Blog: San Diego Online News Right Now
The opinions of individual bizSanDiego contributors don't necessarily reflect the editorial position of bizSanDiego magazine as a whole.
PR Firms: Think Results, Not Retainers!
posted on
Friday, 02 May 2008
Many PR professionals and agencies resist client efforts to align their fees to a business metric, opting instead to use the traditional – and largely academic – ad equivalency index.

By David B. Oates, APR
PR firms should embrace and adopt performance-based rate structures, as the ability to measure results is now much more cost-effective and readily accessible. This model aligns a majority of client fees to actual results, such as pinpoint article placement, speaking opportunities, industry award recognition and customer/partner/investor lead generation.
Think and Act Strategically
To transform an agency successfully, its principals must – first and foremost –stop thinking like a Marketing or PR person and more like a business manager who thoroughly understands their client’s business and competitive landscape. Communication practitioners must also clearly comprehend how their client’s executive team and board of directors measure success. While sales (or development for non-profits) will undoubtedly reign supreme, other aspects of the business will retain significant value, such as:
- Profit margins,
- Distribution and technology partner agreements,
- Investor (private or public) interest,
- Rate of customer acquisition,
- Strategic product roadmap,
- Average sale price per customer and so on.
Agencies will fail to realize true success if their evaluation differs from – or worst case, contradicts – the criteria of their client.
How Performance-Based PR Revenue Models Work
Under a performance-based model, a PR firm should charge a small amount of a client’s budget to a monthly program fee in return for offering that company unlimited hours of work. This eliminates the potential for agencies to be perceived as “nickel-ing and dime-ing” clients for time spent on non-valued items. The remaining budget should then be structured in performance fees where clients pay only as results occur. Some examples include:
- Articles placed, tiered by size, circulation and demographics,
- Speaking opportunities secured,
- Industry awards secured,
- Qualified customer, partner, investor leads brought into the pipeline,
- Web traffic increase and subsequent conversion rates,
- Unsolicited PR opportunities secured,
- Brand value/perception audit increases with targeted audiences
Performance-based PR fee models also apply to all aspects of public relations and marketing – and not just media relations as some would believe. Some examples include:
Crisis Communications
Agencies can tie their fee structure to their effectiveness in meeting those goals, such as where and when those key messages were portrayed in a broadcast or print story and how many resonated with key stakeholders. PR firms could also measure their effectiveness by how long the crisis lasted when compared to other similar events.
Internal Communications
An organization can most certainly look at internal communications for its value in improving employee retention and recruitment rates. The reduction in employee churn and increase in productivity are indeed quantifiable and mission-critical elements in any organization. PR agencies need to recognize this and align their fees accordingly.
Counsel to Execs
Oftentimes, PR professionals offer such counsel to ensure executives can either solidify key messages and/or effectively convey them to their stakeholders and media. PR agencies should create benchmarks as to the capabilities of an organization before and after such counsel and measure the improvements over a period of time. Firms may also find that this program's benefits extend beyond corporate communications to the marketing product management, sales/customer service and investor relations departments.
More and more clients today are asking their PR firms to share the burden of generating results. As a result, this sharing model will drive performance-based revenue models to evolve as the industry standard for the next decade.
David Oates, APR, is the President of Stalwart Communications Inc., (www.stalwartcom.com) a San Diego-based marketing and public relations firm. He also recently launched PayonPerformance (http://payonperformance.com) to engage business leaders in discussion on this business model. David can be reached at david@stalwartcom.com.
Dont agree? Blog about it below.
Watch the bizSanDiego exclusive video interview with David Oats
Posted by David Oates | 3 Comments
Comment Posted by David Oates on May 13, 2008
Thanks as well. I wholeheartedly disagree with you and time will prove me right, but we need to have this kind of conversation.
Comment Posted by Jan Rieger on May 13, 2008
Sorry, but this sounds ridiculous for so many reasons! Editorial coverage is much more valuable than the same amount of advertising space. Internal communications is only one small factor in employee turnover. And a small monthly fee for unlimited time worked? And a crisis doesn't "stop" at a certain point in time. PR experts can help limit the damage, but they can't make the problem and resulting negative publicity just go away nicely and neatly. David, we've not met and I'm sure you're a great guy. Good luck with this.
Jan Rieger, President
McLane Rieger Communications, Inc.
Add Your Own Comments
To Add Comments, suggest a Topic or join in the conversation you must register to be a part of it.
BizBuz EMAIL UPDATES
Get the best news, events, and tips about San Diego business. View Sample
SAN DIEGO JOB BOARD
The area's best (and still free) online job directory.
SAN DIEGO BUSINESS DIRECTORY
The source for businesses by businesses.




Comment Posted by David Oates on May 13, 2008
Hey Jan. Feel feel to join this site: http://payonperformance.com