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Headlines
AI in 2025: Five trends for marketing, media, enterprise and e-commerce | Digiday, 10 jan 2025
Why are Nano Influencers the Future of Advertising? | Adgully.com, 10 jan 2025
Why So Many Customer Experiences Are Mediocre at Best | Information Week, 10 jan 2025
Programmatic advertising's power trio: AI, analytics, and privacy protection | Campaign India, 09 jan 2025
10 marketing predictions for 2025 as new era of productivity dawns | Marketing Dive, 08 jan 2025
We need to leave these 10 marketing vices in 2024 | The Drum, 08 jan 2025
The 4 principles of modern marketing | Think With Google, 08 jan 2025
Reactive PR & AI: How to capitalize on trending topics faster | Search Engine Land, 08 jan 2025
Consumer and marketing trends 2025: Key insights from Statista | Revista Merca2.0, 07 jan 2025
9 Personal Branding Trends For 2025 | Forbes, 02 jan 2025
November 2024
Mohammad Anas Wahaj | 30 nov 2024
Public relations (PR) is a dynamic sector with continuously evolving landscape. Thinking beyond the basics, what is relevant now may become obsolete in future. Rise of artifical intelligence (AI) and automation has already started shifting the competitive advantage. Fake news and misinformation has become a nuisance and continues to hurt the PR ecosystem. Moreover, the ever challenging rising costs have made the task of PR founders difficult. To look into the coming 2025, there is always silver lining and brightness for those who keep their focus and adaptively strategizee with modern and forward looking mindset. Here are the views of PR founders aiming for success in the coming year - (1) Caroline MacDonald, founder and CEO at PR firm OggaDoon PR and Digital Media: 'As you strategise your planning, media engagement and press worthy stories for the coming year, keep these factors in mind - (i) Content is king, but don't forget your brand values. (ii) Embrace Artificial Intelligence...Enhancing productivity and creativity while fostering innovation, AI will unlock possibilities for growth and efficiency. (iii) Gen-Alpha are beginning to enter the conversation...Values like plant-based products, eco-friendliness, and sustainability resonate not just with them but also strongly influence Generation Z. (iv) Bluesky (social media platform) is poised to remain an influential player in the social media landscape.' (2) Rachel Royall, founder and MD at comms firm Blue Lozenge: 'Public relations like many sectors is in for a stormy 2025. As an agency founder I think there are four major factors that will disrupt our industry - (i) The golden thread that cuts through the obvious disruptors of AI, digital and social media channel shift is truth. (ii) Human connection in our work and with our teams will be increasingly important. (iii) Optimistically I think PR professionals who can find and promote joy will go far next year. (iv) Integration across disciplines will be vital for agency growth and impact. (3) Olugbeminiyi Idowu, founder and MD at PR firm Talking Drum: 'Increased emphasis on owned media as a channel...Advancements in digital analytics and content management tools will further enhance the appeal of owned media by enabling organizations to measure impact, refine messaging, and target audiences with greater precision...I also foresee synthetic PR redefining how brands engage audiences and manage their reputations. By leveraging advancements in artificial intelligence and synthetic data, PR professionals will be able to simulate audience reactions, test crisis scenarios and personalize campaigns with unprecedented precision...Predictive modelling powered by synthetic data will also help brands stay ahead of emerging trends, navigate reputational risks, and refine their strategies in real-time.' (4) Nick Baines, CEO and co-founder at PR firm Nara Communications: 'Aside from just saying 'AI will be big' ad nauseam, a trend I see that could be significant is the increasingly blurred lines between 'earned' and 'paid' media...There are more and more examples of sponsored placements that seem journalistic and meritocratic but have actually just been bought by companies who want to be seen in the press...I'm especially worried about this as it applies to mediums such as podcasts and individual newsletters...I predict 2025 will see a cozier media, when we in fact need more antagonism and challenging of interviewees. This is a problem - journalism is designed to ruffle feathers not just amplify corporate messaging.' (5) Lynsey Barry, CEO and co-founder at PR firm Five not 10: 'There's going to be more onus on clients and agencies doing a better job of linking PR with business outcomes...As budgets start to pick up in 2025...creative alone won't be enough to get PR the traction it needs and deserves in board rooms...it's going to be an interesting year for recruitment and retention.' (6) Nikki Collins, founder at Earnies: 'It's quite interesting to consider what will be the biggest disruptors in office culture and in turn employee happiness in 2025. Return-to-office has kicked back up a gear...I'd love to see the 'classic' mobile phone call become 2025's biggest disruptor.' (7) Jazz Gandhi, founder at comms firm Duet London: 'B2B and B2C will merge more becoming B2B2C...Insurance companies will need to see a more direct link to embedded sustainability practices...Larger companies will work with smaller outfits with lean overheads...A breed of versatile, talented 'big agency' experts will join as partners to greater a more fluid approach to delivering good comms.' (8) Courtney Glymph, founder and MD at PR firm, YourStoryPR: 'The PR landscape in 2025 will be shaped by shifts in how we build relationships and craft narratives across fragmented channels...As newsrooms shrink and AI content floods digital channels, there's clear appetite for researched, context-rich stories...The disruption lies in the changing nature of influence...Measurement is evolving too. Rather than vanity metrics, we'll track how stories move through professional communities and influence business decisions...Success will come from understanding how communities consume and share information, building campaigns that resonate while ensuring strong digital positioning for AI-driven discovery.' (9) Lydia Oakes, co-founder and COO of PR firm, Bluestripe Group: 'Of course AI will be having an impact in PR like any other industry, but it is just a tool...In fact the human relationship will always be one of the most important in the PR industry’s toolbox...In 2025 the use of AI will continue to grow but it will not replace industry expertise, great relationships and excellent storytelling.' Read on...
PRmoment:
What's next for PR in 2025? Founders make their predictions
Author:
Elizabeth Howlett
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