10 Rules for Quick and Easy PR
For startup companies with small budgets, gaining an
advantage for your new business or a new product through
advertising is both a challenging and risky venture. Once the initial budget is
gone, there are seldom second chances.
A good public relations strategy is an alternative
to advertising. Effective PR is a cost-effective way to gain editorial exposure
for your product, get more leads, generate more sales and build a great
brand.
What makes PR so powerful?
In a word: credibility.
People often see through advertising, but a product mentioned
in the context of a news report or print feature story gives it a passive
endorsement and third-party credibility advertising just can’t buy.
A news report is actually far more likely to move people to
action than conventional advertising, and a good public relations strategy is
the way to get the media to seek you out.
How can you make the PR process work for you? Let me walk you
through 10 rules you need to create an effective PR plan to give your product
competitive advantages in your market:
- Know your market. The more
specific you can get about which community should use your product, the easier
it will be to identify which media you need to work with. Be very narrow in your
target, realizing that no product ever commands 100 percent market share, nor does it need to in order to be
successful.
- Identify the product benefits
relevant to your market. Features aren’t as important as what your
product does for your potential clientele. Remember, at this stage you’re trying
to sell your product or service to the media so your story will get published.
Let them know the benefits and show them the numbers to prove that your product
saves users time and money--or makes money.
- Establish your product as
unique. It’s important to be able to prove your product is “x-times”
faster, better, cleaner or more cost-effective than your competitors’ product or
industry standard. Such specific and proven advantages will provide the media
concrete evidence to feature your product over anyone else’s.
- Source and use
testimonials. All other things equal, testimonials are one of the
strongest ways to enhance the credibility of any promotional piece. This also
holds true for your editorial piece as well. The main difference will be the way
the testimonial is presented. While in some promotional pieces you might get
away with someone named “C.K.” from Omaha who says your widgets are “great.”
However an editorial piece needs to be about a targeted benefit.
- Target the media used by your target
market. Find out which media outlets your target market typically
reads, views or listens to. In many cases, you’ll be able to identify specific
journals or programs for the industry you are targeting. If it’s not obvious,
you may need to do some research to find out which media are most seen or read
by your target market. You can get this information from SRDS and any of the Bacon’s
directories. These types of publications outline available newspapers,
magazines, newsletters, radio and television broadcasts according to locality
and special interest groups. They also provide names and contact information for
key editor.
- Prepare your press release to be
printed as is. Start your release with a great headline and make sure
it also follows AP style guides so a journalist can (if they so choose) cut and
paste your copy for their story needs. Your first paragraph should be no more
than 25 words and needs to both explain the headline and summarise the story.
Journalists spend on average of seven seconds “speed reading” the hundreds of
news releases they receive each day, so the first 25 words are critical. And
remember to keep your editorial to one page or less.
- Sell your release. Make a
phone call to the person named in the media guide. Let them know you have a
story that may interest them and their readers. Give them the headline and the
first paragraph. They’ll make a decision then and there whether they like it or
not. A “yes” or “maybe” means “send me a fax or email with more information.”
Then, forward immediately marked clearly to their attention. Earn the right to
follow up by asking if you can call back the next day or at some other specific
time, depending on publication dates.
- Follow up. Call your
contact when you said you would to confirm whether or not they received the
information you sent and offer to provide more information if necessary.
- Keep in contact. But don’t
be pushy. If the story is of value, it will sell itself. All you should do is
provide your contact with the convenience of more information. This is also a
good way to make sure your press release gets a second look.
- Use a photograph. A
photograph can literally sell a thousand words. Daily media are more
photo-conscious than ever, and are more interested in photos than the monthly
special interest magazines or trade journals. Those publications are
usually only interested in a photograph if it educates or informs the reader.
Are these steps a guarantee of publication, broadcast and
success? No.
But by following them,
you’ll immediately increase your chances of success and you’ll also start to
build the good media relationships you’ll need for the future. You’ll also give
your product a strong competitive advantage in the media market, while any
results you do achieve from “free press” will be more effective.
So if you’re looking to start your own PR
program, just follow the steps. Then, you can work to apply your “off-line”
efforts to the online space--a strategy that can leverage your message in a
number of ways conventional media simply can’t.
Source:
Entrepreneur.com