the future for grads in PR: an interview with Tony Byng, Leeds University Business School

business cardIt is coming up to that time again.  Dissertations are in, final exams are looming and the prospect of leaving the fun university life that has been a reality for the past few years is becoming more and more real.

But, given the current financial climate™ what are the prospects for today’s graduates?

Rather than come up with a flimsy list of tips (that is the next post) I thought I’d speak to an expert.  Tony Byng used to work with me at The Weber Group before pursuing a career as a lecturer.  He is currently the programme Director for Leeds University Business School’s MA in corporate communications and PR. I asked him what he thought of the industry today and how tough it was for Grads:

… from what I gather, the market is still relatively open for those students who are prepared to ‘put themselves about’ or who have garnered some real experience during their summer vacations. Having said that, we have seen an increase in applications for our marketing-related Masters programmes of between 20-40%… suggesting many are hoping to ride out the economic storm by spending another year in education – if they can afford it!

We have a large Careers Service at Leeds and the University has a very good track record of graduate employment. While the ‘Milk Run’ is rather a sparse affair these days, Leeds is still targeted by many corporate employers – partly due to the quality of its education, but also down to the quality and background of the students we accept.

The issue with PR specifically, is that both agencies and in-house departments appear to be pretty poor at graduate recruitment. I have rarely come across agencies who start a recruitment drive in, say, November… interview in the spring with a view to employing in August/September. Most of them don’t seem to be able to plan that far ahead! And, it’s not just PR – most marketing agencies are the same, apart from the some of the larger ones. Of course, a lack of experience tends to shut the door pretty quickly as well.

I asked Tony what his advice is for this year’s graduates:

So, my advice to students considering a move in to PR is, perhaps, a little old-fashioned. I tell them to surf the web, read Guardian Media and PR Week, talk to anyone with even the slightest association with PR and encourage them to identify agencies they would like to work for (based on awards, client list, positioning, etc.) and then get on the phone… looking to find out who’s hiring, when they may be hiring and generally selling themselves and trying to get a network going. I even encourage them to ask for internships – even a day shadowing an account team. It’s difficult to say no to someone who appears keen and bright when they offer themselves for free! If they think this sounds too much like hard work, then they’re probably not cut out for the industry anyway!

How does the Uni help PR grads find work?

In terms of the University, I recommend that students look to the careers service for advice on preparing CVs, interview skills and using resources for researching target agencies. I also advise students to look at their whole CV and find something that differentiates them – not a just a rounded CV balancing work and play but something genuinely interesting to talk about. It is difficult for the education sector to do too much more when the industry appears to be less than organised. I would be delighted if you proved me wrong on this last point 😉

To help prove Tony wrong, I will be speaking to PR students at Leeds over the coming few months and we’re also reviewing  how we promote the graduate scheme at Ruder Finn.

Corss posted at Ruder Finn’s blog

remarkable companies – who makes your list?

Seth Godin is inviting people to contribute 200 words about a company they see as being remarkable for the updated version of Purple Cow. You can’t work for or with any company you put forward and entries need to be in by midnight EST on 24th may so you haven’t got long now!

I just had a go.

My purple cow is Howies, you might know it.  Whether it gets in or not, I think they are a remarkable bunch.

http://www.howies.co.uk/

Howies clothing is a truly remarkable organisation.  It makes and sells clothes.  But it provides brainfood.

Howies partners with charities, views its business through truly sustainable eyes and makes the most beautiful brochures I have ever seen.  The reason it can do this is because it understands its customers. It also understands they care about the future of surfing, the battle for clean beaches, the world’s coolest skate parks, sustainable organisations, ethical supply chains….you get the picture.

Howies is one of the few organisations that manages to completely personalise its company by making every employee “the brand”.  So they photograph the stories for the catalogue.  They write the blog.  They hold charity debates in their local stores.  Howies features its product by showcasing it in a world its customers care about.  But it does this from the roots of the company, not just out of the marketing department. And although it shouldn’t be, that is still pretty remarkable.

Which company is remarkable enough to make it onto your list?

junior PRs: why it is time to speak up

No matter how much work you do behind the scenes, as a junior PR consultant, a client will never know who you are or why they are paying for your time unless you take an active role in meetings. Getting started with this can be tough for many people, especially when there is a large team of more senior folks in the room.

Here are my tips:

  1. Agree a role with your manager before you go in
  2. Own a bit of the agenda to run through / update on
  3. Keep something special to tell the client – a hit you got, an opportunity you secured or a new industry thing they might be interested in
  4. Ask questions….think of something before you go in
  5. Check their news daily – you won’t learn and feel confident offering an opinion if you don’t read
  6. Look at the headlines before every meeting – any customer or competitor been written about that day?
  7. Check the stock price, it’ll help you know what their focus is before the meeting
  8. Introduce yourself and explain your role on the account
  9. Listen in to as many calls as you can – good way of learning before you speak
  10. Listen in to media briefings – helps you know the ropes before you host them yourself
  11. Remember the client is paying for your time, always think about demonstrating value to them by making a contribution

Anything I missed?

This is cross posted with my employer’s blog