Corporate Communication 'N' PR Ethics
Corporate Communication 'N' PR Ethics
Corporate Communication 'N' PR Ethics
• Organizational Communication
It is used generally to cover PR, public affairs, investor relations, labour market
communication, corporate advertising, environmental communication, corporate
communication etc.
• Management Communication
It is described as ‘accomplishing work through other people’. Management
includes functions such as planning, organizing, commanding, coordinating and
controlling. Management communication is used in various staff and line functions
in an organization.
• Employee communication
• Government relations
• Corporate advertising
• Corporate PR
Reputation
• Reputation is defined as the ‘standing’ that an individual or an
entity has in the perception of people.
• Competitive edge
• Corporate governance
CRM
• Position through words and imagery (corporate identity
programme) : corporate advertising
• Stakeholder evaluation
• Brand audit
• Opinion polls
• Crisis research
Image/identity
• Image is a reflection of an organization’s reality.
Image/identity/reputation
• Image is taken to mean the view of the company held by external
stakeholders, especially that held by customers
Known as -
• Institutional advertising
• Advocacy advertising
• Social advertising
Ethics of PR
• Since then, PSRI had 26 All India PR conferences including the 9th PR
World Congress in Bombay in 1982 and the first Asia Pacific PR Meet in
Kolkata during January, 1998 and International Public Relations
Conference at Bangalore in 2002.
• CONSIDERING that, apart from "rights", human beings have not only
physical or material needs but also intellectual, moral and social needs,
and that their rights are of real benefits to them only in so far as needs
are essentially met,
SHALL UNDERTAKE
• 6. To pay due regard to, and uphold, human dignity, and to recognize
the right of each individual to judge for himself;
• 7. To establish the moral, psychological and intellectual conditions for
dialogue in its true sense, and to recognize the right of the parties
involved to state their case and express their views;
• The Code consolidates the 1961 Code of Venice, the 1965 Code of
Athens and the 2007 Code of Brussels.
• (a) RECALLING the Charter of the United Nations which determines “to
reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights, and in the dignity and
worth of the human person”;
• (d) RECALLING that the conduct of public relations and public affairs
provides essential democratic representation to public authorities;
• (g) RECALLING that the Internet and other digital media demand
special care with respect to the personal privacy of individuals, clients,
employers and colleagues;
2. Integrity
Act with honesty and integrity at all times so as to secure and retain the
confidence of those with whom the practitioner comes into contact;
3. Dialogue
Seek to establish the moral, cultural and intellectual conditions for dialogue, and
recognise the rights of all parties involved to state their case and express their
views;
4. Transparency
Be open and transparent in declaring their name, organisation and the interest
they represent;
5. Conflict.
Avoid any professional conflicts of interest and to disclose such conflicts to
affected parties when they occur;
6. Confidentiality
Honour confidential information provided to them;
7. Accuracy
Take all reasonable steps to ensure the truth and accuracy of all information
provided;
8. Falsehood
Make every effort to not intentionally disseminate false or misleading information,
exercise proper care to avoid doing so unintentionally and correct any such act
promptly;
9. Deception
Not obtain information by deceptive or dishonest means;
10. Disclosure
Not create or use any organisation to serve an announced cause but which actually
serves an undisclosed interest;
11. Profit
Not sell for profit to third parties copies of documents obtained from public
authorities;
12. Remuneration
Whilst providing professional services, not accept any form of payment in
connection with those services from anyone other than the principal;
13. Inducement
Neither directly nor indirectly offer nor give any financial or other inducement to
public representatives or the media, or other stakeholders;
14. Influence
Neither propose nor undertake any action which would constitute an improper
influence on public representatives, the media, or other stakeholders;
15. Competitors
Not intentionally injure the professional reputation of another practitioner;
16. Poaching
Not seek to secure another practitioner’s client by deceptive means;
17. Employment
When employing personnel from public authorities or competitors take care to
follow the rules and confidentiality requirements of those organisations;
18. Colleagues
Observe this Code with respect to fellow IPRA members and public relations
practitioners worldwide.
IPRA members shall, in upholding this Code, agree to abide by and help enforce the
disciplinary procedures of the International Public Relations Association in regard
to any breach of this Code.