潜水艇

Paul Graham 2005-04-01

潜水艇

2005年4月

“西装在企业界卷土重来,“《纽约时报》说。为什么这听起来很熟悉?也许是因为西装在2005年2月、2004年9月、2004年6月、2004年3月、2003年9月、2002年11月、2002年4月和2002年2月也都回来了。为什么媒体不断刊登说西装回来的故事?因为公关公司告诉他们这样做。在我短暂的商业生涯中发现的最令人惊讶的事情之一是公关行业的存在,像一艘巨大的、安静的潜水艇一样潜伏在新闻之下。你在传统媒体上读到的非政治、犯罪或灾难的故事中,超过一半可能来自公关公司。

我知道,因为我花了多年时间寻找这样的”媒体曝光”。我们的创业公司把整个营销预算都花在公关上:在那时我们自己组装电脑以省钱,我们却每月给公关公司支付16,000美元。而且他们值得这个价钱。公关是新闻中相当于搜索引擎优化的东西;你不是购买读者会忽略的广告,而是让自己直接被插入到故事中。[1]

我们的公关公司是业内最好的之一。在18个月内,他们在60多家不同的出版物中获得了媒体曝光。而且我们不是他们为之做伟大工作的唯一客户。1997年,我接到另一个创业公司创始人的电话,他考虑雇佣他们来推广他的公司。我告诉他们他们是公关之神,他们离谱的费用每一分钱都值得。但我记得当时觉得他公司的名字很奇怪。为什么把拍卖网站叫”eBay”?

共生

公关不诚实。不完全是。事实上,最好的公关公司如此有效的原因恰恰是它们不诚实。它们给记者真正有价值的信息。好的公关公司不会因为客户告诉他们就去骚扰记者;他们努力在记者中建立信誉,他们不想通过向他们提供纯粹的宣传来破坏它。

如果说有人不诚实,那是记者。公关公司存在的主要原因是记者懒惰。或者,更温和地说,是工作过度。他们真的应该出去为自己挖掘故事。但坐在办公室里让公关公司把故事带给他们是如此诱人。毕竟,他们知道好的公关公司不会对他们撒谎。

好的奉承者不说谎,而是告诉受害者选择性的真相(你的眼睛颜色真好看)。好的公关公司使用相同的策略:他们给记者真实的故事,但真相有利于他们的客户。

例如,我们的公关公司经常推销关于网络如何让小商家与大商家竞争的故事。这是完全真实的。但记者最终写关于这个特定真相而不是其他真相的故事的原因是,小商家是我们的目标市场,而我们正在付钱。

不同出版物对公关公司的依赖程度差异很大。在底层的是行业媒体,他们的大部分收入来自广告,如果广告商允许,他们会免费赠送杂志。[2] 一般的行业出版物是一堆广告,用足够的文章粘合在一起,使其看起来像一本杂志。他们对”内容”如此绝望,以至于如果你费心写新闻稿使其读起来像文章,一些会几乎逐字印刷你的新闻稿。

另一个极端是像《纽约时报》和《华尔街日报》这样的出版物。他们的记者确实出去寻找自己的故事,至少有时候是这样。他们会听公关公司的话,但简短而怀疑。我们设法在几乎每家我们想要的出版物中获得了媒体曝光,但我们从未设法打入《纽约时报》的印刷版。[3]

顶级记者的弱点不是懒惰,而是虚荣。你不向他们推销故事。你必须接近他们,好像你是他们全视显微镜下的标本,并让他们觉得你想要他们运行的故事是他们自己想到的。

我们最大的公关政变是一个两部分的。我们基于一些相当不正式的数学估计,网络上大约有5000家商店。我们让一家报纸印刷这个数字,这似乎足够中立。但一旦这个”事实”在那里印刷出来,我们可以向其他出版物引用它,并声称有1000个用户,我们拥有在线商店市场的20%。

这大致是真实的。我们确实拥有在线商店市场的最大份额,5000是我们对其规模的最好猜测。但故事在媒体中出现的方式听起来要确定得多。

记者喜欢确定的陈述。例如,许多关于Jeremy Jaynes定罪的故事说他是十大垃圾邮件发送者之一。这个”事实”起源于Spamhaus的ROKSO名单,我认为即使是Spamhaus也会承认这是对顶级垃圾邮件发送者的粗略估计。关于Jaynes的早期故事引用了这个来源,但现在它只是被重复,好像它是起诉书的一部分。[4]

关于Jaynes你唯一可以确定的是他是一个相当大的垃圾邮件发送者。但记者不想打印像”相当大”这样模糊的东西。他们想要有冲击力的陈述,比如”前十名”。而公关公司给他们想要的东西。我们被告知,穿西装会使我们的生产力提高3.6%。

传播

公关公司的工作真正变得故意误导的地方是在制造”传播”时。他们通常同时向几家不同的出版物提供相同的故事。当读者在多个地方看到类似的故事时,他们认为有一些重要的趋势正在进行。这正是他们应该想的。

当Windows 95发布时,人们在午夜在商店外排队购买第一批拷贝。如果没有公关公司,他们不会在那里,公关公司在新闻媒体中制造了如此大的传播,以至于它变得自我强化,就像核连锁反应一样。

我怀疑公关公司是否意识到这一点,但网络使得跟踪它们的工作成为可能。如果你搜索明显的短语,你会发现多年来几次尝试放置关于西装回归的故事。例如,2004年9月被《今日美国》转载的路透社文章。“西装回来了,“它开始说。

像这样的趋势文章几乎总是公关公司的工作。一旦你知道如何阅读它们,就很容易找出谁是客户。对于趋势故事,公关公司通常安排一个或多个”专家”来一般性地谈论行业。在这个案例中,我们得到三个:NPD集团,《GQ》的创意总监,和Smith Barney的研究总监。[5] 当你到达专家的末尾时,寻找客户。瞧,就是它:The Men’s Wearhouse。

不奇怪,考虑到The Men’s Wearhouse当时正在运行广告说”西装回来了”。谈到成功的媒体曝光——一篇通讯社文章的第一句话是你自己的广告文案。

从特定推介中找到其他媒体曝光的秘密是意识到它们都从公关公司的同一份文件开始。搜索几个关键短语以及客户和专家的名字,你会发现这个故事的其他变体。

“休闲星期五已经过时,着装规范回来了,“Diane E. Lewis在《波士顿环球报》中写道。一个显著的巧合是,Lewis女士的行业联系人也包括《GQ》的创意总监。

“破洞牛仔裤和T恤已经过时了,“Mary Kathleen Flynn在《美国新闻与世界报道》中写道。她也认识《GQ》的创意总监。

“男士西装回来了,“Nicole Ford在Sexbuzz.Com上写道(“终极男士娱乐杂志”)。

“随着男士在办公室穿西装,休闲着装失去吸引力,“《底特律新闻》的Tenisha Mercer写道。

既然现在这么多新闻文章在线,我怀疑你可以为大多数公关公司放置的趋势故事找到类似的模式。我建议我们称这项新运动为”公关潜水”,我相信那里有比这五个故事群更引人注目的例子。

在线

在追赶了多年之后,现在对我来说,识别媒体曝光的本质已经成了第二天性。但在我们雇佣公关公司之前,我不知道主流媒体的文章来自哪里。我可以说很多都是垃圾,但我不知道为什么。

还记得你在学校做过的批判性阅读练习吗,你必须看一篇写作,退后一步,问作者是否在告诉全部真相?如果你真的想成为一个批判性的读者,事实证明你必须再退后一步,不仅问作者是否在说真话,还要问为什么他首先写这个主题。

在线上,答案往往简单得多。大多数在线发布的人写他们写的东西是因为他们想要写。你不能像在许多印刷出版物中那样在文章上看到公关公司的指纹——这是读者比《商业周刊》更信任博客的原因之一,尽管他们可能没有意识地意识到这一点。

我最近和一个在大报社工作的朋友交谈。他认为印刷媒体有严重麻烦,而且他们大多仍然否认这一点。“他们认为这种下降是周期性的,“他说。“实际上它是结构性的。”

换句话说,读者正在离开,他们不会回来。为什么?我认为主要原因是在线写作更诚实。想象一下,如果你在博客中读到《纽约时报》关于西装的文章,它听起来会多么不协调:“看起来像企业的冲动——光滑、威严、谨慎,但在你剪裁良好的袖子上有一丝傲慢——在商业耻辱的时代是一个意外的发展。“这篇文章的问题不仅仅是它起源于公关公司。整个语调都是虚假的。这是对读者居高临下的写作语调。

无论有什么缺陷,你在网上找到的写作是真实的。它不是由推介信和新闻稿的碎片烹制而成,并压制成活泼的新闻语的神秘肉。它是人们写他们所想的。

直到有了替代品,我才意识到主流媒体的大部分写作是多么人为。我不是说我过去相信在《时代》和《新闻周刊》上读到的东西。至少从高中起,我就认为这样的杂志更多地作为普通人被指导思考的指南,而不是信息来源。但直到近几年我才意识到为出版物写作不意味着那样写作。我没有意识到你可以像写给朋友一样坦率和随意地写作。

注意到这一变化的不仅仅是读者。公关行业也注意到了。美国公关协会网站上的一篇搞笑文章抓住了问题的核心:“博主对成为其他组织和公司的喉舌很敏感,这是他们首先开始写博客的原因。“公关人士害怕博主的原因与读者喜欢他们的原因相同。这意味着未来可能有斗争。随着这种新型写作把读者从传统媒体拉走,我们应该为公关变异成任何补偿形式做好准备。当我想起公关公司多么努力在传统媒体中获得媒体曝光时,我无法想象如果他们能弄明白如何向博主提供故事,他们会不努力去做。

注释

[1] 公关至少有一个有益的特点:它有利于小公司。如果公关不起作用,唯一的替代方案将是广告,只有大公司才能负担得起。

[2] 广告商在免费出版物上为广告支付较少的费用,因为他们假设读者会忽略他们免费得到的东西。这就是为什么这么多行业出版物名义上有封面价格,却如此随意地免费赠送订阅。

[3] 《纽约时报》的不同部分标准差异如此之大,以至于它们实际上是不同的报纸。 whoever向时尚版记者提供这个西装回来的故事的人,会被常规新闻记者打发走。

[4] 我知道的这种类型的最引人注目的例子是1988年互联网蠕虫感染6000台计算机的”事实”。当时我在那里,这是配方:有人猜测互联网上连接了大约60,000台计算机,蠕虫可能感染了其中的10%。

实际上没有人知道蠕虫感染了多少台计算机,因为补救措施是重新启动它们,这销毁了所有痕迹。但人们喜欢数字。所以这个现在在整个互联网上复制,像自己的小蠕虫。

[5] 不一定都是由公关公司提供的。记者有时会自己打电话给几个额外的来源,就像有人给一罐汤添加一些新鲜蔬菜。

感谢Ingrid Basset、Trevor Blackwell、Sarah Harlin、Jessica Livingston、Jackie McDonough、Robert Morris和Aaron Swartz(他也发现了PRSA文章)阅读本文的草稿。

更正:早期版本使用了一篇最近的《商业周刊》文章,提到del.icio.us作为媒体曝光的例子,但Joshua Schachter告诉我这是自发的。


网络是写作环境

出卖者的故事

如何向博主推销

为牛奶写博客

高效博客公关的7个习惯

公关人员需要学会应对新的守门人

Marqui博客圈计划

公关观察

真正的男人去角质

新闻是如何制作的

2006年1月:西装又回来了

领带的衰落

日语翻译

如果你喜欢这个,你可能也喜欢《黑客与画家》。

The Submarine

April 2005

“Suits make a corporate comeback,” says the New York Times. Why does this sound familiar? Maybe because the suit was also back in February, September 2004, June 2004, March 2004, September 2003, November 2002, April 2002, and February 2002. Why do the media keep running stories saying suits are back? Because PR firms tell them to. One of the most surprising things I discovered during my brief business career was the existence of the PR industry, lurking like a huge, quiet submarine beneath the news. Of the stories you read in traditional media that aren’t about politics, crimes, or disasters, more than half probably come from PR firms.

I know because I spent years hunting such “press hits.” Our startup spent its entire marketing budget on PR: at a time when we were assembling our own computers to save money, we were paying a PR firm $16,000 a month. And they were worth it. PR is the news equivalent of search engine optimization; instead of buying ads, which readers ignore, you get yourself inserted directly into the stories. [1]

Our PR firm was one of the best in the business. In 18 months, they got press hits in over 60 different publications. And we weren’t the only ones they did great things for. In 1997 I got a call from another startup founder considering hiring them to promote his company. I told him they were PR gods, worth every penny of their outrageous fees. But I remember thinking his company’s name was odd. Why call an auction site “eBay”?

Symbiosis

PR is not dishonest. Not quite. In fact, the reason the best PR firms are so effective is precisely that they aren’t dishonest. They give reporters genuinely valuable information. A good PR firm won’t bug reporters just because the client tells them to; they’ve worked hard to build their credibility with reporters, and they don’t want to destroy it by feeding them mere propaganda.

If anyone is dishonest, it’s the reporters. The main reason PR firms exist is that reporters are lazy. Or, to put it more nicely, overworked. Really they ought to be out there digging up stories for themselves. But it’s so tempting to sit in their offices and let PR firms bring the stories to them. After all, they know good PR firms won’t lie to them.

A good flatterer doesn’t lie, but tells his victim selective truths (what a nice color your eyes are). Good PR firms use the same strategy: they give reporters stories that are true, but whose truth favors their clients.

For example, our PR firm often pitched stories about how the Web let small merchants compete with big ones. This was perfectly true. But the reason reporters ended up writing stories about this particular truth, rather than some other one, was that small merchants were our target market, and we were paying the piper.

Different publications vary greatly in their reliance on PR firms. At the bottom of the heap are the trade press, who make most of their money from advertising and would give the magazines away for free if advertisers would let them. [2] The average trade publication is a bunch of ads, glued together by just enough articles to make it look like a magazine. They’re so desperate for “content” that some will print your press releases almost verbatim, if you take the trouble to write them to read like articles.

At the other extreme are publications like the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. Their reporters do go out and find their own stories, at least some of the time. They’ll listen to PR firms, but briefly and skeptically. We managed to get press hits in almost every publication we wanted, but we never managed to crack the print edition of the Times. [3]

The weak point of the top reporters is not laziness, but vanity. You don’t pitch stories to them. You have to approach them as if you were a specimen under their all-seeing microscope, and make it seem as if the story you want them to run is something they thought of themselves.

Our greatest PR coup was a two-part one. We estimated, based on some fairly informal math, that there were about 5000 stores on the Web. We got one paper to print this number, which seemed neutral enough. But once this “fact” was out there in print, we could quote it to other publications, and claim that with 1000 users we had 20% of the online store market.

This was roughly true. We really did have the biggest share of the online store market, and 5000 was our best guess at its size. But the way the story appeared in the press sounded a lot more definite.

Reporters like definitive statements. For example, many of the stories about Jeremy Jaynes’s conviction say that he was one of the 10 worst spammers. This “fact” originated in Spamhaus’s ROKSO list, which I think even Spamhaus would admit is a rough guess at the top spammers. The first stories about Jaynes cited this source, but now it’s simply repeated as if it were part of the indictment. [4]

All you can say with certainty about Jaynes is that he was a fairly big spammer. But reporters don’t want to print vague stuff like “fairly big.” They want statements with punch, like “top ten.” And PR firms give them what they want. Wearing suits, we’re told, will make us 3.6 percent more productive.

Buzz

Where the work of PR firms really does get deliberately misleading is in the generation of “buzz.” They usually feed the same story to several different publications at once. And when readers see similar stories in multiple places, they think there is some important trend afoot. Which is exactly what they’re supposed to think.

When Windows 95 was launched, people waited outside stores at midnight to buy the first copies. None of them would have been there without PR firms, who generated such a buzz in the news media that it became self-reinforcing, like a nuclear chain reaction.

I doubt PR firms realize it yet, but the Web makes it possible to track them at work. If you search for the obvious phrases, you turn up several efforts over the years to place stories about the return of the suit. For example, the Reuters article that got picked up by USA Today in September 2004. “The suit is back,” it begins.

Trend articles like this are almost always the work of PR firms. Once you know how to read them, it’s straightforward to figure out who the client is. With trend stories, PR firms usually line up one or more “experts” to talk about the industry generally. In this case we get three: the NPD Group, the creative director of GQ, and a research director at Smith Barney. [5] When you get to the end of the experts, look for the client. And bingo, there it is: The Men’s Wearhouse.

Not surprising, considering The Men’s Wearhouse was at that moment running ads saying “The Suit is Back.” Talk about a successful press hit— a wire service article whose first sentence is your own ad copy.

The secret to finding other press hits from a given pitch is to realize that they all started from the same document back at the PR firm. Search for a few key phrases and the names of the clients and the experts, and you’ll turn up other variants of this story.

“Casual fridays are out and dress codes are in” writes Diane E. Lewis in The Boston Globe. In a remarkable coincidence, Ms. Lewis’s industry contacts also include the creative director of GQ.

“Ripped jeans and T-shirts are out,” writes Mary Kathleen Flynn in US News & World Report. And she too knows the creative director of GQ.

“Men’s suits are back” writes Nicole Ford in Sexbuzz.Com (“the ultimate men’s entertainment magazine”).

“Dressing down loses appeal as men suit up at the office” writes Tenisha Mercer of The Detroit News.

Now that so many news articles are online, I suspect you could find a similar pattern for most trend stories placed by PR firms. I propose we call this new sport “PR diving,” and I’m sure there are far more striking examples out there than this clump of five stories.

Online

After spending years chasing them, it’s now second nature to me to recognize press hits for what they are. But before we hired a PR firm I had no idea where articles in the mainstream media came from. I could tell a lot of them were crap, but I didn’t realize why.

Remember the exercises in critical reading you did in school, where you had to look at a piece of writing and step back and ask whether the author was telling the whole truth? If you really want to be a critical reader, it turns out you have to step back one step further, and ask not just whether the author is telling the truth, but why he’s writing about this subject at all.

Online, the answer tends to be a lot simpler. Most people who publish online write what they write for the simple reason that they want to. You can’t see the fingerprints of PR firms all over the articles, as you can in so many print publications— which is one of the reasons, though they may not consciously realize it, that readers trust bloggers more than Business Week.

I was talking recently to a friend who works for a big newspaper. He thought the print media were in serious trouble, and that they were still mostly in denial about it. “They think the decline is cyclic,” he said. “Actually it’s structural.”

In other words, the readers are leaving, and they’re not coming back. Why? I think the main reason is that the writing online is more honest. Imagine how incongruous the New York Times article about suits would sound if you read it in a blog: “The urge to look corporate— sleek, commanding, prudent, yet with just a touch of hubris on your well-cut sleeve— is an unexpected development in a time of business disgrace.” The problem with this article is not just that it originated in a PR firm. The whole tone is bogus. This is the tone of someone writing down to their audience.

Whatever its flaws, the writing you find online is authentic. It’s not mystery meat cooked up out of scraps of pitch letters and press releases, and pressed into molds of zippy journalese. It’s people writing what they think.

I didn’t realize, till there was an alternative, just how artificial most of the writing in the mainstream media was. I’m not saying I used to believe what I read in Time and Newsweek. Since high school, at least, I’ve thought of magazines like that more as guides to what ordinary people were being told to think than as sources of information. But I didn’t realize till the last few years that writing for publication didn’t have to mean writing that way. I didn’t realize you could write as candidly and informally as you would if you were writing to a friend.

Readers aren’t the only ones who’ve noticed the change. The PR industry has too. A hilarious article on the site of the PR Society of America gets to the heart of the matter: “Bloggers are sensitive about becoming mouthpieces for other organizations and companies, which is the reason they began blogging in the first place.” PR people fear bloggers for the same reason readers like them. And that means there may be a struggle ahead. As this new kind of writing draws readers away from traditional media, we should be prepared for whatever PR mutates into to compensate. When I think how hard PR firms work to score press hits in the traditional media, I can’t imagine they’ll work any less hard to feed stories to bloggers, if they can figure out how.

Notes

[1] PR has at least one beneficial feature: it favors small companies. If PR didn’t work, the only alternative would be to advertise, and only big companies can afford that.

[2] Advertisers pay less for ads in free publications, because they assume readers ignore something they get for free. This is why so many trade publications nominally have a cover price and yet give away free subscriptions with such abandon.

[3] Different sections of the Times vary so much in their standards that they’re practically different papers. Whoever fed the style section reporter this story about suits coming back would have been sent packing by the regular news reporters.

[4] The most striking example I know of this type is the “fact” that the Internet worm of 1988 infected 6000 computers. I was there when it was cooked up, and this was the recipe: someone guessed that there were about 60,000 computers attached to the Internet, and that the worm might have infected ten percent of them.

Actually no one knows how many computers the worm infected, because the remedy was to reboot them, and this destroyed all traces. But people like numbers. And so this one is now replicated all over the Internet, like a little worm of its own.

[5] Not all were necessarily supplied by the PR firm. Reporters sometimes call a few additional sources on their own, like someone adding a few fresh vegetables to a can of soup.

Thanks to Ingrid Basset, Trevor Blackwell, Sarah Harlin, Jessica Livingston, Jackie McDonough, Robert Morris, and Aaron Swartz (who also found the PRSA article) for reading drafts of this.

Correction: Earlier versions used a recent Business Week article mentioning del.icio.us as an example of a press hit, but Joshua Schachter tells me it was spontaneous.


The Web is a Writing Environment

A Sell-Out’s Tale

How to Pitch Bloggers

Blogging for Milk

7 Habits of Highly Effective Blog PR

PR People Need To Learn To Deal With New Gatekeepers

Marqui Blogosphere Program

PR Watch

Real Men Exfoliate

How the News is Made

January 2006: The suit is back yet again

The Decline of the Tie

Japanese Translation

If you liked this, you may also like Hackers & Painters.