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Showing posts with the label Trust

Navigating Data Privacy and AI Ethics in APAC PR: A Guide for Brands

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Artificial intelligence has been called the future of communications. But in Asia-Pacific, the future comes with fine print. While brands are racing to embed AI into PR and marketing, the real risk isn’t the tech itself -- it’s the rules around it . Ignore Asia’s evolving privacy laws and ethical expectations, and your next PR win could quickly turn into your next PR mess. This isn’t theory. It’s happening now. And for brands operating across multiple APAC markets, the patchwork of regulations and cultural expectations can make the difference between building trust and burning it. The Patchwork Problem: Why One-Size-Fits-All Doesn’t Work Unlike Europe’s GDPR, APAC is far from harmonised. Singapore has the Personal Data Protection Act (PDPA) with strict consent requirements. Thailand’s PDPA only recently came into force, leaving brands scrambling. Malaysia is in the middle of overhauling its law, while China has the Personal Information Protection Law (PIPL), which is  arguabl...

The Evolving Role of Influencer Marketing in Southeast Asia: Beyond the Mega-Influencer

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For years, the influencer playbook in Southeast Asia was simple: hire the biggest name you could afford, sit back, and watch the likes roll in. But the rules have changed. Today, audiences are savvier, regulators are catching up, and the real influence is shifting from the red-carpet “mega” stars to the smaller, hungrier, more authentic voices shaping communities online. If you’re still chasing follower counts as your north star, you’re not just behind the curve; you’re burning budget. The Shift: From Mega to Micro (and Nano) In markets like Indonesia, the Philippines, and Malaysia, consumers are starting to tune out big-ticket endorsements. Why? Because they smell scripted, staged, and bought. Enter micro- and nano-influencers: creators with 1,000 to 50,000 followers, often laser-focused on niche communities e.g., parenting groups, gaming circles, sustainable living advocates, you name it. They may not have the lure or gloss of a celebrity, but their engagement rates are often higher...

Why AI Product-Market Fit Differs from SaaS -- and How to Succeed

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In tech, product-market fit (PMF) has always been the holy grail. For SaaS, hitting PMF often feels like crossing the finish line. You’ve nailed retention, customers are sticky, and growth follows. AI? Not so simple. Here, PMF isn’t a milestone. It’s a treadmill that only speeds up. Models evolve weekly, expectations shift daily, and hype fades fast if products don’t deliver trust and real-world value. This matters even more in Southeast Asia’s AI market , which is second only to North America in generative AI adoption. Indonesia and Vietnam are leading the charge, with 42% of ecommerce sellers already using AI. Governments are rolling out AI strategies, and by 2027, AI could pump $120 billion into regional GDP. Big numbers. But here’s the catch: without sustained value, AI ventures burn out fast. SaaS Product-Market Fit vs. AI Product-Market Fit SaaS has always had a playbook: build an MVP, launch, iterate, and once you’ve got PMF, you’re pretty much set. Retention is the golden ...

Media Coverage ≠ Impact

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Headlines don’t prove ROI. Discover why media coverage is a vanity metric, and how to measure communication by real impact: trust, behaviour, and outcomes. Agencies love to brag about “media coverage.” The number of headlines. The stack of clippings. The glossy PDF full of logos. But here’s the truth: media coverage without impact is just wallpaper. It looks nice, but it doesn’t fill the room. If your audience doesn’t think differently, feel differently, or act differently, all you’ve got is noise. Coverage vs. Impact: The Real Difference Coverage = visibility. Did the story run? Was the brand mentioned? Impact = outcomes. Did people shift their thinking, trust more, or act differently because of that story? One gets you attention. The other moves your business forward. Why Counting Headlines is a Vanity Metric No one remembers logos on a PDF. What people remember is how a story made them think differently. Volume doesn’t equal influence. Ten tiny pickups in ...

Reputation Isn’t Built by Press Releases

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Reputation isn’t built by press releases. It’s shaped by what people say when they think no one’s listening. Here’s how unseen chatter can derail your brand, and what to do about it. Companies love their press releases. Glossy language, approved quotes, carefully chosen words. But here’s the uncomfortable truth: your reputation isn’t built in those polished paragraphs. It’s built in the conversations you don’t control. The comments whispered at the coffee shop. The WhatsApp messages between frustrated customers. The grumbles employees share at lunch. That’s where reputations are shaped; and often, where they’re broken. The Story No Press Release Could Save A few years ago, a well-known brand (no names, but you’d recognise them instantly) invested heavily in a “positive PR push.” Press releases were flowing, coverage looked great on paper, and the leadership team was confident. But beneath the surface, informal chatter was telling a different story. Customers were quietly compla...

From Awareness to Advocacy: Why Malaysian Brands Still Struggle with Trust

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We talk a lot about “brand awareness” in Malaysia. Campaigns, events, social spends... everyone wants eyeballs. But let’s be honest: awareness is the easy part. What most brands can’t seem to crack is trust . And without trust, all that awareness is just noise. We’ve all seen it. A campaign goes viral, hashtags trend for a week... and then… silence. Or worse, the brand takes a hit when people start asking: “Okay, but do I actually believe them?” The Malaysian Trust Deficit Here’s the kicker: Malaysians are naturally sceptical. Years of over-promising (and under-delivering) have made audiences sharper, quicker to call out BS. Add to that the megaphone of social media, where one bad review on TikTok or a rant in a WhatsApp group can undo months of brand building. And let’s not pretend we haven’t seen brands get dragged in the comments -- sometimes deservedly, sometimes not. That’s the reality of reputation management in Malaysia today. We’ve sat with brands that had all the awarene...

The Future of Strategic Communications in Malaysia: 2025 and Beyond

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Strategic communications isn’t a “nice-to-have” anymore. In Malaysia, it has become a core business function i.e., shaping reputation, steering conversations, and helping organisations navigate a world where trust is currency. And here’s the reality: the brands that still treat PR as decoration will lose ground fast. The ones that view communications as capital will win. At Orchan, we’ve seen both sides of that equation -- startups that built credibility from day one and corporates that paid the price for silence when it mattered most. So, what’s next for strategic communications in Malaysia? Here’s what 2025 (and beyond) is bringing our way, and why it matters to your business. 1. Trust Will Be the Ultimate Differentiator Malaysians have always valued relationships but now trust sits at the heart of survival. Communities aren’t shy about holding brands accountable; one misstep can spiral across WhatsApp groups and TikTok in hours. The cost? Lost customers, shaken investor confi...

Reputation Management in Malaysia: Building Trust Beyond the Headlines

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Reputation isn’t just PR fluff anymore. It’s not about glossy press clippings or a viral stunt that gets you trending for a day. Reputation is a business currency;  and in Malaysia, it’s often the difference between being trusted or being torn apart. Why Reputation Hits Different Here Here’s the thing about Malaysia: people talk. And they don’t just talk... they share, screenshot, forward to family WhatsApp, WeChat or Telegram groups, and pile on in the comments. One slip, one badly phrased remark, one campaign that misses cultural nuance… and you’re not just facing a PR headache. You’re facing community outrage. It’s not just about customers either. Regulators are watching. Investors are watching. Employees are watching. Everyone wants to know: can we trust you? That’s why “just keep quiet and hope it blows over” isn’t a strategy. It’s a gamble - and one that rarely pays off. Short-Term Noise vs. Long-Term Reputation Publicity? That’s short-term. It’s the sugar rush of marke...

How to Choose the Best PR Agency in Malaysia: A Practical Guide for Brands

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When you search “best PR agency in Malaysia ,” you’ll find endless lists, awards, and glossy websites. Every agency claims to be the most creative, the most connected, or the most “integrated.” But the truth is: the best PR agency for your brand depends on more than hype or a clever tagline. At its core, public relations is about trust, reputation, and relationships. Choosing the right partner can make the difference between a campaign that fades after a press release, and one that builds lasting credibility. So, how do you separate the buzz from the substance? 1. Look Beyond the Hype A slick website or big client logos don’t tell the full story. Ask: What measurable impact did the agency deliver for those clients? Are there long-term relationships, or just one-off projects? Do they have sector-specific experience (e.g., fintech , lifestyle, NGOs) that matches your needs? The best PR partners don’t just chase headlines. They help you build brand equity over time. 2. Test Their Crisis...

#BlastFromThePast: When Orchan Wore the Cape

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It’s not every day (or even every year) an agency gets to wear a superhero cape. But in 2015, Orchan Consulting Asia did just that, taking home not one but two accolades at Advertising + Marketing Magazine’s AOTY Awards: PR Agency of the Year (Bronze) and the coveted Local Hero Award . The Bronze win recognised our results across three fronts: success for our clients, success as an agency, and contribution to the wider communications industry. In other words, it was a nod to the work we delivered throughout 2014 - campaigns that weren’t just effective, but cost-savvy, creative, and industry-shaping. The Local Hero Award carried its own weight. As a proudly Malaysian-owned boutique agency competing against mostly international heavyweights, being singled out as a “hero” agency meant our approach was cutting through. It showed that businesses value the way Orchan thinks and the change we orchestrate for their brands. Managing Director, Craig J Selby and Founding Director, Farrell ...