In this episode of the PRmoment Podcast, Ben Smith and Will Hart, CEO of PRmoment Leaders, engage in a timely debate surrounding the structural integration of public relations and artificial intelligence.
Moving decisively past the initial "experimental" phase where practitioners simply played with basic prompts, the industry has rapidly arrived at a critical juncture. Today's leaders are forced to confront foundational organizational design questions, evolving agency structures, and entirely new talent profiles.
While Hart highlights the profound excitement of being able to fundamentally rethink traditional operational workflows, Smith offers a grounded counter-perspective: the core objective of public relations—using distinct channels to strategically influence audiences—remains fundamentally unchanged. However, the infrastructure utilized to achieve these goals is shifting dramatically.
A primary catalyst is the democratisation of predictive analytics; a concept that was once a cost-prohibitive dream for marketers is now an accessible reality for modern PR targeting.
Yet, this technological leap brings multifaceted risks. Agency leaders are navigating intense client pushback regarding intellectual property security, deepfakes, corporate reputation vulnerabilities, and looming sector-specific compliance regulations.
A significant portion of the dialogue focuses on agency workflows and the existential threat of automation. Smith warns against a reductive approach to AI, noting that if an agency’s sole strategy is the integration of basic tools, it triggers a "race to the bottom" since everyone has access to the same software.
True competitive advantage relies on human curiosity and the ability to navigate strategic ambiguity. This technical evolution directly challenges the traditional agency pyramid model. As AI automates the "grunt work," leaders must figure out how to train junior entry-level staff who historically relied on those repetitive tasks to learn the trade.
Concurrently, in-house corporate communications roles are experiencing a major boardroom elevation, transforming CCOs into critical stakeholders guiding their broader enterprises through the AI revolution.
To master these urgent structural friction points, PR professionals should secure tickets to the upcoming AI in PR Masterclass (full agenda details here).
Curated by Smith, this advanced, pitch-free session is not a how to write prompts for ChatGPT tutorial - it’s a high-level strategic activation. The elite speaker lineup includes Sal Della Monica (MikeWorldwide) discussing how to prevent efficiency from diluting work effectiveness, Allison Spray (Burson) exposing AI implementation traps, and Andy Barr revealing critical research on which media titles influence LLM results.
Additionally, leading copyright lawyer Luke English will break down the legal landscape, Mike Robb (Boldspace) will showcase agent-based workflow redesigns, and Kat Arnull will delve into the power of market mix modeling. The day also features a powerhouse corporate panel with in-house communications directors from L&G, Tenable, Procore, and Verizon, wrapped up by Peter Heneghan (Albie) forecasting the ultimate redesign of future communications teams.
Available both in-person and via virtual live stream, space is strictly limited.
Will Hart on the scale of the AI shift:
"AI
in PR got real very quickly. It's massively exciting though. How many
times in your life in your working life do you get to be in a place
where you can fundamentally rethink everything you do and how you do
it."
Ben Smith on the hidden danger of over-automating:
"You
might run the most beautifully efficient PR business by integrating AI
into your workflow. But if you're not very careful about the quality of
your work, your level of insight may well decrease."
Ben Smith on why relying solely on tools backfires:
“If
your strategy is the integration of tools and agents in your business,
it's a race to the bottom. Because everyone's basically got access to
that."
Ben Smith on how predictive analytics solves PR's historical budget issue:
"One
of the things that has always had the handbrake on PR budgets is that
unpredictability of outcome because there's so many other things going
on... but AI has made predictive analytics accessible for a fraction of
the historical cost. For PR that is going to change the game"
If you enjoyed this article, sign up for free to our twice weekly editorial alert.
We have six email alerts in total - covering ESG, internal comms, PR jobs and events. Enter your email address below to find out more: