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Online Public Relations: A Handbook for Practitioners
 
 
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Online Public Relations: A Handbook for Practitioners [Hardcover]

James L. Horton (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 30, 2001

Carefully designed by an experienced PR professional, here is a reference-guide-handbook you can pick up and use immediately to serve your clients better, faster, and less expensively. Horton gives you short, easy-to-find, action-oriented explanations, dictionary-style, backed up by plenty of references to lead you to additional necessary information elsewhere. You'll also get an entire chapter devoted to hundreds of online sites ranked by their work value to you day-by-day--getting a fast take on exactly the information you need, when and how you need it. Each entry defines a topic; explains how it fits into public relations practice and why you should know it; discusses who uses it; suggests why it should be used to communicate more effectively and how to use it tactically. Horton's summaries of information from dozens of sources is clear and logical.

Throughout his book, Horton strives to use simple language and to avoid burying practitioners in geek speak. He makes you aware of the opportunities and dangers of online in a way that balances the practical aspects of using and not using online resources daily work. An experienced navigator himself of the online world and the creator and webmaster of a website used widely by other PR practitioners, Horton brings to the book an understanding of the needs of others who want to get started and become proficient in online PR right away, without having to climb a long, high learning curve. The way the book is organized, and the things Horton has selected and how he presents them, accomplishes just that. The result is an easily accessed, quickly usable reference to the dynamics of Internet and Web usages, experienced and inexperienced PR professionals alike, and for their colleagues teaching or learning the profession in colleges and universities worldwide.


Editorial Reviews

Review

?Carefully designed by an experienced PR professional, this handbook provides a practical guide to the role of the Internet in public relations.?-Business Horizons

Book Description

A desk-top reference that explains the language and techniques of doing public relations online.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 328 pages
  • Publisher: Praeger (August 30, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1567204066
  • ISBN-13: 978-1567204063
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.3 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,900,644 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Filling a gap on the PR bookshelf, October 9, 2001
By 
Peter Shinbach (Birmingham, MI USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Online Public Relations: A Handbook for Practitioners (Hardcover)
Public relations is one of those businesses that's been slow to grasp the implications of the Internet on its practice. Whereas it has traditionally been rooted in publicity, today's PR people are finding themselves confronted with Listserves, blogs, chat rooms and other online communications that don't fit neatly into their world of news media relations. "Online Public Relations" should help them adjust to their changing world.

The book is divided into three parts: a brief overview of the implications of the 'Net on PR; an annotated, expanded glossary of Internet terms; and an amazing section of websites, broken down by industry, which PR people should know of. Only the first section should be read and it should be read carefully. The other two are mini-reference books and should be treated as such.

Horton makes the case for expanding PR's horizons in the first section. His arguments aren't new: others such as Holtz, Middleberg, Tapscott, Taylor/Wacker and Godin have been making them for years. What makes Horton's version compelling is that they aren't veiled in the corporate-speak of "strategic planning," "interactive, one-to-one marketing," two-way communications modeling" or other catchy phrases best left to the trend seekers reading Fast Company, FSB and other New Age business periodicals. It's also useful to keep in mind what Horton's perspective is. He's not a consultant, professional speaker or full-time author. He's a New York City public relations agency executive. In other words, his mouth's where his money is.

The second section is a long list of terms associated with the Internet. It's best glossed over. PR people will find it useful when someone - probably some 20-something up & comer - uses some techno-speak that needs defining. Horton does that but in English and within the context of the public relations business. Most of his stuff is dead on. Some of it isn't. He has six pages on web page design - a subject that's covered by volumes of books and hundreds of college courses. But he has nothing on international online public relations. Perhaps this is a topic best left to another book but it's one he alludes to several times throughout this one.

However, it's the third section that should be most valuable for PR people. Listing hundreds of websites, it includes media sites with industry sites. This supports Horton's argument that the Internet's used for information differently than traditional media are. For the PR manager reviewing this section, it will come as a mild surprise that there's more to online public relations than old-fashioned news media relations.

All of this isn't to say that "Online Public Relations" is the "be all - end all" of online PR books. It isn't. It seeks to cover a constantly changing situation and, as a printed document, simply can't. Its medium won't let it. The directory of industry websites was outdated before the book was published and can't be updated. The second section has no mention of new online things such as blogs which are becoming more and more popular among journalists, opinion makers and anyone who has an opinion and doesn't mind sharing it. This is a book that needs a website if only for a way to keep it updated as the Internet continues to mutate.

But, despite this somewhat minor flaw, "Online Public Relations" fills a gap on the PR bookshelf. It's the first attempt to put some perspective on the Internet's tools for the public relations industry and, in that, it succeeds. But any PR person buying this book should treat that purchase as an investment. Rather than just buying the book and putting it up on the shelf next to Strunk & White and the AP Stylebook, PR people should use the book as a foundation and build on it. Those second and third sections of the book are going to get more and more outdated as time goes on. But "Online Public Relations" is a good start and the first attempt by an author to help frame the Internet in terms of the day-to-day work PR people do. For that reason, it belongs alongside the PR office's style books, media directories and clip files.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Public speaker job search, April 19, 2009
By 
This review is from: Online Public Relations: A Handbook for Practitioners (Hardcover)
This book was very useful for individuals seeking a job in public relations. The author was very informative as he explained the subject matter. Another excellent resource for finding PR jobs is http://www.PRCrossing.com. I like using http://www.PRCrossing.com to look for jobs because it has jobs only from employer websites and far more jobs than you will find on other job boards. I found a PR job within days using this website. It has all the information that one needs to gain a position in the public relations industry. This is the best PR website on the web!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Probably one of the best, April 9, 2009
This review is from: Online Public Relations: A Handbook for Practitioners (Hardcover)
Horton does an excellent job of going over various ways to go about online job hunting. In today's economy, this is an extremely valuable skill, one that is much harder to hone than that of simply going into a store or office for an interview. Since reading this, I've taken a job in P.R. with a Fortune 500 company and it was rather easy to find. While the book helped quite a bit, I used what I had learned from it to collaborate and come up with my own search methods. I found that the heavily advertised websites lack a lot of the personal job ads that employers like to put out. I came across www.prcrossing.com and came up with a lot of great job opportunities straight from employers websites. They only take them from employers websites and have a TON of jobs. Like over a million easy and growing every day. I tried monster, but didn't particularly enjoy it because it was a little difficult to navigate. If you're serious about starting a decent p.r. career, it's a great place to go.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
republished content, digital press kits, trade show calendar, online public relations, news distribution services, using online media, print strategy, industry calendar, public relations practitioners, news aggregated, covered online, media audit, online strategy, selected editorial, phrase searching
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Daily Archive Publication, Medium Resources, United States, America Online, New York, Adobe Acrobat, Wall Street, World Wide Web, Rich Text File, United Kingdom, Food Service, Daily Publication, File Transfer Protocol, Glass Magazine, Information Week, National Geographic, Dow Jones, Martha Stewart, Penton Publishing
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