COMM 4310: Term Project Guide: Planning a Public Relations Campaign
Imagine you are public relations consultants to a public, private, or not-for-profit organization.
As teams of four, you plan (conceive, research, and develop) and present (try to sell) a realistic
meaningful campaign proposal to the highest authority (authorities) of the organization.
Your project should seek an improvement that is of genuine value to the stakeholders of the
organization. It should be significant and not trivial or disruptive. Ideally, I would like to see
that you address a real problem and try to sell the client organization on your plan.
In developing your project, you will follow the Smith Model of Strategic PR Planning (also referenced in the course schedule) or another model if you find that much more
compelling. You will complete the project in phases throughout the quarter. The timeline
for submission and suggested format for the project are given here below.
Timeline
1. Statement of Intent (proposal, one page, due Week 5) explaining
a. What you plan to accomplish in the project.
b. Why you think it is important
c. How do you plan to go about doing research and completing the project?
2. Interim reports due for periodic review in class (see the course schedule).
3. Final report (paper and presentation due Week 15):
Suggested Format
a. Topic (A specific thematic title)
b. Abstract (150 words)
c. Introduction (1-2 pages)
i. Get attention
ii. Briefly introduce what the project is all about.
iii. Briefly explain why it is significant.
iv. Briefly establish ethos (how did you go about doing the project,
suggesting why people should trust you)
v. Preview the structure of the project
d. Theoretical Model (1-2 pages)
i. Describe the planning model you have followed and why (Say why you
found it useful).
e. The Campaign Plan (the body of your report; 15-25 pages)
i. Present your plan by systematically following the model you have chosen.
If you follow the Smith model, which I recommend, you can methodically
craft the plan by answering the questions outlined here for every step of
the model.
ii. Examples of two student projects based on the Smith model and graded by
http://www.ron-smith.com/#!strategic-planning-for-public-relations/l4229
http://www.nku.edu/~turney/prclass/readings/process_acronyms.html
http://faculty.buffalostate.edu/smithrd/PR/steps.htm
http://faculty.buffalostate.edu/smithrd/PR/steps.htm
http://faculty.buffalostate.edu/smithrd/PR/steps.htm
Smith himself: Denny's Restaurant: Image-Boosting Campaign and
National Endowment for the Arts: Visibility and Support. If you read
closely, you can spot flaws in these reports. I trust your project reports
will be better than these ones.
f. Reflection (about 2 pages)
i. Comment on what you, personally (everyone individually), have
learned from your research in planning for the project and what this
project has taught you about yourself as a budding public relations
professional.
ii. Specify also the lessons for other learners in the field.
iii. Relate your learnings to the learning outcomes of the course.