Richard Winston Edelman (born June 1954) is an American businessman, and the president and chief executive officer of public relations company Edelman, a company founded by his father, since 1996.
On May 18, 1986, he married Rosalind Anne Walrath in a Jewish ceremony at the Harvard Club of New York City.[5] His wife is the daughter of the then-creative director of advertising agency JWT, and was a vice president at the investment bank Keefe, Bruyette & Woods when they wed.[3] He has three daughters,[6] Margot, Tory, and Amanda.[7] In 2008, he was diagnosed with prostate cancer, and had successful surgery.[8] In 2015, it was announced that Edelman and Walrath were getting divorced. In 2017, Edelman married Mexican public servant Claudia Romo González,[9] and the couple lives in Manhattan.[10] Claudia had two children, Joshua and Tamara, in her previous marriage.
His two siblings, John and Renee, are also executives at Edelman, making Edelman the largest private, family-run public relations firm in the world.[11] His daughters, Margot and Tory, both work for the firm.[12]
Career
Richard Edelman joined the Edelman firm in 1978 after receiving his MBA from Harvard, where he had also studied as an undergraduate.[2] He had intended to take a job in marketing at Playtex, but his father persuaded him to join the family business.[6] He was an executive at Edelman by 1981 and in 1983, was appointed president of Edelman's New York office.[13][14] He was appointed president of the company in 1985, and his father remained as chief executive officer . At that time, the company's income was only $14.2 million.[2] He pledged to keep the company independent at a time when many other PR companies were being bought by advertising agencies.[15] He later became the regional manager of Europe before being promoted to chief executive officer in September 1996, a post he still holds.[16]
Edelman is a regular attendee at the World Economic Forum's annual meeting in Davos, having been nine times by 2007.[17] In a January 2012 presentation, his main message was that, based on a survey by his company, the public do not trust governments and business executives anymore - they are the least trusted of any group.[18]
Social media
Edelman was one of the first PR practitioners to identify the importance of social media and create a specialist practice.[19] He coined the phrase circle of cross influence to describe how people are increasingly influenced by other people, the internet, new media and cable TV, rather than mainstream media.[20][21] He has written a blog since 2004, and is one of the first chief executive officers to do so.[22][23] In 2007 PRWeek described his blog as one of the better-known PR blogs, in part due to some of his posts being controversial.[17]
He has advised the Canadian tar sands industry how to counter negative PR from NGOs using social media.[24]
In September 2014 he was inducted into the Arthur W. Page Society Hall of Fame.[29]
In March 2019 he was named "Agency Pro of the Last 20 Year." by PRWeek.[30]
Views
Shortly after the mortgage lending crisis, Edelman said that financial institutions have a PR problem. He claimed that financial institutions rank lowest on the company's trust barometer, because they don't explain the how and why of their actions to the public.[31] Richard Edelman spends about an hour per day voicing his views on the company blog that he started to set an example for his clients.[32]