
1932 - GENERAL MOTORS: Value and Sales Appeal

(continued from previous page) He organized the "Metropolitan Committee
on Better Transportation" that issued a report advocating improved
transportation ventilation. After Bernays ensured that the report received
publicity, GM announced that its 1933 cars assured the ventilation that
the committee had advocated.
To emphasize value, he recruited endorsements from engineers for GM's
innovative composite steel and wood bodies, and the National Retail Dry
Goods Association endorsements on quality maintenance. By pledging a commitment
to research and development, Bernays was able to achieve over 150 endorsements
for GM from some of America's most famous business leaders -- the presidents
of B&O, Standard Oil of N.Y., and Yale University. The overall message:
high quality is a better investment than cheap cars.
At Bernays's suggestion, GM president and CEO Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., hosted
three luncheons during the auto show. The first emphasized new GM technology
and commitment to further innovation. At the second luncheon, diplomatic
consuls from more than 40 countries around the world heard GM's perspectives
on motoring as a major force in international understanding. The third luncheon,
attended by distinguished economists boosted consumer confidence when a
Bernays survey revealed a public optimism in business and the stock market.
Innovation and GM were now associated in the public eye.
Alfred P. Sloan, satisfied that the luncheons furthered company goals,
hired Bernays as GM counsel and endorsed public relations as more effective
and cheaper than advertising. He asked Bernays to educate executives of
51 GM subsidiaries and Bernays responded with a package of quotes, "desk
presentations," and mimeographed newsletters.
Sloan's conversion to public relations was conveyed in his message in
the annual report. He said, "the corporation's most vital relationship
is with the public. Its success depends on a current interpretation of the
public's needs and viewpoints, as well as on the public's understanding
of the corporation's motives in everything it does."
Bernays's relationship with GM continued until he grew the function outside
of an external counselor's role. As General Motors embraced public relations,
so did the rest of the country. Clearly, the corporate perception of public
relations was advanced through Bernays's work.
EDWARD L. BERNAYS - A RETROSPECTIVE

|