Business
Articles
PR Secrets to Unlock Your
Promotional Potential
By Gail Martin
For many business owners, Public Relations (PR)
efforts are a black hole, an unknown that makes them hesitant
to invest time and money. Handled correctly and approached
with realistic expectations, PR can be one of the most cost-effective
tools in your marketing toolbox.
Here are five things every business owner should
know about PR:
Fact #1: PR offers you several things
that you can’t buy with a paid ad. Articles are considered
to be more credible than advertisements, so whenever you or
your business is featured in an article, the reader considers
the information more credible than whatever you say in an
ad (where you are obviously trying to sell something). Articles—even
short ones—usually say more about your business than will
fit in all but the largest ads. Articles also have the benefit
of being what someone else (the reporter) says about you,
and hence are seen as more credible than what you say about
yourself.
Fact #2: There are several important
differences between advertising and PR. When you pay for an
ad, you pay to have it run in a specific issue or at a specific
time. A press release may generate an article six months after
the release is sent out. Neither you—nor the PR professional—can
control the timing. With an ad you have written and paid for,
you control exactly what the ad says. While you can write
a press release yourself, the article that actually runs is
likely to be edited or changed by the reporter.
Fact #3: Short of owning the newspaper
or the magazine, no PR practitioner can guarantee an article
will get placed. Your publicist can put the information in
its most attractive form in front of the best-positioned editors
at the right magazines, and through personal follow up, can
highlight the reasons they should be interested, but no one
can guarantee placement unless they own the magazine.
Fact #4: One-shot PR doesn’t work. Unless
you are announcing a special event for the calendar page,
releases don’t get 100% pickup (and even with a special event,
100% placement is rare). There are many reasons for this,
even when the release is properly written and sent to the
right person. They include:
- The editor has already planned the next several months
(or full year) of articles and doesn’t have room.
- It reminds them of something else they’ve run recently.
- They like the general idea, but this particular release
doesn’t strike their fancy.
- They file it with future ideas, then leave the company,
and the new editor pitches the old file and starts over.
- There are too many possible article ideas and not enough
space.
Your best odds of getting stories placed is to send out a
new release every month—or as often as you can come up with
something newsworthy—and stay on the editors’ radar.
Fact #5: Value is created even without immediate placement.
Your publicist has researched the best newspapers/magazines
for your target audience, identified the editor most likely
to be interested in your story, written the initial release,
emailed it to the editor/reporter, and followed up by phone
or email. After that round of distribution and follow-up,
editors will be aware of your company, and the next time they
get something about you, they will be more receptive and already
know who you are.
The customer’s timing to buy is not always your timing to
sell. That holds true for editors as well as product buyers.
Successful marketing and PR means keeping a consistent presence
so that when the editor is ready to tell a story about your
topic, he thinks of you. The key to success is being in front
of the editor often enough that you are the subject of choice
when an article about your specialty fits with their editorial
need.
The value of one positive article can recoup the effort put
into the PR process, and can create much more business than
a single ad. The biggest secret to successful PR is patience.
Gail Z. Martin owns DreamSpinner Communications and
helps companies in the U.S. and Canada tell the Real Story
of their business through exceptional writing and marketing.
Gail has an MBA in marketing and over 20 years of corporate
and non-profit experience at senior executive levels. She
is also the author of The Summoner, a fantasy adventure novel.
Sign up for a FREE email mini course, FREE marketing conference
call and a FREE teleseminar on Telling Your Real Story, at
http://www.DreamSpinnerCommunications.com
Find out more about Gail’s books at http://www.ChroniclesOfTheNecromancer.com
Contact Gail at 704-595-9581 to start telling the Real Story
of your business.
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