REGISTER NOW: Uncomfortable Conversations: The Skills Crisis
REGISTER: 8THIRTYFOUR Skills Survival School Founding Cohort

Integrated: The New (-ish) Communication Model

Written by

Share This Post:

Everyone always asks us, what is integrated communications? What do you mean 834 is an “integrated communication firm”?
Here is the deal. A long time ago, in a universe far, far away…someone decided that communications would be separated out into 4 major disciplines: Design, Public Relations, Advertising and Marketing. Fast forward to 2015 and you now have another discipline…Digital.
Now, stay with us…let’s say you are a small to mid-sized business and you realize that you need to communicate with your clients/customers, partners, investors, community etc. to grow your sales, reputation and talent. How do you decide whom to hire to assist in these efforts? You don’t have an in-house communications person, or you do but they can’t handle the range of work needed…so what do you do? Do you hire a designer to rework your brand, image and collateral? Who will write the messaging and determine usability? Do you hire a public relations firm to promote your growth? Great ideas! But once you get people to your website, which hasn’t been updated in 4 years…how do you keep them there? Why not launch a talent recruitment campaign? A marketing agency would be great for that, but what about the digital aspect? The majority of the world is on social media networks and using tools you have never heard about…will the marketing agency be in the know on all of this?
Do you see the dilemma?
An integrated communications approach takes all disciplines – creative, digital, public relations, advertising, marketing and meshes them all together to deliver your desired results. Everything works together to form a cohesive strategy that outlines goals, measurement and ultimate results for you, the business owner.
We don’t know who had the idea to segment the disciplines but we would like to have a convo with them (in a dark alley without witnesses). The fact is, communication is complex and you have to take all strategies, tools and tactics into consideration before implementing…and you need to get the most bang for your buck. None of this one-off idea bullshit that is so damn popular these days. It’s not good enough to have a good, or even an amazing idea – you need the backing of research for a successful strategy and the benefit of multiple tools in your toolbox to pull off an authentic campaign.
Something else to keep in mind…not all agencies/firms will implement a strategy for you. So after you pay for the strategy, you then have to turn around and pay for the implementation of said strategy or go it on your own with your existing staff. So if you don’t have the staff to implement, then that strat you just paid for is well, useless.
All disciplines support each other. For example, you launch a recruitment campaign:

  1. Design/Creative: Develop collateral for social, website, print and advertising. Coordinate efforts with all disciplines
  2. Advertising: Review audiences, determine media buys – segmented by target audiences.
  3. Marketing: Outline strategy to get the message out, plan special events throughout target area, work with creative and PR to outline messaging.
  4. Public relations: Develop a press release on campaign, recruting events, company growth. Plan out storylines throughout the length of the campaign.
  5. Social: Work with PR to outline messaging for all networks, work with creative to develop images and infographics to be shared.
  6. Digital: Set up online ads, create a landing page specific to recruitment that all advertising and campaign efforts will direct to.
  7. Implement and measure

It is obviously a bit more complicated than the above example, but you get the idea.
What do you think will provide your business with the best return? Is it time to re-evaluate your strategy?

Responses

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

Recent Posts

Something on Your Mind?

The way you show up at work shapes how people remember you.

Last month, alyshiahull joined bodespeaks on Happy Hour Hustle to talk about what workplace authenticity really means. Alyshia is a New York-based freelance journalist who writes for Business Insider, Fast Company, USA Today, Inc., and Entrepreneur. If you are ready to bring your authentic self to work, episode #134 is for you. 

Listen to Happy Hour Hustle on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and Youtube. Link in bio.
The power of the Women's Entrepreneurial Fellowship, in a graduate's own words:

"Growth is never accidental, it comes from being willing to learn, adapt, and embrace change. After nine months of dedication, reflection, and business development, I proudly graduated from the Women's Entrepreneurial Fellowship (WEF) during the Small Business Association of Michigan Annual Meeting.

Throughout the program, I challenged myself to evaluate every aspect of my business, celebrating what was working while identifying opportunities for growth and improvement. The journey was made even more meaningful through the support of an incredible cohort of women entrepreneurs, the guidance of mentor Gina Jacquart Thorsen, and the leadership of bodespeaks and her team.

A sincere thank you to smallbusinessassocofmichigan for investing in second-stage women business owners and creating opportunities that empower entrepreneurs to build stronger, more sustainable businesses."

— Mary A. Barton, President and CEO of Equitable Accounting Solutions and proud WEF graduate.

Applications for the next cohort are now open. Link in comments.
"Out of failure comes growth – you have to see it as an opportunity." 

bodespeaks joined cuzzinjustin on the strictlyfromnowhere Podcast for an honest conversation about entrepreneurship, embracing your superpowers, and building a personal brand that's actually yours, the wins, the setbacks, and everything in between. And naturally, dropped an f-bomb or two along the way. You don't want to miss it.

Full episode in the comments 👇
AI doesn't treat every source equally; it trusts what's credible, cited, and current, like news coverage.

Showing up in the right places isn't just good PR. It's how the robots (and the humans) get you right.

Read the full blog at the link in bio.
"If you don't get up and grind every day, the needle isn't gonna move."

We sat down with brandonmccraney, founder and Master Blender behind olderaleighdistillery in Zebulon, North Carolina. Brandon spent fifteen years just thinking about whiskey before he finally opened his doors, and even then it took four more years, a dozen rejections, construction delays, and a global pandemic to get there. Two years later, Olde Raleigh had already won Best Micro Distillery in the US.

Check out the latest episode of Happy Hour Hustle, where Brandon shares what it actually took to grow a business through COVID, the military discipline that kept him going when everything else said quit, and how working with people turned out to be the hardest part of the job.

Listen to Happy Hour Hustle on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and watch the whole episode on Youtube. Link in bio.
It's 9 months that is impossible to sum up in a video - but here's just a taste. 

This Women's Entrepreneurial Fellowship is resources, mentorship, and connections that you can't build anywhere else. We're so exicted for what the next cohort will bring.

Apply now at the link in bio.
smallbusinessassocofmichigan