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THE JOURNAL

I Want To Work In PR. What Will My Salary Be?

The job: Public Relations

Tracey Bochner, president of Paradigm PRPhoto Credit: Tracey Bochner, president of Paradigm PR, left, and Michael Abbass, senior vice-president, in their office in Toronto.  Brett Gundlock, for The Globe and Mail

The salary: 

  • Starts at about $40,000 for managers and grows to about $80,000 for associates and beyond.
  • Pays about $150,000 for more senior roles, such as senior vice-president or president.

The education:

  • Marketing, communications or journalism are common routes to public relations.
  • Colleges and universities across Canada offer public relations and communication degrees and certificates.

The role:

  • Public relations tasks can vary, from pitching stories to the news media, to event planning, to community relations, to helping to launch new brands or products.
  • The PR person’s job is to help gain attention and awareness for the client.
  • PR people require strong writing and storytelling skills as well as knowledge of current events and trends in a wide variety of sectors, depending on their area of expertise.

By the numbers:

  • The PR field is dominated by women. According to 2006 census data, 69 per cent of PR people were women, up from 59 per cent in 1991.

Andrea Lekushoff, president of Broadreach Communications

Photo Credit: Andrea Lekushoff, president of Broadreach Communications in her Toronto home office in May, 2012. Fred Lum/The Globe and Mail

Job prospects:

  • The rise of social media coupled with an increasing need for companies and organizations to get their messages across in a cluttered world of communication has driven up demand for PR professionals.
  • ”This significant rising trend in employment should continue over the next few years,” according to Service Canada.

The challenges:

  • It’s no longer just about pitching a story to traditional media outlets and crossing your fingers for coverage.
  • Today, PR people need to find other avenues to promote their clients’ work, especially as mainstream newsrooms are shrinking.
  • That means getting more creative and coming up with new tactics, such as a skilled use of social media, to garner attention.
  • The hours can be long and weekend work is often part of the gig.

Why they do it:

”It can be exciting… and no two days are the same,” says Katie Stevens, a senior account associate at Vancouver-based Talk Shop Media.

Ms. Stevens says she is passionate about marketing but felt that advertising was too promotional for her tastes.

She enjoys PR because it gives her the ability to be creative, while also digging deeper into certain issues.

”It gives you an opportunity to be an expert – or at least a mini expert – in many different fields.”

Misconceptions:

It’s nothing like the job of Samantha Jones in Sex and the City.

”We aren’t the ones sipping champagne beside the fashion show. We are the ones behind the scenes worrying about the logistics and making sure everything ticks,” Ms. Stevens says.

She also bristles at the idea that what she does is spin.

”You have to be creative, but that can often be misconstrued as inauthentic,” she says.

Kim Cattrall

Photo Credit: Kim Cattrall appears in a scene from Sex and the City 2 movie.  ITAR-TASS/Newscom

This story is part of the Globe Careers’ series looking at specific jobs, with their qualifications, descriptions, responsibilities and current salaries. 


American Women in Public Relations™ (Women in PR USA®) and Canadian Women in Public Relations (Women in PR Canada) has been formed to enable groups of public relations women leaders across the Americas to come together to share ideas, contacts, experiences, and to advocate for major issues directly affecting women working in the PR industry today.

Join our online community to be interviewed on our website as a Women in PR, gain access to our premium resources, find your next job and build contacts in your field. We also offer member discounts on PR tools, events and training to help you thrive in your career.

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