'Exposure' Category Archive

Posted on Aug 12th, 2007

The next time a newspaper photographer takes your photo, remember the 8 things they hate:

1. Bossy people who demand that other people be included in the photo, so there won’t be hurt feelings. Never tell the photographer whom to photograph. This puts them on the spot. Usually, the photographer will oblige and take a few shots just to placate you, then make a mental note that you’re a real pain to deal with.

2. Know-it-all photo subjects, usually amateur photographers, who think they know the correct angles, lighting and backdrops. The photographer doesn’t tell you how to do your job. So you shouldn’t tell her how to shoot a photo.

3. Not giving the photographer enough time to take a photo. After he arrives, he might want to look around, consider several different backdrops, check and double-check equipment, make sure the lighting is adequate, and experiment by shooting you in several different settings. So don’t rush him.

4. Public relations people and staff members who act like bodyguards and refuse to let the photographer talk one-on-one with the photo subject. Photographers like one-on-one contact for several reasons. It makes the photo subject feel more at ease. It also helps the photographer discover something about the photo subject that they that might not have known.

5. Inconsiderate people who leave the photographer waiting for half an hour in the lobby. Call media outlets as soon as you know there will be a delay in case the photographer wants to reschedule. Every minute you make a photographer wait is one less minute they can spend helping you look good.

6. Demanding to see the negatives so you can choose the photo you want printed. Leave this decision to the photographer and photo editor.

7. Demanding that you get to keep the negatives. The negatives are the property of the media outlet. They are under no obligation whatsoever to give them to you, although some media outlets will sell you a print.

8. People who ask if the photographer can send them 10 reprints—for free. Don’t make this request of reporters or editors, either. Call the publication and order them yourself, and expect to pay.

Trat photographers the way you want to be treated. Help them make you look good, and the extra time you spend with them will be well worth it.

Joan Stewart, a.k.a. The Publicity Hound, shows you how to use the media to establish your credibility, enhance your reputation, sell more products and services, promote a favorite cause or issue, and position yourself as an employer of choice. She publishes “The Publicity Hound’s Tips of the Week,” a free ezine on how to generate thousands of dollars in free publicity. Subscribe at http://www.PublicityHound.com and receive by email the free checklist “89 Reasons to Send a News Release.”

Posted on Aug 7th, 2007

If you want to succeed, build a great team. A great team multiplies your prospects for success; it enables you to form relationships with powerful people who can make your dreams come true. A great network supports your strengths, fills in your weaknesses and allows you to d build on your teammates’ accomplishments. When you have a great team, people assume that you are great and will stand in line to get to know you, do business with you, and help you. They will also be delighted to pay your price.

Okay, so you understand the value of a strong network. Now, how do you get started in building a great network?

Well, unless you’ve been living in total seclusion, you already have a network in place. And your network is probably more extensive than you realize. It may not be a great network yet, but it’s a beginning and a place from which to build. Your network most likely consists of your family, friends, schoolmates and business associates. It includes people with whom you’ve conducted business, socialized or otherwise interacted. In addition, the members of your network members’ networks are also members of your network. Therefore, if your accountant is a member of your network, so are all the members of your accountant’s network.

To build great networks, you need great people: great lawyers, doctors, dentists, accounts, insurance agents, friends, etc. If a disaster arose in the middle of the night, whom would you call? Can you count on him/her? Would he/she solve your problem? If a disaster arose in the middle of the night, who would call you? How could you help? Could they count on you?

If you want to build a great network, you must continually expand and upgrade your existing network. Everything always changes and what constitutes a great network today, could be less than great tomorrow. Network members drop out and lose interest: they change businesses, interests, and their lives and so will you. In networking, expanding and upgrading is a never-ending process: heads of states, CEOs, established leaders at every strata of society are constantly seeking to find the best people and incorporate them into their networks, add them to their teams. So the process of expanding and upgrading never stops; it’s what building a network is about.

To expand and upgrade your network requires focus. Once you realize that you have a network, it’s time sharpen your focus and begin to see with new eyes. Continually look for new and better network members and search for links that tie your network members with virtually everyone you meet and everything you experience. Search for opportunities for your network members and help them reach their goals.

Follow the example of the successful people in your life. Have you noticed how frequently they take new information and relate it to their particular area of expertise? Have you observed that writers tend to see everything as material for potential stories, financiers always look at the bottom line, publicists think about promotional possibilities, comics turn everything into humor, lawyers probe for hidden liabilities and medical workers zero in on health?

Well, successful networkers operate on the same principle. They’re obsessed with connections and instinctively search for them. Accomplished networkers see the world in terms of leads, contacts, and opportunities that will bring them closer to network relationships. They view the world optimistically and see every possibility as an opening that could lead them to their pot of gold.

Examine how the successful people you know process new information. Then apply their methods to your situation.

In most cases, your contacts have been around for quite a while. However, you confined them to specific niches. To you they were friends, family, business associates, or service people, not potential network contacts. When you expand your awareness to see those around you also as members of your network, you can refine your networking focus.

Focus on networking. Practice honing your networking focus until it becomes a highly-developed skill. Begin by:

* Asking yourself if people you know, meet or hear about could help you network.

* Clarifying precisely how these people could help. For example, introduce you to the mayor, recommend you for the membership in the garden club or inform you where they found their antique Venetian carnival masks.

* Find out what places and events would be worth attending to expand your contacts.

* Question how you can make the best use of information to connect you with your targets.

Developing networking focus isn’t difficult and before long, it will become second nature. Work to get it down pat because the ability to focus sharply is a priceless skill that will bring you rewards for the rest of your life.

Jill Lublin, author of the best selling book, Guerrilla Publicity, is a renowned public relations strategist and marketing expert. Jill is founder of GoodNews Media, Inc. a company specializing in positive news. She is currently the host of the nationally syndicated radio show, Do the Dream where she interviews celebrities who have achieved their dreams. Jill also has a TV pilot, The Good News, and an upcoming book, Networking Magic (Adams Media). Websites: www.promisingpromotion.com and www.jilllublin.com.

Posted on Aug 6th, 2007

Although it seems less common these days, there are still a fair number of us public relations practitioners who enter the business by crossing over from the journalist’s side of the notebook.

When you make that transition, you become something of an oracle. Colleagues and clients expect you to be the walking, talking answer to the Rubik’s cube puzzle of how to gain the attention of the media. If only it were that simple!

Landing media placements is at least as much about art as it is science.

But it’s also about you and who you are as a PR person. What did I learn in two decades of writing and editing for newspapers, magazines and news services?

First of all, a PR pro doesn’t need a journalistic pedigree to succeed with journalists.

But you do have to possess something else: knowledge of what journalists really want from PR people. I’m not talking about what journalists want from your story – that’s another subject.

I’m talking about you. Do you know what journalists want from you, as the individual who’s e-mailing, faxing, calling and (too often, I fear) pestering them?

Here’s my short list of attributes that will get you a hearing from journalists (and that’s all you want – your story will sink or float on its own merits):

1. Honest brokers

Journalists know PR people have something to promote – a company, a product, a point of view. That’s not the issue.

It’s whether the journalist trusts that the story is coming from someone who won’t waste their time – someone who has invested the effort to understand them, their organization, their boss, and whether the story might interest the audience the journalist serves.

Trust is fundamental – but it’s also earned. Becoming an honest broker requires more than one conversation with a journalist. It requires enough dialogue that a relationship and a history of honest dealings can be established.

2. Facilitators

Face it, journalists don’t want to talk to PR people – at least not on the record, and not as newsmakers.

Good PR practitioners know they’re not newsmakers. They recognize that their role is to make stories happen, not be part of them. So good PR pros focus on being matchmakers, putting journalists together with the sources who make stories come alive.

For the PR pro, as well as the journalist, it’s all about the story. It’s not about you, or the institutional challenges you face in making the story happen. It’s about making the story real. And that leads me to what journalists really, really want from PR practitioners (and what we should strive to be):

3. Advocates for communication

No journalist wants to deal with a PR person who’s primarily unavailable, and when he or she is available, has a vocabulary limited to phrases such as “no comment.”

All other things being equal (including working for an organization or a leader who doesn’t communicate) journalists still give the benefit of the doubt to a PR person whom they know to be an advocate of communication.

That doesn’t mean someone who’s going to speak at inappropriate times about subjects that aren’t in the best interests of their organization. It means someone who understands deadlines, editors, the competition and the other pressures that journalists face while trying to do their jobs.

It means someone who understands that the best interests of their organization always include good relationships with the news media, the trusted purveyors of independent information for the customers, employees, investors and other audiences that the PR pro wants to reach.

In the end, that’s what all of media relations is really about: A good journalist and a good PR pro want to serve their audiences first.

It’s not always possible for journalists and PR pros to achieve that objective from their respective viewpoints in every interaction. But over the course of time, in a relationship of trust, respect and understanding, honest brokers who facilitate the story and advocate for communication will succeed in landing media placements.

Paul Furiga is president of WordWrite Communications LLC, a Pittsburgh-based virtual agency. He is the former editor of the Pittsburgh Business Times, and has also covered Congress, the White House, edited magazines and written for publications ranging from Congressional Quarterly to Frequent Flyer magazine.

Posted on Aug 5th, 2007

Media placement is an art. Practicing it often requires as much attention to approach and style as it does to the focus of your story. While it’s important to know how to use creative formatting techniques that can enhance editorial reception to a story (see article, “Using Publicity As A Creative Marketing Tool”) publicists can benefit from mastering some useful tips prior to approaching, by e-mail, snail mail or phone, the keepers of the media gate. Some Basic Assumptions:

* Always tell the truth. Make sure your product or service does what it says it does and your information is accurate. If a question is put to you that you do not have an answer for, indicate to the reporter you’ll get back with the information. If you don’t, the info will come from someone else–and not necessarily from a source that will help your organization. Never “imagine” or “fudge” an answer. Remember, candor equals credibility. If your organization has taken an action that has reaped negative consequences, counsel your client to admit the mistake (unless the client is constrained from doing so by legal counsel). Negativity can also be mitigated if you can anticipate a reporter’s tough question, and frame an answer that puts the action into historical perspective; or by developing a positioning statement that lessens the harshness implied in the question. (For example, when a poisonous substance infiltrated Tylenol bottles, the company issued the statement that “we are victims too”).

* Know your outlet before you call. Have you read the magazine or newspaper in advance? Have you watched the tv program? Have you listened to the radio show? With print media, do you know the specific beat of the editor or reporter you intend to make contact with? Have you read his/her stories? It’s fine to cold call but don’t cold call blindly (unless there really is vagueness about that person’s turf).

* Attitude. There are some p.r. people whose emotional lives seem to count on an editor’s acceptance; and who feel like failures when the editor says “no.” “Unattachment” is the best attitude. “Unattachment” doesn’t mean “detachment” or “apathy.” It means coming from a centered place, with self-confidence in yourself and your ability to communicate a story effectively – but without being attached to the outcome. You’ll find this a liberating approach, one that disallows you from becoming intimidated by an editor or producer, and one that enables you to return to the same person in the future with no regrets. When an editor perceives that you are not overly emotionally invested in a story, you may actually get a better hearing. Be warm & polite, professional…and clear. See that individual as a peer and colleague. If they’re brusque in the moment, they may be having a bad day. Simply ask if there’s a better time to get back to them.

* That said, believe in your story and believe in yourself. The best p.r. people see themselves as resources of news and information who work with journalists to fill valuable time & print space.

* Be more empathetic than sympathetic. Being empathetic enables you to build on what was said and resond with alternate approaches. Being sympathetic means you’ve probably foreclosed the possibility of an alternate approach.

* Get out of the reporter’s way. When you’re providing a reporter, editor or producer information where the story is time-sensitive, relay the information and get out of the way. There’s a time for pitching an idea, and there’s a time for simply relaying information. In the case of the latter, act like an editorial assistant. Do your job and get out. You’ll earn the journalist’s respect when you do so.

* Don’t waste their time. When you call, communicate in sharp and crystallized fashion, the essence of the story. Keep it brief, respect deadlines and ask in advance if the moment is ok for that editor/ producer. NEVER call when you know an editor is under deadline pressure. Keep your message on-point and as brief as possible, but craft it in a compelling and creative way that will earn attention.

* Personalize. I’ve seen too many impersonal, photocopied pitch letters, whether via e-mail or snail mail. If you send something in advance to a call, or as a follow-up to a call, personalize. Don’t be overly chummy (unless you’ve been on good terms with that journalist for a long time). But keep sensitive to the fact that you’re a human being, and you’re communicating with a human being. For e-mails, craft a provocative phrase in the “subject” area. Too many e-mail messages get unread without a compelling lead.

* Listen to the editor. It’s as important to listen as it is to talk. Be sensitive to any verbal feedback, cues or clues that can assist you in fine-tuning your pitch. Keep your antennae fully extended.

* Respect the ‘no’ and be prepared for it. Ask quick, important questions: What is it about this story that doesn’t seem right for you? Is there anyone else for whom this story might work better? Suggest how the story can be adapted to the outlet’s needs. Best of all, suggest three to five different angles in advance. This reduces chances for rejection.

* But when you get your final no, let it go and release it. YOU haven’t been rejected, just your story. And if you’ve handled the approach professionally and cordially, you’ll always be able to come back with another story at another time. Regard your list of cultivated contacts as resources and investments for the long-haul, not for quick fix purposes.

* Occasionally, pass along an item of interest that lies outside your own sphere of self-interest. Be someone who’s not always out to get something. Also, supply your most important contacts with your home phone number.

* Get out from behind your desk. The better you get to know the journalist on a one-to-one basis, the better your chance of a receptive ear.

* Getting beyond voice mail. Leave a succinct, provocative, targeted message. If you don’t hear from them in two days, try calling early, or leave a message with an editorial assistant or colleague. Call back that other person to learn if your message was received and if there’s a return message. Sometimes, you can ask the switchboard for the department that person works in, rather than a specific voice mail.

Remember that an editor or producer is buying you as well as your story. The bottom line is trust. It’s up to you to earn it.

Mike Schwager is President of Worldlink Media Consultants, Inc., based in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. He is an accomplished veteran of media interview training, and has conducted successful trainings for scores of CEO’s and other senior executives, politicians, celebrities and authors. Website: www.mediamavens.com. E-mail: michael@mediamavens.com.

Posted on Aug 4th, 2007

You have a story to tell. Your company has developed a revolutionary new product, or an improved version of one that is known and respected in the marketplace. Most companies are media-savvy enough to take a proactive approach to publicity. Yet there are many firms that instead sit on a new development, waiting for the press to come to them because they are unsure of how to “break the news.”

The vehicle for the announcement is critical. One should avoid the “shot-gun” approach to publicity. In most cases, a technique referred to as “editorial cultivation” works. Determine the appropriate initial outlet – a magazine or newspaper, for instance – and approach that venue with your story. Once the story breaks via your primary media choice, other vehicles can, and usually will follow.

There is nothing wrong with the standard news release, except that most are written without first contacting the appropriate editor at the preferred publication. The first hurdle is deciding who to contact.

Finding your target audience Establish your subject and audience. Once you have done so, the job becomes a matter of prioritizing the several most important print outlets for your story. If you already know your audience’s preferred industry publication, put it on the top of your list. For backups, refer to a directory like Bacon’s Magazine Directory, The Ayer Directory of Publications, or Ulrich’s International Periodicals Directory, all of which provide names of the leading magazines and journals listed under each industry. For each specific magazine, in addition to circulation figures, these sources list the outlet’s primary editorial contacts, including addresses, phone numbers and e-mail addresses.

Weigh the impact, immediacy and relevance of your story. In some cases, your news may have an impact on a wider marketplace and editorial audience than the sphere of influence of a trade magazine. Examples would be a merger, an acquisition or an initial public offering. Such news must be immediately disseminated. The best avenues may be: a national newspaper such as The New York Times, Wall Street Journal or USA Today; a national wire service, such as The Associated Press or Reuters; a business wire such as Dow Jones or Bloomberg; a business magazine like Business Week or Industry Week; or even a national news magazine such as Time, Newsweek or U.S. News & World Report.

A number of Internet resources through which breaking news can be disseminated quickly are the PR Newswire http://www.prnewswire.com and Businesswire http://businesswire.com. PR Newswire and Businesswire will carry a story over their wires and on the Internet for a fee paid by the source. Newswires provide the “insurance policy” that a story will definitely get out. Even if the article is printed in a newspaper or magazine, the newswire provides a good secondary backup for the dissemination, and the article will appear exactly as it has been provided to these outlets.

News releases, especially informative, well-written and succinct ones, are the sources of the majority of ideas and leads for a trade magazine editor. The news releases should be written in what is called the “inverted pyramid” style, with the “fattest,” most pertinent facts on top, and the less salient facts further down. The headline should capture the essence of the story, and the subheadings should clarify the impact.

For a technical news article, details are vital. Keep them as clear as possible; and translate technical jargon and “buzzwords” specific to a certain segment of the industry you are targeting, into terms that even a lay person can understand.

Reach out and touch someone For trade magazines and national news magazines alike, the initial phone call – or “cold call” – must be well-planned. Develop a pitch, or verbal presentation, that informs the editor of the significance of the story, and its relevance to his or her outlet. Keep your pitch short, succinct and newsworthy. Just as you would write a news release with the “fattest” or most pertinent facts on top, organize your verbal pitch to give the most important and interesting details right at the beginning.

One thing I do for all of my pitching is to capture in my mind the “essence,” “vision” and “overview” of the story, especially in the context of the news of the day and the aspect of the story that may be “evolutionary” or “revolutionary” in the context of historical perspective.

Try to keep the tone conversational. Communicate your story in a clear, concise, yet enthusiastic fashion. Point to the relevance and impact of your story on the editor’s readership, as well as to what is new and unusual about its content. If the editor “bites,” or at least seems interested, offer it as a first-exclusive if this particular media outlet is a prominent one and important to your organization. In all cases, be prepared to e-mail or fax the information, and send photos, technical illustrations or diagrams to visually describe technical information. Schedule interviews between the editor and your spokesperson if this is requested, or if it’s important to your organization to get its representative quoted.

Try to avoid voicemail, unless you have honed the pitch to a point where it is brief, clearly worded and convincing. Voicemail is a notorious playing field for “phone tag” and does not allow you to ask follow-up questions or to gauge the editor’s response, thereby fine-tuning your own approach. Voicemail is also used by some journalists as a method to “screen out” calls. Leaving a voicemail message supplemented and elucidated by an e-mail message does make sense, and in my experience e-mail often works, particularly after a live conversation has occurred (no matter how brief) or voicemail message has been left. After an initial communication, whether by voice and/or e-mail, follow-up in a day or two if you’ve not yet heard back from the editor.

Etiquette and other matters Respect deadlines. If you reach the editor live, and you discover he or she is near deadline, immediately indicate that you’ll return the call later. Better yet, learn in advance when that magazine’s deadline is occurring, and avoid reaching the editor at that time. If you do call at a good time, be personable, keep your pitch brief and relevant.

Know your story. Keep your enthusiasm high (but stay centered), and make sure you understand the story thoroughly. Confidence in the importance and viability of the story always communicates over the phone. Be warm, polite, professional and clear. If the editor is in a bad mood, be astute enough to know that you are not the cause.

If the news is very important to the company, the person entrusted with the call should be someone who has public relations or prior journalistic experience. It is prudent for a professional communicator to initiate the approach and deal with the editor as the primary contact. If the editor requires someone with technical expertise and in-depth knowledge of the technology, an expert’s name and contact information should be provided for a follow-up interview. Media relations representatives should always lead the editor back to themselves as the primary contact. And, this is important: as the media relations rep, remember in very “hot” news stories with short deadlines to get out of the editor’s way once you’ve “pitched” and “sold” the story. After that, see yourself as an “assistant” in helping the editor get the facts and the interviews, end of story. Don’t try to manipulate the story or get in the editor’s way, in any way. You’ll be respected for that, and will be able to come back to that person in good graces in the future.

On some occasions, the reporter or editor may wish to speak to the chief executive officer (CEO). If this happens, know in advance if the CEO is available for an interview. If so, make sure that he or she is prepared, as some CEOs may not be seasoned spokespersons. In this case, a conference call could be arranged between the CEO, p.r. representative and the editor.

Listen to the editor. Whether you initiate a cold call, speak to an editor calling in response to an e-mail message, or receive a cold call from an editor who is querying about a story or lead obtained through the newswire, it is as important to listen as it is to talk. Be sensitive to any verbal feedback, cues or clues that can assist you in fine-tuning your response.

Respect the “no” and be prepared for it. After an initial rejection, ask quick, important questions: “What is it about this story that doesn’t seem right for you? Is there any way this story can be adapted to better suit your needs?” Suggest changes. Best of all, prepare three to five different angles in advance, as this reduces chances for rejection.

What may be appropriate for one editor may not be appropriate for another. Before concluding a conversation, ask if the news might be more appropriate for someone else with a different beat, or in a different section of the magazine. If referred to a new person, introduce yourself by way of that referral. If you have exhausted all your angles to a story, thank the editor for his or her time and release yourself from this connection. Sour the contact, and it will be difficult, if not impossible, to maintain a credible relationship in the future.

Cultivate your contacts. Whenever feasible, try to meet the editors and reporters who are important to you. Offer to take them out to lunch, but do not be insulted if they decline. The better you get to know the journalist on a one-to-one basis, the better your chances of winning a receptive ear.

Do not be discouraged by the rejection of a story idea. If is far more important to keep the channels of communication open. Record the vital information about your journalistic contact in a Rolodex or software address book, such as Sharkware. Also, supply your most important contacts with your home phone number and/or cell phone number, signaling them that you can be reached after business hours. This practice communicates professionalism and reinforces your reputation as someone who goes “beyond the call of duty” to meet editorial needs.

Packing the punch. If your company is one of the fortunate few whose news is printed in a national publication, the story automatically becomes a prime candidate for the leading magazines within your industry, as well as for generic print and broadcast media. Remember, too, that broadcast often follows print (especially if you’ve placed a major wire service story or placed a story in a USA Today or Time Magazine).

When working with the media, remember to do your homework, hone your pitch and maintain a positive attitude.

THE PUBLIC RELATIONS CHECKLIST

* News releases should be double-spaced. Include the media contact’s name, phone number and e-mail, as well as the date and location from which the story originates.

* If a new product is being announced, include all operating parameters. Clearly described how the product works and how it differs from what currently exists in the marketplace. Do this by quantifying the benefits and advantages of this product and comparing it with competing technologies. Stress the user or customer benefits, and explain tangible results.

* Avoid terms such as cheaper, more efficient, fastest, unique and revolutionary without providing parameters by which these benefits can be measured.

* Products or other news leads should tie in with current trends or larger- scope news stories.

* Do not use acronyms without spelling them out, or buzz words without explaining them for the layman.

* For financial news releases, focus more on how the takeover, merger or acquisition will impact the reader or the marketplace, as opposed to the details about money and market shares.

* Provide quotes from executives who can comment on both technical and market information. And always go to the bottom of the line in asking.

* Use photos, charts, graphs or tables, with captions and information, to elaborate upon your story, especially if this is a new trend.

* Ask the journalist what he or she will require to make the interview successful.

Mike Schwager is President of Worldlink Media Consultants, Inc., based in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. He is an accomplished veteran of media interview training, and has conducted successful trainings for scores of CEO’s and other senior executives, politicians, celebrities and authors. Website: http://www.mediamavens.com. E-mail: michael@mediamavens.com.

Posted on Aug 1st, 2007

There’s the old joke about the two buzzards sitting in a tree overlooking a highway. One responds to the other, "Be patient? I’m hungry. Let’s kill something." Just like that buzzard, it is not in the nature of most marketers to be patient for business to grow. They want to go out and "kill something," too.

The trouble is that most marketers go after new business the wrong way. They want to "take down" the new piece of business using all the tools of the trade from advertising and direct mail to cold calling and event marketing. This is an expensive way to drum up business. Your existing clients are just waiting to tell you about people they know who could use your services, and then help sell you in to these people they refer. Not only is this more cost effective, it practically guarantees the prospects will share the same characteristics of your best customers.

"OK, Harry," you’re asking, "but how do I do it?"

The first rule of getting referrals: ask. When should you ask? Let’s review.

- After your customer has purchased something from you is a great time to ask. The new customer is pumped up about your offering and you can harness that energy by asking for names of others who could beneft from doing business with you.

- Upon delivery of your product or service is the next time to ask. The benefits of your offering should be readily apparent now, so you can remind the customer of the importance of their referrals.

- Anytime you have personal contact with your customer is a good time to ask. You are continuing to build a relationship with them and can use the opportunity to ask for referrals. Don’t ask more than three times per year.

Many people hesitate to ask for referrals because they are not sure how to do it. Just be honest. Tell your customers that referrals are very important to the growth of your business, and that you want to grow it with people just like them. Remind them that the people they know will benefit from your service the way that they have. Then, ask.

Tell your prospect that you’d like for them to give you the names of three or four people who might benefit from your services. Pull out a sheet of paper and pen and look expectantly at them. If they can’t immediately give you names, ask some prompting questions. Such as:

Who are your three best friends? Who are the most successful business people you know? Can you think of anyone who would benefit from my services?

Write the names down and keep writing until the customer runs out of names. Then, go back and ask for contact information for each one.

Thank the customer in the way you feel most comfortable. Some people like to send a gift, others will just drop a note of thanks. Some wait to see if the referral becomes a customer and then send a higher end gift. Do whatever works for you, but do thank them and keep them in the loop, letting them know about your follow up and the outcome of your prospecting.

So, don’t just sit there in your tree. Get out there and kill something.

Harry Hoover is managing principal of Hoover ink PR, http://www.hoover-ink.com. He has 26 years of experience in crafting and delivering bottom line messages that ensure success for serious businesses like Brent Dees Financial Planning, Duke Energy, Levolor, New World Mortgage, North Carolina Tourism, VELUX and Verbatim.

Posted on Jul 28th, 2007

Want to get radio interviews and coverage in print
publications to sell more books?

Master the art of writing magnetic media releases
that attract attention of editors and publishers.

A media release (which also goes by its former
name, the press release) is a one page, double spaced, single-sided document designed to transmit news about books, products, and people.

Because of its official sounding name, authors often
make the mistake of sounding like Sgt. Friday of the TV show "Dragnet" when they write the release, and make it Too fact oriented.

Don’t forget that real live people, editors and
producers, must pull the release from the fax machine and be motivated to read it.

Motivating Editors and Producers to Read Your Release
In today’s world, getting editors and producers to
actually read your release is a challenge. Every day,
people tap into the possibilities of free publicity and are becoming proactive in getting their voice heard.

As the producer of a lifestyle TV show, I receive
upward of two hundred releases a week. However,
only a small percentage are both appropriate for the
show and grab my attention.

Below are 10 tips to help you write releases that get your message heard.
1. Write an attention grabbing headline.
Realize that your headline must immediately
"hook" a busy producer or editor at first glance.
If your headline doesn’t hook them, they won’t read
further.

2. Be certain that your book is appropriate for the target audience.

Do not send a media release about your romance novel to a radio show that interviews only nonfiction authors. Wishful thinking is well and good, but realize that shows KNOW their target market.

3. Realize that there is a difference in format when sending a release by email and by fax.
A faxed release and release sent by mail can be
identical. However, an email release requires careful
crafting to get right and is an art onto itself. The key
concept to remember is twofold. First, the subject line spells the difference between the release being opened or deleted. Second, you must target delivery of the email release carefully, or you risk being banned forever to the recipient’s "bozo" file.

4. Be certain to include key information in a book
release such as your ISBN number, publication
date, page count and binding, and if you like
a small .jpeg of the cover.

5. You can increase your chances of
being booked on a radio station if you offer
to give away books on the show in your
release.

6. For media releases aimed at reviewers,
include information on how they can
get a book to review by email or fax.

7. Do not follow up to see if the recipient
received the release. If this is a show or
publication you are keenly interested in,
call them with "new information"
designed to create more excitement
in featuring you.

8. Keep a notebook with you and
jot down names of appropriate media
contacts as you read publications and
hear radio interviews.

9. Journalists and producers need you
and your news, but will lose respect if
you hammer them with releases that
don’t apply to their market or beat.
Discriminate.

10. Keep a "swipe file" of
clever advertisements or headlines
you can refer to when you need
a creative boost.

copyright 2004 Marisa D’Vari All rights reserved

Byline
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Posted on Jul 17th, 2007

How do you make a friend of the media? A press package can go a long way in helping you deal with the media. It allows you to have everything you need handy.

Many individuals in the media will ask you to send yourpress package to them, so it is very important to be sure to make one up and to keep it up to date.

What does a press package contain?

1. Your biography
2. Your picture
3. Information on Your Company
4. Press Releases
5. Any articles written about you

Note: If you are a frequent speaker, you also want to have an updated itinerary in your press package of where you will be speaking.

Copyright DeFiore Enterprises 2002

Interested in having your own successful, home based creative real estate investing business? Chuck and Sue have been helping folks start successful home based businesses for over 19 years, and we can help you too! To see how, visit http://www.homebusinesssolutions.com for the latest FREE tips and tricks, educational products and coaching in creative real estate investing and home based businesses. No time to visit the site? Subscribe to our "how to" Home Business Solutions Digest, it’s like having your own personal coach: mailto:subscribeHBS@homebusinesssolutions.com

Posted on Jul 7th, 2007

Another way to really become known in your area is to speak up. Make yourself available to talk to every civic,business and educational group that will have you. Stress your expertise, and, as with writing the newspaper column,never try to sell anything-except your reputation as a knowledgeable, trustworthy professional.

I know that many of you are saying. Not me! I hate talking in front of people. Well news flash - so do I. However, try a group like Toastmasters or small networking groups to start out and then work your way up. It’s a great way to become known as an expert in your field, and for those of us in real estate a great way to sell our end user manuals for sellers and tenant buyers.

Be sure however, before you start going to networking group meetings that you have your 30 second commercial done.

A 30 second commercial tells someone what you do in 30 seconds or less. For example, we have two of them. When I’m at a networking meeting and introduce myself I say, "Hi,I’m Sue, I help sellers move their home in 30 days or less and  help buyers get into a dream home today that they can purchase tomorrow, what do you do!" or "Hi, I’m Sue, I help people start the perfect home based business".

So get your commercial done and start networking and speaking! I know you can do it if you’ll just give it a try!

Copyright DeFiore Enterprises 2002

Interested in having your own successful, home based creative real estate investing business? Chuck and Sue have been helping folks start successful home based businesses for over 19 years, and we can help you too! To see how, visit http://www.homebusinesssolutions.com for the latest FREE tips and tricks, educational products and coaching in creative real estate investing and home based businesses. No time to visit the site? Subscribe to our  "how to" Home Business Solutions Digest, it’s like having your own personal coach: mailto:subscribeHBS@homebusinesssolutions.com

Posted on Jun 27th, 2007

A PR product or service launching is a perfect way to build momentum slowly. It handles the first and most important hurdle to overcome in building a brand — credibility.

Step 1: Be a leak-er. The media adores describing events that are "going" to occur. Use it and use it to its longest capacity. Don’t jump out too soon.

Step 2: The Slow Buildup. Like a rose, slow gets more beautiful to people the more it unfolds. It is the way people expect and are comfortable with, respect it.

Step 3: Recruit natural allies to support your launch and buildup. Especially, the enemy of your competitors.

Step 4: Bottom-up rollout. You don’t want to jump up to the roof and yell, people just think you’re crazy. Begin at the lowest rung on the ladder first. Consider each rung a media outlet. Each media creates its own momentum, its own attraction.

Step 5: Listen and Adjust. Be very aware of credible comments and adjust accordingly. Don’t react but do respond.

Step 6: Make message modifications. What attributes are working and build on them. Observe media feedback and watch for media nosebleeds.

Step 7: Patience. Launch occurs after PR has run its course, not before. Have a big D-day planned with a massive approach.

After PR comes advertising and not before. The advertising handles the conventional hurdle — being popular enough so people buy. Conventional, people buying because other people are buying, never comes before credibility. Credibility is why the most effective brand launching starts with PR.

(c) 2004, Catherine Franz.

Catherine Franz, a Business Coach, specialized in writing, marketing and product development. Newsletters and additional articles: http://www.abundancecenter.com. An expanded view on this topic, "Brand Building: The Ideal Way" is available in the articles section.

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