How do today’s public relations and marketing students differ from those of the past? Let me rip off a format pioneered by a mid-western professor (can’t find a link, sorry) and compare the media environment public relations and marketing students face today, compared with when I was an undergradute:

PR and Marketing students born in 1988 don’t know … :

  • what [ALT] F4 + [CTRL] F4 does in WordPerfect (link)
  • cable TV used to be 23 channels, and ten were soft porn or regional sports
  • you could print in either Courier New or Arial
  • authority was conferred by business titles
  • USA Today was the vanguard of new media. Graphs! Colours!
  • “send this over to the client for approval” meant an envelope and a cab ride
  • American Media and Playboy were the media companies of the future
  • business gurus usually had extensive work in their field before writing a book
  • The “Pepsi Challenge” was the only form of experiential marketing outside of grocery store sampling - and the Playboy Club
  • social media? You mean the martini recipes in Esquire?
  • not only did digital media kill the radio star, it crippled the mysogynistic album art industry
  • our measurement framework included AVE, coupon redemption or direct reply postcards
  • Kinkos was the gateway to the internet - and to $1 colour copies
  • mailing lists were maintained in Dbase
  • a clippings search involved your fingers, some index cards and a librarian