit concerned, but that’s about all.

      Meanwhile, the news went viral, first on national and then on foreign networks:

      https://www.rt.com/news/254993-raccoons-destroy-office-moscow/

      http://360tv.ru/news/dressirovannye-enoty-isportili-internetoborudovanie-v-magazine-yota-20465/

      http://ren.tv/novosti/2015-04-29/enoty-ustroili-debosh-v-stolichnom-magazine-video

      http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/watch-three-badly-behaved-raccoons-ransack-an-office-in-russia-10218013.html

      It was particularly exciting to read about the “damage” done by our animal companions, estimated in GBP.

      As performers of that promo action, we were content with sparking a public outcry in Moscow, but we sent shock waves over the world. The client thought this effort was insufficient, however, and we had to stage one more promo event to fully satisfy him,


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<p>1</p>

The Trout Memo, written in 1939, is a document comparing the deception of an enemy in wartime with fly fishing. Issued under the name of Admiral John Godfrey, Britain’s director of naval intelligence, according to the historian Ben Macintyre, it bore the hallmarks of having been written by Godfrey’s assistant, Ian Fleming. The memo reads, in particular: “The Trout Fisher casts patiently all day. He frequently changes his venue and his lures. If he has frightened a fish he may ‘give the water a rest for half-an-hour,’ but his main endeavor, visually attract fish by something he sends out from his boat, is incessant.” The memo goes on to describe numerous ways the enemy, like a trout, may be fooled or lured in. One idea from the memo was broadly similar to Operation Mincemeat, a World War II plan to convince the Germans the Allies would attack Greece rather than Italy in 1943, although the idea was developed by Charles Cholmondeley in October 1942. Confirmation of the success of the plan was sent to Churchill: “Mincemeat swallowed rod, line and sinker.” Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trout_memo