There’s an old debate in marketing that never quite gets resolved.
Should I spend money on advertising or invest in public relations?
It’s the wrong question. But it’s the one most business owners ask, because budgets are real and priorities have to be set. So let’s talk about what each one actually does, how they work differently, and why the businesses that grow the fastest in this region use both.
What advertising does well
Advertising is rented attention. You pay for space — in a feed, on a screen, on a billboard, in a publication — and your message goes in front of people.
The advantage is control. You write the message. You pick the audience. You choose the timing. You decide how long it runs. And with digital advertising, you can measure exactly what happened — how many people saw it, how many clicked, how many called, how many bought.
For East Texas businesses, advertising works well for specific, time-sensitive objectives. A grand opening. A seasonal promotion. A new service launch. A hiring push. When you need visibility on a deadline, advertising delivers.
The limitation is trust. People know an ad is an ad. They’ve seen thousands of them. They’ve developed filters — mental and digital — that let them scroll past, skip, ignore, or block anything that feels like a pitch. Advertising can build awareness, but it builds trust slowly. And in a relationship-driven market, trust is the currency that matters most.
What PR does differently
Public relations is earned attention. Instead of paying for space, you earn it by being newsworthy, relevant, or interesting enough that a journalist decides to cover you.
When the local paper writes a feature about your business, that carries a weight no ad can match. It’s a third party — someone with no financial stake in your success — telling their audience that you’re worth knowing about. That endorsement builds credibility in a way that self-promotion never can.
In East Texas, where community reputation is everything, a single media placement can do more for your credibility than months of paid advertising. People clip newspaper features and hang them on the wall. They share TV segments with friends. They remember.
The limitation is that you can’t control the outcome. You pitch the story, but the journalist decides the angle. You hope for Tuesday’s paper, but news happens and your piece gets bumped to next week. You might pitch a great story and get nothing back. PR requires patience, strategy, and the ability to accept that earned media operates on its own timeline.
Why integration matters
Here’s what the most effective businesses in this region have figured out: advertising and PR aren’t either/or. They’re amplifiers of each other.
A newspaper feature about your business becomes the most credible ad you’ve ever run — repost it on social media, reference it in your email marketing, frame it in your lobby. A TV segment gets clipped and becomes a video asset on your website. A quote from a journalist’s story becomes proof in your proposal.
Going the other direction, a well-placed ad campaign creates the visibility that makes your PR pitch more compelling. “You may have seen our recent campaign about [topic]” gives a journalist context and signals that your business is active, invested, and newsworthy.
The businesses that use both — with consistent messaging across paid and earned channels — create a presence that feels omnipresent without being overbearing. Customers see the ad. Then they see the news article. Then they see the social post. Each one reinforces the others. And by the time that customer needs what you offer, you’re the first name that comes to mind.
Where it falls apart
The challenge for most local business owners isn’t understanding the concept. It’s the coordination.
Running ad campaigns requires writing copy, designing creative, managing targeting, monitoring spend, and analyzing results. Managing PR requires building media relationships, writing pitches, tracking editorial calendars, and following up without being a nuisance. And both need to be aligned — same message, same brand voice, same strategic direction.
When these functions operate in silos — or worse, when one is handled by the owner in spare moments that don’t exist — the messaging fragments. The ad says one thing, the press release says another, and the social media doesn’t reference either.
Integration isn’t just a nice idea. It’s the difference between a marketing effort that compounds and one that scatters.
The businesses in this region that are growing with the most momentum are the ones that have figured out how to make advertising and PR work together — not as separate line items, but as parts of a single, coherent strategy.
Lee Allen Miller is the founder of MSGPR Ltd Co, a full-service creative agency in Lufkin, Texas, and author of Entrepreneurship God’s Way. For more insights on marketing and business growth, visit msgpr.com.