Defining The Qualities of A Professional

Written by Raju Gavurla


In today's business climate we are experiencing more interest in professionalism. The past five years provided many successes; however, most have been overshadowed byrepparttar non-ethical behavior of a few. Some people lost most of their retirement savings, andrepparttar 104568 US population is demanding a stronger US economy and a peaceful world. We've seen quality job opportunities decreasing andrepparttar 104569 need for profits has many projects being partially or wholly completed overseas. Many employees are traveling to other offices inrepparttar 104570 US because ofrepparttar 104571 lack of projects locally. If they choose not to travel, they are being asked to take vacation or risk being laid off.

In tough times, I look to fundamentals to help rightrepparttar 104572 path. One fundamental factor more prevalent in daily dialogue and business consists of definingrepparttar 104573 qualities of a professional. Some define a professional as a person who is being paid for a service. True, we require money to trade. However, some get paid by doing illegal activities.

To simplify, you can be or recognize a professional when three qualities are present. The first quality is trustworthiness. When you meet a person forrepparttar 104574 first time you immediately associate a level of trust withrepparttar 104575 person and their service. Ifrepparttar 104576 person happens to come via a recommendation, then usuallyrepparttar 104577 trust is greater. Regardless, just as relationships develop so doesrepparttar 104578 level of trust. People that associate with each other on a high trust level know how to talk to one another and provide reasonsrepparttar 104579 service they are representing can be beneficial. Knowing how to talk to one another is more than mannerisms. It isrepparttar 104580 ability to motivate one another to create positive results. Additionally, your involvement and input in your company, associations, volunteerism, charity work, and political ideas and opinions help develop trust. Not necessarily because two people agree on an issue but because somewhere on this path a common trust level evolves and continues to evolve as you share experiences. When trust is present, people will buy from you or recommend your service.

How Real PR Works

Written by Robert A. Kelly


Please feel free to publish this article and resource box in your ezine, newsletter, offline publication or website. A copy would be appreciated at bobkelly@TNI.net. Word count is 995 including guidelines and resource box. Robert A. Kelly © 2004.

How Real PR Works

For some, public relations works well when their news release or special event winds up inrepparttar newspaper or on repparttar 104567 radio.

For others, public relations works best when it does something positive aboutrepparttar 104568 behaviors of outside audiences that affect their operationsrepparttar 104569 most. I like this approach because a business, non-profit or association manager can userepparttar 104570 fundamental premise of public relations to deliver key stakeholder behavior change –repparttar 104571 kind that leads directly to achieving a manager’s objectives.

What fundamental premise of public relations am I talking about here, and how can you put it to good use persuading those important outside folks to your way of thinking, then move them to take actions that help your department, division or subsidiary succeed?

“People act on their own perception ofrepparttar 104572 facts before them, which leads to predictable behaviors about which something can be done. When we create, change or reinforce that opinion by reaching, persuading and moving-to-desired-actionrepparttar 104573 very people whose behaviors affectrepparttar 104574 organizationrepparttar 104575 most, repparttar 104576 public relations mission is accomplished.”

A simple plan that gets everyone working towardsrepparttar 104577 same external audience behaviors insuring that your public relations effort stays on track.

Byrepparttar 104578 way, I’m talking about changes in behavior like welcome bounces in showroom visits, community leaders beginning to seek you out; membership applications onrepparttar 104579 rise, customers starting to make repeat purchases; organizations proposing strategic alliances and joint ventures; waves of prospects starting to do business with you; new inquiries about strategic alliances; politicians and legislators starting to view you as a key member ofrepparttar 104580 business, non-profit or association communities; higher employee retention rates and even capital givers or specifying sources beginning to look your way.

Meet with your PR team and takerepparttar 104581 time to list those outside audiences of yours who behave in ways that help or hinder you in achieving your objectives. Then prioritize them by how badly they impact you, and start working withrepparttar 104582 target audience that heads your list.

First challenge? You’re not certain just how most members of that key outside audience perceive your organization.

Because there’s a good chance you can’t afford professional survey work, you and your PR colleagues (don’t worry, they’ll be quite familiar with perception and behavior matters) must monitor those perceptions yourself.

Ask members of that outside audience questions like “Have you ever had contact with anyone from our organization? Was it a satisfactory experience? Are you familiar with our services or products?” Stay alert to negative statements, especially evasive or hesitant replies, and especially for false assumptions, untruths, misconceptions, inaccuracies and potentially damaging rumors. Because experience shows they usually lead to negative behaviors, repparttar 104583 objective is to correct any ofrepparttar 104584 above you encounter.

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