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Home>Marketing Articles>Communications>Effective PR in eight steps
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Eight easy steps to positive media
attention
Im often asked for advice on this one. And with good reason ...
media exposure is probably the most cost-effective way of communicating with your
marketplace. Follow these steps and you will discover that it is surprisingly easy to get
exposure for your business.
-
Choose a publication that communicates with your market.
-
Write a newsworthy story - a story that will capture the
attention of the readers (and therefore the journalist) of this publication. Tell your
story the way the publications' readers would like to hear it, not the way you would like
to tell it.
-
Give your story a powerful benefit headline and, if
possible, choose a story with a use-by date (like a seminar or a special event of
some kind).
-
Read the publication and identify a journalist that has written
a story with a content similar to yours.
-
Phone the publication and ask for that journalist by name. Tell
the journalist that you have a story that might interest their readers and then relate
your storys headline (fire your big gun first).
-
If the journalist perceives that you have a good story they will
probably ask you to send some information. Fax them your story along with any other
relevant information you have (include copies of stories written by other journalists).
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If you dont hear from the journalist within a few days, it
often pays to follow up by phone. Just be sure to keep your tone low key.
(Its nice to phone simply to advise them of a new development.)
-
Assuming your story goes to print, it is imperative that you
thank the journalist. In fact even if your story doesnt make it to the
publications pages, I would still thank the journalist for giving it their
consideration.
How not to do it ...
Ive seen many companies produce literally hundreds of conventional
(read boring) press kits and post them to every newspaper and T.V. station they could
think of.
Well this kind of shotgun strategy will work if you have a story
that is absolutely earth shattering, but if you dont ... it probably wont.
Journalists prefer to feel that they have discovered an exclusive scoop, rather
than being battery-fed a mass-produced media release.
Unless you are dealing with a very small publication, do not try to bribe
media with advertising dollars. Journalists (quite rightly) believe that they are servants
of the general public and not servants of yours. (Adverts will not generally sell
newspapers, but good editorial will).
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