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In this Issue

A Profession but Less Professionalized

Is the Brand Still King in the Middle East?

Communicating Through the Chaos

A Passion for the Arts

Starbucks Built on Greek Pillars

Pan-Asian Pointers

Just Connect The Dots

Crisis Planning in the Digital Age

CIVITAS Global – Story of a Cross-Border Merger

Multinational Vs. Agency Network

The Boat on the Nile

Death By Execution

A Dashboard To Help With Steering

A Sustained Focus on Sustainability

Managing The Opinion Factor

A Network of Insiders

The Swing from Advertising to PR

Czechs in the Fast Lane

Bridging the Divide in the Age of Access

A Very Un-British Election

Sweden’s Local Politicians Gain Public Respect

Pipes that Carry Messages

Pink Ribbon Casts a Big Shadow

Perceptions of PR in Bulgaria

Tech That’s Not 'Techie'

The Nordic Challenge

Celtic Tiger Roars

Championing Free Speech for the Good of Communities

The Eleven Commandments of PR

Internal Communications on Demand

Optimists Have a Better Story to Tell

Taking Care of a Food Safety Scare

Context is Everything

Rethinking Public Relations

Who Really Needs a Code of Ethics?

Truth About Smoking

Being prepared: Alaska Airlines 261

My Word is my Bond

Clear and Creative Communications Carry Companies Clear of Crisis

Gold Mining at Golden World Awards

A Rallying Cry for Disarmament

India’s Online Explosion

Cold Times for America’s Ethnic Media

Bridging the ‘Health Wealth’ Divide

Vibrant Rioja Targets New Audience

The Cost of the Cure

One Click Away from Damage or Success

Content and the Opportunity for PR

Making Sense of International PR

It’s Still Location, Location, Location – Only More So

The Elasticity of English

New Age Crisis Communications

Let’s End The Spin Cycle

Africa’s PR Makeover

Choosing and Using PR Agencies

Fairtrade Fortnight Whets Consumer Appetite for Ethical Trade

Trends in Public Relations in Central America

From Tip to Base of the Consulting Pyramid

Redundant But Too Good For The Scrapheap

Research That Grabs Headlines

European Auto Makers Turn to Public Affairs Teamwork

Evolutionary France

Measuring Sponsorships and Events

Pull Down the Ivory Towers

Fuelling Gazprom’s Warmer Image

The Rise of Reputation in Brazil

Swift Progress Across Eurasia and Eastern Europe

Personal Branding is a Passport to Success

PR Puts University Research on the Map

Reality Distorted by Photoshop and Bias

Water Divides The World

Rebuilding the License to Operate

The Kaleidoscope of Asia

Is Honesty an Absolute PR Value?

A New Paradigm for Crisis Communication

Special Relationship or Special Misunderstanding?

Rucks and Trucks

The True Scale of PR in Russia

Africa’s Plurality Presents Public Affairs Challenges

France’s Environmental Convention Brings Focus to Debate

Financial PR in Times of Crisis

Putting Creative Businesses on the International Map

A Seat at the Boardroom Table

The End of Informed Choice?

Reaching out to Gay Consumers

Surviving the Market Downturn

New Game, New Roles – and Now it’s Personal

The Importance of Style

Autonomy without Anarchy

Taming the Knee-Jerk

Kitchen Stages Digital Delicacies

Changing Client Demand in Germany

Uniting PR, Lobbying and the Web

President’s Perspective – PR in Interesting Times

President’s Letter

President’s Perspective – Global Reach, Regional Leadership

Letter from the President

My Year of Promoting Positive PR

Wooing Visitors to Wellington

A Clearer Grasp of Corporate Reputation

Lessons from the Chinese Blogosphere

Women In Charge on Health

President’s Perspective

The Value of Ideas

Insights Into Corporate China

Golden Rules of Global Media Relations

Shining a Light on Sight

Public Diplomacy Needs to Get Its Groove Back

IC Fails The Test

Voice Of The World

Artistry and Editorial

Creative Sparkle

Your Inner Brand

Massaging Messages Into Great Shape

The Leader as Hero

Gaining Respect Through Corporate Diplomacy

President’s Update

Our Common Bond

President’s Update

Competing with Everyone from Everywhere

Thanks for the Most Amazing Year!

Active and Honest Engagement Achieves e-Influence

Naked Truth About Animal Rights

Oxytrol Earns Golden Ruler

Israel’s Vibrant Life Sciences Sector

Get Paid to Save the World

Dealing with an ‘Alien’ Invader

Fighting Firebombs with Reason

Interaction at the Summit

Sorting Out the Best From the Rest

GM Accelerates Towards its Second Century

The Political Union of Arcelor Mittal

Hands On Volunteers

No Room for Negativity in the Boardroom

Tech Savvy Sweden’s Consumer High

The Time to Act is Always Now

Personal Touch Still Key in a Crisis

Working Through It

Trends in Public Affairs

Crisis Make or Break – The First 24 Hours

Emerging with Credibility Intact

Online Takes The Lion’s Share

Concerted Communications

Where The Truth Lies

Overcoming Inefficiency

Love without Borders

How to Sell Up Successfully

Trends For And From Results

Growing your Business Internationally

Developments in our Digital World

The 10 Most Common Business Mistakes

Highs and Lows at Heathrow
Terminal 5

What Makes an Agency a Premium Buy?

Rethinking Business for the New Decade

Online Newsroom Tips

Berlin’s Political Renaissance

Effective CSR in Developing Markets

Quo Vadis Turkish PR?

The Self-Correction Model in Public Relations

Poland’s Public Sector Turns to Public Relations

The ‘So-What’ of PR Measurement

CSR is Child's Play in Korea

Fresh Air, Dog Walks and Pub Lunches

Visible and Positive Despite Diminished Resources

Keeping Multinational Companies Relevant in China

The PR Value Argument

Money or Morality?

How Good PR Can Drive Sales

Pirelli's PR Power and Control

Newborn Baby Screening

LatAm’s New Media Reality

Harnessing Celebrity Power for a Good Cause

Golden Rules for Success in Japan

Toora Tests Revamped IPO Process

Michelangelo, Da Vinci and Communication Today

A Word on Word-of-Mouth

Branding Regions and Destinations

When Foreign Businesses Mismanage Crises in Korea

Recipe for Success in a Recession

Lessons from the Death of a Princess

Teaching Finns To Make A Fuss

Broadway Musical Hits Right Notes in China

Recession Creates PR Opportunities

Avoiding Embarrassment in Asia

After the Event

Addressing Asia’s Ascent

Mega-Cities or Mega-Losers?

Care To Boogie With Google?

News of Fiction and Pseudo Events

Viva Peru!

Good News About Kids

Annual Report 2.0

CR and Sustainability, Commit or Crunch?

Heavyweight PR Stunt Provides Fitness Lift

Roy Mitchell’s 40-Year Journey

The Road to ERMIS

Digging Deep For Employee Comms Gold

India's Geographical and Business Offering Challenges

Going Niche in Croatia

The Future of Human Resources and Public Relations

Reaching India’s Affluent 300 Million

The Rise of the Imperial Shareholder

Sporting Scandals Threaten Brands

Leadership Opportunities for Chief Communications Officers

Sprinting Away from Trouble

The Changing Landscape of African Media

Cisco Broadband Barometer Measures Take-up in Argentina

Making Sense of Digital Preferences

Turkey Heads Upwards

Five Goals for Public Relations in Barbados

Can Social Media Drive Green Content?

The Technical Transition

Public Trust In Brazil

Transnationals Opt for Latin American Hubs

Venezuelan Government’s Political Revolution Coerces Public Relations to be Strategic

Authentic Passion About Colombia

Performance Feeds on Commitment

Trust and Short-Termism

A Vision for Living the Brand

Professional But Never a Profession

Re-defining the Role of Public Private Partnerships

Search for a Crisis Solution

A Role in AIDS Prevention

The Real Economics of the Public Relations Profession

Dealing With a Terror Nightmare

Image Matters in Latin American Elections

Science and the Soundbite

Heavyweight Nigerian Businesses Gain International Respect

Cracking the China PR Market

Non-Stop PR at 37,000 Feet

Ukraine – Not for the Faint Hearted

Respect for Modesty Hinders Creativity

The Secret of Sir Martin’s Success

Seven Step Greening

Life in China’s Consumer Fast Lane

If it’s Social, it Connects

Shooting From the Hip in a Volcanic Land

B2B Brands That Clean Up

A Contrasting Perspective on Ukraine

What the Wealthy Want

The Caring Face of Pharmaceuticals in Croatia

Gulf PR Industry Booms

Bright Ideas Power PR at Toronto Hydro

Clean Communications for Clean-tech

Stars Still Sparkle in Recession

Getting Image Rights Right

Trust Me, The Citizen

Playing it Safe with Gambling

Raising the Profile of PR

Corporate Change Need Not Spell Disaster

Deutsche in Russia

Viva, Las Vegas!

Patriotism, Government Influence and Consumer Wariness

Dresdner Ball Street

Measuring Your Network

Sticking to Benchmarks for Better Control of Corporate PR

Top Team Performance

Switching on the Power of TV

Face Facts About the New Lotus

Celebrating 150 Years of Trans-National Education

A Brighter Light Shines on Big Business in India

As Regions Rise, India’s Map of Influence is Redrawn

Class Action Floodgates Open in Australia

The Art of Conversation

Building Trust in a Shrinking World

Resisting The Disease Mongering Jibes

The Pursuit of ABN AMRO

Winds of Change

Simplifying the Science of Sustainability

Middle Eastern Resilience

A Snapshot of Business School Marketing

Build A Coherent Internal Brand

Model PR in Estonia

What Employers Want Now

AppLabs Re-branding Elicits Applause

PR Takes Hold In Mexico's C-Suites

Asia Embraces CSR

Positive Prospects for Latin America

When Sustainability and Cost-Cutting Collide

Definitions of PR: Keeping it Honest

CSR: Not the Same in Lagos as London

The Story Behind Earth Hour

Luxottica's Visionary Growth

Kids’ Compelling Recovery Stories

PR Boosts Third Sector Results

Kit Launch is a Roaring Success

A Vote for Stability and Progress

Being Smarter About Media

IPRA President’s News

Truth and Belief

President's Perspective

From Bali and all points west to London

Emotional Connection (Woof!)

President's Retrospective

Surveying New Zealand’s Unique Media Landscape

How Social Marketing can Achieve Positive Change

Building and Protecting Brands Across Borders

Next Practices

Consumers Who Talk Back

Small is Big

PR Versus Corporate Communication

Search is Changing the PR Business

Keeping The City Faith

Multi-Minding Women are Co-Brand Managers

The Battle Against Negative Perceptions

Media Myths and Realities

Carbon, Cost and Consequences

Serving Coke to Dr Frankenstein

Measuring the Long Tail

Silver Archer Lights The Way

New Opportunities in the Arab World

Trim The Fat From Your Newsfeeds

The Countdown to COP15

Turning Good Relationships into Great Ones

Practical Lobbying Advice

Relationship-Building for Global Stakeholder Engagement

Global Echoes and Public Affairs

Parable of the Timid, the Uncertain and the Bold

Local Development Needs PR

Advertising the Dentsu Way

Connective Tissue for a ‘Glocal’ World

Communication Creates Value

Bulgaria's Challenging Entry Into the EU

CSR as Branded Content

Sustainable Business, Hot Stuff or Hot Air?

A Turning Point Reached

How to Make it in PR

A Prescription for Greater Healthcare Openness

PR Navigators Wanted!

The You, You And You Phenomenon

Opportunities and Threats in Belgium

Lenovo Blurs Borders By Blending East With West

Going Global... and Taking Employees With You

You say "Tomato"

Reputation — I’ll buy that

Pampers Grows by Helping China’s Parents

Misunderstood in South Africa

Passport to World Citizenry

The Communications Imperative for Japanese Business Expansion

The United States is a Foreign Country, too

Higher Standard, New Life

RSS Feeds on Typewriter Skeletons

Unethical…We’re Not Like That!

Build Your Career By Working Overseas

Heroes Happen Here

From Rolling Stone to Showtime

IPRA President’s Letter

“At the same time as the tobacco companies were broadcasting ads focused on youth smoking prevention and smoking cessation, they were quietly increasing the nicotine content in cigarettes.”

 
Bottom Back Print

Truth About Smoking

The American Legacy Foundation battles the tobacco industry to keep teens from smoking. Julia Cartwright explains how.
   

The truth® youth smoking prevention campaign is behind edgy ads featuring body bags, a snarling dog and “Shards O’Glass” freeze pop. The campaign taps into youth rebellion by asking teens to react to the negative business tactics of the tobacco industry – a strategy campaign creators learned could replace the rebellious behavior of smoking with rebellion against tobacco industry marketing tactics.

While doing this, truth® educates teens about the health effects, social costs and addictive nature of smoking. The campaign features advertising, a website, interactive elements, events and grassroots outreach through a summer cross-country tour.

Each year in the U.S., more than 400,000 people die from tobacco-related diseases, including cancers, heart disease, emphysema and stroke – making tobacco-related disease America’s number-one preventable cause of death. These alarming figures make tobacco-use prevention the key objective of truth®. Since about 80% of smokers begin using tobacco before they turn 18, truth® seeks to engage the hearts and minds of teenagers and prevent them from starting. This approach is working: the ads have ranked truth® in the top-10 most recognized brands by teens from 2000-2005 by Teen Research Unlimited.

Ripped From The Headlines

The organization behind truth® is the American Legacy Foundation, created in 1999 from the landmark Master Settlement Agreement between 46 U.S. states and the tobacco industry. Legacy works to build a world where young people reject tobacco and anyone can quit. Given what we know about the companies that manufacture cigarettes, it appears that a huge national dose of truth® is needed now more than ever.  The New York Times reported on August 31 that:

“Evidence of what looks like an increasingly desperate effort to hook new young smokers and prevent older ones from quitting has been uncovered by a Massachusetts law that forces tobacco companies to report test results showing how much nicotine is inhaled by typical smokers of their various brands.

“The Massachusetts Department of Public Health revealed that from 1998 through 2004, as public health campaigns were mounted to curb smoking, the manufacturers increased the amount of addictive nicotine delivered to the average smoker by 10%. …The three most popular brands chosen by young smokers - Marlboro, Newport and Camel - all delivered significantly more nicotine as the years passed. Virtually all brands were found to deliver a high enough nicotine dose to cause heavy dependence.”

This disturbing research is part of a trend: just two weeks earlier the court issued a decision in the case brought by U.S. Department of Justice litigation against the tobacco industry. The court said that, “…over the course of more than 50 years, Defendants lied, misrepresented, and deceived the American public, including smokers and the young people they avidly sought as ‘replacement smokers,’ about the devastating health effects of smoking and environmental tobacco smoke, they suppressed research, they destroyed documents, they manipulated the use of nicotine so as to increase and perpetuate addiction, they distorted the truth about low tar and light cigarettes so as to discourage smokers from quitting, and they abused the legal system in order to achieve their goal – to make money with little, if any, regard for individual illness and suffering, soaring health costs, or the integrity of the legal system.’ 

As illuminating as these new developments are, it has long been common knowledge that the industry has also has deep pockets. In 2003, the tobacco industry spent more than $40 million a day in the United States alone, just to market and promote its addictive products. At the same time as the tobacco companies were broadcasting ads focused on youth smoking prevention and smoking cessation, they were quietly increasing the nicotine content in cigarettes.

In this David v. Goliath battle, the annual budget for the American Legacy Foundation’s truth® campaign will soon be less than what cigarette makers spend daily in marketing.  Legacy’s internal and external communications teams aggressively work to extend the reach of truth®. Efforts focus on earned media, special events, speaking opportunities and community outreach – all tactics to highlight truth® and keep smoking prevention top of mind. The foundation goes where the industry goes, counter markets to populations the industry targets and raises awareness about tobacco’s deadly toll on virtually every family in the nation. 

Thank You For Not Smoking

As a result of litigation, the tobacco industry plays an important part in this process, since many of its documents that are made public are used in truth® ads. The film Thank You for Smoking led many to wonder how the tobacco industry really behaves. Katie Holmes’ character asked “why they don’t market a cigarette to homeless people and call them Hobos?”  In reality, one tobacco company did contemplate marketing cigarettes to gays and homeless people in San Francisco and called the plan Project SCUM (Sub Culture Urban Marketing). This document, once made public, became the basis for a popular truth® ad exposing these tobacco industry marketing tactics.

The $50 million youth smoking prevention campaign in the film – the one that wasn’t supposed to work – also is reality. Many IPRA readers are aware of the Talk, They'll Listen campaign from Philip Morris, which was preceded by its Think, Don't Smoke campaign. The Think, Don't Smoke campaign was shown to actually increase the likelihood of smoking among youth who are open to smoking. The public health community notes the irony: the same companies that sell cigarettes are simultaneously telling their future customers not to buy their products.

Truth Prevails

The tobacco industry has also worked aggressively - and unsuccessfully – for the past five years to shut down the truth® campaign, the only national youth smoking prevention campaign that is proven to work and that is not operated by the tobacco industry.  truth® is credited with 22% of the decline in youth smoking in its first two years (2000-2002). Litigation brought by the Lorillard Tobacco Company against Legacy was costly and threatened to divert the foundation from its life-saving mission and close its doors.

The public might think that ‘Big Tobacco’ ceased to exist as a group after memorable Congressional testimony in which tobacco executives testified that they did not believe that cigarettes are addictive. Legacy knows otherwise. Just months before the court’s decision, Lorillard was joined by Philip Morris, RJ Reynolds and Brown & Williamson as they tried – but were denied by the court – to file briefs supporting Lorillard’s claim that Legacy’s truth® campaign ads “vilify and personally attacked” the companies. But on July 17, the Delaware Supreme Court unanimously decided in favor of Legacy and said it did not vilify or attack tobacco companies or their employees.

This legal victory ensures that – for now – our nation’s youth will continue to hear the life-saving messages perpetuated by the truth® campaign. By keeping youth from smoking, the foundation hopes that more American families will be spared the devastation of seeing loved ones become sick or lose their lives from the addictive and harmful effects of tobacco use.

Author's Details

Julia Cartwright is Senior Vice President of Communications at American Legacy Organisation.

Visit the author's website

Email the author

Top Back Print

 


“The public health community notes the irony: the same companies that sell cigarettes are simultaneously telling their future customers not to buy their products.”

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