Tag Archives: public relations

The Intersection of the Message: Cicero, Machiavelli, and Ivy Lee

This article explores how Cicero, Machiavelli, and Ivy Lee each used “the message” as a vehicle for power, persuasion, and public control. From Cicero’s moralised rhetoric to Machiavelli’s cunning optics to Ivy Lee’s media-savvy framing, it dissects how messaging intersects with ethics, audience, and intent. Their techniques still shape political campaigns, corporate comms, and crisis response today—proving that the message is never just about words, but always about influence.

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The Ivy Lee Method: Public Relations, Productivity, and Propaganda

Ivy Lee shaped the modern world of public relations by mastering narrative control, pioneering a simple yet powerful productivity method, and reframing truth as both tactic and ethic. This article explores Lee’s legacy, from press release orchestration and the “two-way street” philosophy to his morally ambiguous work for industrial giants, ending with a practical guide to applying his enduring techniques today.

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