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  • Writer's pictureTemple PRSSA

Brian in Cape Town, South America.

In celebrating our 50th anniversary of Temple PRSSA we have been taking time to look back on how far we have come as a chapter as well as what we have accomplished. We recently interviewed Brian Mattes, a former chapter president, who joined Temple PRSSA in 1975. Brian is now retired in a beautiful part of Mexico but served as Principal of Government Relations for Vanguard, helping them grow from $7 billion in assets in 1984 to a $5 trillion global investment company today. He credits the beginning of his 40-year career in communications with the Temple PRSSA chapter. We are excited to share his story and his advice to present PRSSA members so they can learn from a pro how to get the most out of their PRSSA experience.


Brian explained how an admirable faculty member of his, Dr. Lee Carl, introduced him to

public relations and former PRSSA leaders, Alan Jackson and Barbara Barr, got him involved in the chapter. Brian’s goals included learning more about the public relations practice while being able to connect with professionals in the region. He became the newsletter editor and would actively attend monthly meetings with PR professionals in the city as well as national conferences.


His most memorable experience was participating in the PRSSA bicentennial celebration in 1976, where PRSSA chapters across the country competed to create PR campaigns to promote the event. The team included about 5 members from the chapter who divided up the workload. After a few weeks of hard work, they presented their idea in front of leading regional PR professionals. Although they didn’t make it to the national round, another chapter who used some of their elements did go on to win the national award. Since Brain worked at an audio laboratory on campus for one of Temple’s radio stations, he used his talents to help put together a narration for their entry in the competition with music and visual.


Brian with the pyramids In Egypt.

After graduation, Brian worked at a small company in New Jersey where he had previously interned. After a few years he wanted to do something bigger in Philadelphia, so he contacted some of his old professors from Temple. This connection helped him land a job at what was the largest bank in Philadelphia at the time. He worked long days and late nights but it paid off because he became the youngest officer the bank ever had. He met one of the board of directors who was also who was the chairman and CEO of Vanguard which was a mutual fund company in Philly’s western suburbs. The CEO was looking to develop an internal PR function. He asked Brian to take the job, at first he declined but after time finally agreed. At the time Vanguard was about a quarter the size of the bank, however, Brian describes it as the best decision of his life because it led to a great career and a variety of amazing opportunities that turned into accomplishments.


Brian had a number of great experiences while at Vanguard. He took Vanguard’s PR function which at first consisted of him and expanded it to an international operation with excellent media relations in Europe, Asia, Australia and Canada. Brian also gained positive coverage for his company in big publications like Forbes, Money, The Wall Street Journal, The Financial Times and feature stories in Fortune, Business Week and other international publications. Early in Brian’s career he made the gutsy decision during the stock market crash of 1987 to put vanguard on the forefront of many stories and conducted a major outreach effort. With the teams new motto (Accessibility, Credibility and Quotability) they went from one or two inbound calls a week to dozens of calls every day from reporters around the world. Brian eventually went on to also lead the government relations of Vanguard, starting an office in DC providing communications to members of Congress, their staff and agencies like SEC, Department of Labor, and the Treasury Department.


Brian outside of his home in Ajijic, Mexico on Lake Chapala.

Brian really emphasized how much Temple and the PRSSA chapter began his success journey. Through meeting professional and networking while in PRSSA and staying close with professors he was able to obtain his first big job that led to many wonderful opportunities. Brian said if he could go back and tell himself anything it would be to reassure himself on his skills that became very important later on in his career. He explained the three skills as:

  1. Be a great writer: Being an extraordinary writer not only gives you a competitive advantage in the job market but also helps with professional advancement.

  2. Always have a curiosity for knowledge: Whether in your professional or matters that affect your industry, never stop learning.

  3. Think strategically, not tactically. Go beyond being just a PR practitioner but a strategic communications officer who can provide strategic communication counsel.

This blog post was written by Emma McClain, Director of Fundraising.

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  • Writer's pictureTemple PRSSA

Cuffed or un-cuffed, most people agree that Valentine’s Day is a headache! If you’re single, you get to sit through a day of lovey-dovey Instagram posts flooding your feed. If you’re in a relationship, you’re plagued with the impossible task of finding that special V-Day gift.


No matter how heartbreaking or heartwarming February 14th turns out to be, this holiday has withstood the test of time. As future PR professionals, it’s important for us to understand how this day, claiming to celebrate love, has turned into the ultimate excuse to sell flowers, comically large teddy bears and, most importantly, chocolates!


While St. Valentine is accredited with the fame of the day, according to an article by Time, V-Day can be traced back to the pagan festival of Lupercalia. Ancient Romans celebrated from February 13 and 15—but it wasn’t all candy hearts back then. Men and women would be paired up by a matchmaker for the festival and the men would slap the women with goat and dog hides because it was believed to make them fertile. Yikes.


In the Middle Ages, that idea of courtly love and chivalry came into play. Celebrants of the St. Valentine’s festival felt it should be more cheerful and started associating it with romance. Poets, most famously Geoffrey Chaucer, linked the day with birds finding mates in the Springtime, which is right around the corner from February 14.


How did all of this come to be the red-and-pink-heart-plastered phenomenon we know today? In the mid-19th century, the heat of the industrial revolution, romantic phrases and images began popping up on greeting cards now that they could be mass-produced and sold at affordable prices.


The Time article noted that Cadbury’s heart-shaped boxes of chocolates originated in the 1860s, the Hershey Kisses in 1907 and Valentine’s Day-themed greeting cards were made by Hallmark in 1913.

As a society, we’ve upheld our love for love: in 2016, $19.7 billion was spent by consumers for Valentine’s Day. Yet, we still don’t know the official origin story of this day.


No matter how you feel about it, February 14 is coming and nearly every company has something to say about it. Valentine’s Day gives make-up companies a platform to release collections, candy companies to make heart-shaped sweets, jewelry stores to make that perfect necklace your girlfriend has pinned on her Pinterest wall a million times in the hopes that you see it, and the list goes on.


Whether or not you plan on feeding into the hype of Valentine’s Day, it will always be a major day in our society, especially for those of us getting into PR or Advertising. So, single, taken or “it’s complicated”, I encourage you to sit back, chow down on some discounted V-Day chocolate and pop in your favorite rom-com!


This blog post was written by Paige Kunkel, Director of Recruitment.

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  • Writer's pictureTemple PRSSA

The third membership spotlight of the spring semester is William Careri, a junior majoring in public relations. This is William’s first year as a member of PRSSA and he is a committed member of our chapter. He transferred to Temple from Northampton Community College in the fall of 2018 and became involved immediately. William can often be found writing blog posts and creating amazing graphics!


Here is a Q&A session with William:

Q: Where are you from? What is your major/minor?

A: I'm from Dingmans Ferry, Pennsylvania, roughly 2.5 hours North of Philadelphia. I'm currently majoring in public relations.


Q: Why do you love PRSSA? What do you hope to get out of it?

A: Before coming to Temple, I hadn't met another person that wanted to work in public relations. I love PRSSA because it just brings together PR majors from all over. Ideally, I just want to continue to work with PRSSA members and help us all grow. Each of us has diverse backgrounds and different future aspirations so it's exciting when we can help each other out in any way that we can.


Q: What committee are you a part of? What have you done with this committee?

A: I'm a member of the Digital Committee where I have mostly written blog posts. One of the blog posts I wrote about improving your LinkedIn page ended up getting me a job in the Klein College Career Center, so that's pretty cool!


Q: What PRSSA events have you participated in?

A: I was able to spend time in the Mentor/Mentee Program during the fall, which I'll do again this semester. I have also attended PRSSA-supported events like Networking 101, which was hosted by PPRA in the fall. I enjoy attending guest speaker events as well, those are always a treat.


Q: What other TU organizations are you a part of?

A: I am a junior account executive at PRowl Public Relations, Temple's student-run public relations firm.


Q: What is the coolest place you’ve ever visited?

A: In the spring of 2018, I was able to travel to Japan for the first time! I spent time in Tokyo as well as Kyoto. It was mesmerizing and I highly recommend a trip to Japan for anyone.


Q: Favorite social media platform and why?

A: MySpace, of course! (Just kidding) This answer is constantly changing as social media platforms change and evolve. I feel like this is the case for many people, especially in the past year. Where last year many might have said Snapchat, the evolution of Instagram and the de-evolution of Snapchat has changed that. Lately, I've become more encapsulated with Twitter, so I'll say that. Mostly because it's the easiest to interact with other users in a public space. Where Instagram and Facebook have privacy barriers more limiting, Twitter allows users to communicate through hashtags and you don't have to pass that "privacy barrier" to interact.


Q: Dream job?

A: I've been fortunate to work in many public relations settings through internships and shadowing opportunities, and I have to say that working in a large-scale firm focusing on consumer products is where I feel the most comfortable, am the most interested and where I can see myself working after college.


To learn more about William follow him on social media!


This blog post was written by Caitlin Gemmi, Digital Publications Editor & William Careri, General Body Member & Spotlight Recipient.

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