What’s the difference between marketing and public relations? Public Relations (PR) and Marketing are often confused, but they serve distinct purposes within an organization’s communication strategy. While both aim to promote a brand, product, or service, their methods, goals, and target audiences differ significantly.
Public relations focus is on public image. A firm’s main goal is to create and maintain a positive public image for a brand, organization, or individual. The firm manages the flow of information from the company or person to the public. They strive to build trust and credibility with the public for their clients and work to increase visibility in the marketplace.
Public Relations
- Focus: Reputation management, building relationships, and fostering goodwill.
- Tactics: Media relations (press releases, media kits, interviews), crisis management, community relations, corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives, internal communications, and thought leadership.
- Control: Less direct control over the message. PR relies on earned media (e.g., news articles, features) which are perceived as more credible because they are independently published.
- Goal: Long-term image building, fostering positive perceptions, and maintaining stakeholder relationships.
- Audience: Broad range of stakeholders, including media, employees, investors, customers, government officials, and the general public.
- Measurement: Difficult to quantify directly. Success is often measured by media mentions, sentiment analysis, brand perception surveys, and reputation scores.
Marketing
Marketing encompasses a broader set of activities designed to promote and sell products or services, including creative content such as videos and photography, website design, market research, search engine optimization, graphic design, advertising, sales, and distribution. Its primary objective is to drive sales and generate revenue.
Key Characteristics of Marketing
- Focus: Product/service promotion, sales generation, and market penetration.
- Tactics: Advertising (paid media like TV ads, social media ads, print ads), direct marketing, content marketing, search engine optimization (SEO), social media marketing, sales promotions, and pricing strategies.
- Control: High degree of control over the message and its placement, especially in paid advertising.
- Goal: Short to medium-term goals focused on increasing sales, market share, and customer acquisition.
- Audience: Primarily target consumers or specific customer segments.
- Measurement: Easier to quantify with metrics like sales figures, conversion rates, return on investment (ROI) from campaigns, website traffic, and lead generation.
Overlap & Synergy
While distinct, PR and Marketing are not mutually exclusive and often work together to achieve overarching business objectives. For example:
- Content Marketing: PR teams might generate compelling stories that marketing can then leverage in content marketing campaigns.
- Product Launches: PR can generate buzz and media coverage for a new product, while marketing creates the advertising and sales strategies to drive purchases.
- Brand Storytelling: Both departments contribute to shaping the brand’s narrative, with PR focusing on credibility and marketing on appeal.
At Creative Stories Media, we offer both marketing and public relations. We feel strongly that both marketing and PR should go hand and in hand to elevate our clients and their brands and help them increase their revenues.
About Rachel
Rachel Bollin has a degree in public relations and communications from Southern New Hampshire University. In 2012 she started her own business and fell in love with the marketing and branding side of product development. Her marketing skills took her from concept to nationwide sales in less than a year. She has gotten her own products into numerous magazines, partnerships with influencers, and even on national television.
Rachel has vast experience in social media campaigns, google analytics, and email marketing. She’s a branding expert who knows how to uncover a target audience and create a brand story that people will love to hear about.




