Coming Full Circle
Posted by PRGirlz Alumni on September 18th, 2006
One of the questions I get most about my job, after “what is PR?,” is “how did you get into that?” Well, here’s how. When I was in my third year at U of T, a friend mentioned that she was making decent money doing promotions and suggested I try it out. I started working for a marketing company promoting movies at bars and clubs around Toronto. As far as part-time jobs went, it was pretty good. I worked a couple weekends a month from 9pm-2am. We were a team of 3-5, plus our fearless leader who drove to 4 or 5 bars a night promoting the newest film from Warner Brothers. I got to know the bar scene in Toronto (which helped me bypass the line on more than one occasion when I was out with friends), met some fun people, made use of the fact that I’m a major night owl and made some decent cash. From there, I got into a larger marketing company who promoted more than movies and I did many, many programs with them. That’s how I discovered PR. Some of the programs were fantastic, a lot of fun and very successful. The ones that were bad, were really really bad. So I wondered who came up with these inane ways to push a product? Wouldn’t it be more effective to promote it this way? Or this way? Or that way? I told my ideas to my manager who laughed and said I should work in PR, that’s essentially what I was doing: thinking of creative and efficient ways to push a product. So I did. I went to Humber, did my internship and got a job. And here I am.
And last week, I found my way back to my roots. We decided to take advantage of the throngs in town for The Film Festival and took one of our clients’ mascots down to enjoy the festivities; we went up to people in the street and in line for movies and took pictures of people with the mascot. It was a huge success and I had a lot of fun doing it. At first it was hard to get back into the ‘promotion mindset’- it’s not as easy as one might think to walk up to perfect strangers and ask them to pose for a picture. I have friends who say they are way too self-conscious to do the job. You have to remind yourself that you don’t know these people and will likely never see them again. So why not be outgoing and silly and make them smile? They’re likely to remember it as a result, which is really the whole point of the exercise in the first place.
So there I was two years later and doing the job that got me into PR in the first place. I thought I had come a long way, but in reality, we don’t really get all that far from where we started, do we?
What about you? Come a long way? How did you get started in PR? I’d love to hear your stories!











September 18th, 2006 » 9:47 pm
Sad-but-true-story: I was a horrible high school English teacher. Reality was I should have majored in journalism, but instead majored in education, taught for four years and ultimately hated it and got out before I became one of those disgruntled teachers staying in it for the tenure.
So I fell into my position as a staff writer at a hospital. I taught a grammar class at a local college called “Grammar in the workplace,” and my boss took the class, approached me after to see if I was interested in working, and 8 years later here I am. I love it!
September 21st, 2006 » 7:37 pm
I find that many people in PR have landed there simply by chance. It’s an interesting field that way- journalists, writers, marketing types along with those who knew nothing about communication and those who studied to get there all find their way into PR. We take all kinds!
October 3rd, 2006 » 6:08 am
As a senior at Auburn University, I haven’t entered the public relations industry, but have come full circle just deciding on my major.
My mom worked in public relations at Walt Disney World during my childhood and adolescence. I’m a splitting image of my mother’s personality, so several people suggested that I consider studying public relations. Being an oh-so-independent teenager, I chose to rebel and do something completely different, so I studied biomedical sciences as a pre-med major for my first two years in college. After two years of struggles, I decided to give public relations a try. I love it and feel like I’ve chosen a curriculum I truly enjoy!
You could say I came full circle by deciding to follow in my mother’s footsteps, the path that was originally suggested to me. It’s interesting how many of us end up being more like our parents then we ever imagined.
October 3rd, 2006 » 3:00 pm
Hi Cody – PR at Disney World? Too cool! I bet she has some great stories. I agree about being like your parents…although none of my parents are in PR, I find I’m more and more like them, personality-wise- which is pretty scary!