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Education Public Relation

Another Trip to Barcelona

By July 27, 2016August 20th, 2018No Comments

It all started six years ago.

PR practitioners from more than 30 countries convened in Barcelona, Spain to establish a new set of best practices for measuring the efficacy of PR campaigns. The resulting guidelines were appropriately named the Barcelona Principles. Among other things, these seven Principles mercifully cast out Advertising Value Equivalency (AVEs) and finally addressed the need to measure social media efforts.

It was a good start.

But the media landscape changes quickly. So, five years after the inception of the Barcelona Principles, experts from several groups (the International Association for Measurement and Evaluation of Communication, ICCO, Institute for Public Relations, PRCA, PRSA and The Global Alliance) revisited the measurement constructs. And Barcelona 2.0 was born.

Barcelona-infographic-new-version-with-IPR-logo

Photo credit: Institute for Public Relations

What Changed

Whereas the original guidelines painted with broad strokes, the updated Principles add specificity to the framework. Here’s a rundown of the actual changes, per the International Association for the Measurement and Evaluation of Communication:

Principle 1:

Original: Importance of Goal Setting and Measurement

2.0: Goal Setting and Measurement are Fundamental to Communication and Public Relations

Principle 2:

Original: Measuring the Effect on Outcomes is Preferred to Measuring Outputs

2.0: Measuring Communication Outcomes is Recommended Versus Only Measuring Outputs

Principle 3:

Original: The Effect on Business Results Can and Should Be Measured Where Possible

2.0: The Effect on Organizational Performance Can and Should Be Measured Where Possible

Principle 4:

Original: Media Measurement Requires Quantity and Quality

2.0: Measurement and Evaluation Require Both Qualitative and Quantitative Methods

Principle 5:

Original: AVEs are not the Value of Public Relations

2.0: AVEs are not the Value of Communications

Principle 6:

Original: Social Media Can and Should be Measured

2.0: Social Media Can and Should be Measured Consistently with Other Media Channels

Principle 7:

Original: Transparency and Replicability are Paramount to Sound Measurement

2.0: Measurement and Evaluation Should be Transparent, Consistent and Valid

That’s a lot to digest. During the next several weeks, we’ll share deeper analysis about these changes and how they (should) affect your organization’s communication programs.

When our team designs PR and digital marketing campaigns for clients, the measurement and evaluation component is deliberate, direct and detailed. We establish and evaluate Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) on a monthly basis. With a little help from clients, we can measure at three levels: 1) outputs (the tactics we execute); 2) outcomes (the results generated by outputs); and 3) business results (impact on the bottom line).

If you want to better understand the results of your marketing communication efforts, drop us a line.

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