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And the Survey says...
I am asked frequently by existing and prospective clients about celebrity and professional athlete endorsements and spokesperson agreements. Many in business today want the magic bullet and think it can come from such an influencer.
In contemporary society, how credible, believable and influential are celebrities and pro athletes really?
Creating end-user or consumer demand requires an understanding of human behavior. People are smarter and more skeptical today – making costly (hired gun) spokesperson investment decisions risky at best. Plus, many celebs endorse multiple products, which causes scheduling issues and turns off media and consumers alike. Marketers and the Fortune 500 alike need to acknowledge that today’s consumer (and customer) is enlightened and realizes endorsements are financially driven and companies pay handsomely for these affiliations.
A look at PRSA’s National Credibility Index, which ranks spokespersons and endorsers from professional athletes and celebrities to ordinary business owners, can help a business or brand gain insight into how the public perceives different spokespersons in order to make the best decision and spend their marketing dollars wisely.
The research team polled thousands of Americans and spent five years on this study, producing nearly 5,000 pages of materials. They found that credibility was complex and full of intangibles including peer influence, life experience, demographics, attitudes, ideology and civic involvement. Essentially what it means is that for a spokesperson to be seen as credible, he or she must be perceived as authentic, honest and competent.
Here’s how the public perceives various spokespersons (one meaning most credible and 45 meaning least):
1. Supreme Court justice
2. Teacher
3. National expert
4. Member of the armed forces
5. Local business owner
6. Ordinary citizen
7. Local religious leader
8. High-ranking military officer
9. School official
10. National leader with shared traits
11. National religious leader
12. Network TV news anchor
13. Governor
14. Local business representative
15. Local newspaper or TV reporter
16. National civil rights leader
17. Locally elected council member
18. U.S. senator
19. Nationally syndicated columnist
20. Mayor of a big city
21. Head of state-level agency
22. Head of a local-level agency
23. Reporter for large newspaper or magazine
24. U.S. congressman
25. Head of a large corporation
26. National Credibility Index
27. Local civil rights leader
28. U.S. vice president
29. Head of national association
30. Community activist
31. Wall Street executive
32. Head of a presidential advisory board
33. U.S. president
34. Member of presidential Cabinet
35. Pollster
36. Student activist
37. Local labor union leader
38. Candidate for public office
39. Head of national labor union
40. Famous athlete
41. Head of national interest group
42. Political party leader
43. Public relations specialist
44. Famous entertainer
45. TV or radio talk show host
Look where famous entertainers and famous athletes landed on the list! Isn’t it time marketers and public relations specialists wake up to the fact that it’s all about the customer and their views?
Christopher Rosica is the author of The Authentic Brand: How Today’s Top Entrepreneurs Connect with Customers and CEO of Rosica Strategic Public Relations.