Get in touch
The PR Spotlight with Gini Dietrich (Arment Dietrich) image

The PR Spotlight with Gini Dietrich (Arment Dietrich)

We at Coopr connect with international PR professionals daily. From Sydney to Vancouver and from Cape Town to Helsinki. More and more PR professionals connect with each other online, via Twitter, blogs, podcasts or Facebook. To share their knowledge, thoughts, doubts and passion for Public Relations. With ‘The PR Spotlight‘ we wish to contribute to this active PR community. We will try to approach some of the best in PR for you. To help you find answers. ‘The PR Spotlight’ today is on Gini Dietrich, founder of PR firm Arment Dietrich and author of Spin Sucks. Please enjoy her 7 answers and help us share the story!

1. Who are you and what do you do?
I am Gini Dietrich (or Aunt Gini as I’m known to 14 little munchkins) and I don’t really do anything but watch re-runs of Oprah and eat bon-bons. No? OK. I founded a PR firm (Arment Dietrich), I author Spin Sucks, and I’m launching a new business (Project Jack Bauer) in May.

2. What does PR mean to you?
Is this a trick question? PR is customer service, communication, human resources, sales, marketing, and advertising wrapped up into one. While PR professionals aren’t experts in all of those areas, it is our job to effectively communicate every aspect of each of those roles, both internally and externally.

3. How do you see the role of PR in the near future?
Boy! PR is changing so quickly. Our industry has been the same and, in some cases, stagnant, for a very long time. But with the advent of new media and companies being able to create their own content without relying on the “experts,” our industry is changing so quickly that it’s pretty difficult to keep up. I think PR pros really need to stay ahead of the trends, use new tools so they understand the pros and cons, and keep clients (or colleagues) informed and educated.

4. PR sucks because…
I don’t know so much that PR sucks as much as spin does. The reputation (especially of late) of our industry sucks because of things such as astroturfing, using hashtags of heavily publicized events as anchors for publicity, and creating fake personas. And we do a terrible job of doing our own PR so the bad guys get talked about more than the good ones.

5. PR rules because…
PR rules because it’s the first impression a potential customer has of a company or brand. If done correctly, PR can help shape people’s perceptions of a company, even in a crisis mode.

6. What’s hot on your radar right now?
What’s hot? Hmmm…I’m pretty curious about what Google is doing with small publishers in order to help them develop online content. I’m also watching what traditional media outlets are doing around monetizing content. And I’m paying pretty close attention to what’s happening in the music industry and how they’re staying afloat (or trying) because I see a lot of similarities between that industry and ours.

7. Who’s the best in your field? And why?
There are a lot of people I consider the best, but they’re not necessarily all PR pros. For instance, Beth Harte, Danny Brown, Mark Schaefer, Paul Sutton, Valeria Maltoni, Jay Baer, Elizabeth Sosnow, Arik Hanson, and Jeremiah Owyang.

If you have other questions for Gini, please feel free to post them in the comments below (‘Reageer‘) or connect with her via @ginidietrich.

Thanks again Gini!

Jody Koehler 8 maart 2011

More articles like this

‘Je ziet veel revivalmerken alsnog mislukken’ image

‘Je ziet veel revivalmerken alsnog mislukken’

De absolute expert op het gebied van ‘oude merken’ is Richard Otto. De altijd bezige ondernemer, uitgever en organisator schreef meerdere boeken over dit onderwerp waarvan Merkdisruptie 2025 de nieuwste is. Aan Otto dan ook de vraag: hoe kan je nieuw leven inblazen in oude merken?

‘Hoe je oude merken weer tot leven wekt’ image

‘Hoe je oude merken weer tot leven wekt’

Er zijn van die namen die iedereen kent, maar waar toch de glans vanaf is. Denk aan V&D, Diadora of Lotto: ooit een hit in de voetbalkleedkamer, nu verstopt in de kelder van het collectieve geheugen. Maar wie zegt dat zo’n oud merk voorgoed dood is?

‘Mensen hebben wel wat beters te doen dan zich druk maken om jouw merk’ image

‘Mensen hebben wel wat beters te doen dan zich druk maken om jouw merk’

Sinds de uitgave van How Brands Grow ontbreekt Byron Sharp in geen enkele pitch meer. Terwijl merken zichzelf graag zien als lovebrands met een diepe connectie met hun doelgroep, draait het volgens Sharp allemaal om iets anders: mentale én fysieke beschikbaarheid.

See all articles

Where next for your brand?

Get in touch