Published on 24th June 2025
This insights post is a summary of the blog post published by RH Strategic. View the full insight at: The Power of Many: How Associates can Help Your Communication Strategy.
Trade associations—groups of businesses in the same profession that collaborate and work together towards common objectives—are more than networking groups. They can be your organization’s insurance policy against federal whiplash. When groups like the American Public Health Association, Association of American Universities or National Council of Nonprofits mobilize collective advocacy or issue joint statements, those groups can carry weight that individual companies can’t match.
The need for collection advocacy is something that is playing out in real time across multiple sectors. With tariffs threatened on electronic components like LED lights and lithium batteries, the Consumer Technology Association, whose member companies range from tech titans like Amazon and Verizon to small device manufacturers, coordinated a strategic response. The associations responses included a six-figure ad campaign and meetings with Capitol Hill lawmakers.
In higher education, many associations are filing legal challenges on behalf of individual institutions. They are using associations to lead a response to the administration’s funding and policy changes.
According to RH Strategic, there are several elements of a strategic communications framework that will provide the maximum impact including:
To get more details about the framework and engaging with an association, read the full post at: The Power of Many: How Associates can Help Your Communication Strategy.
23 Feb 2026
Creating Strong Narrative for a Boring CategoryFor companies in public relations and professional services, competing for business through…
17 Feb 2026
6 Goals for Tech PR Strategy in 2026We are well into 2026, and we are starting to see marketing…
12 Feb 2026
Advantages of influencer relations vs. traditional media relationsThis insights post is a summary of the blog post published by HBI…