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10 Killer Tips to Get Free PR
After 20 years in the PR
business, I can tell you that getting publicity is an art, but
you, as the entrepreneur, have a HUGE advantage because the
press loves to hear about new things directly from the horse's
mouth. You, as the entrepreneur, are a "direct source" and
considered a killer scoop for a journalist. Direct calls from
inventors make journalists feel like they're getting the
straight dope without a publicist's spin and they absolutely
love it.
This creates an automatic
trust and credibility that only you can provide. So go for it
with gusto! Don't be shy; turn on your passion. If a journalist
blows you off, turn on your humbleness by telling them, "hey I'm
new at this, would you mind helping me out?" Ask for their
advice on which of their colleagues might like the story you are
pitching. I find that showing true human foible and practicing
humbleness really works wonders and brings down walls of
defensiveness --- even with the snarkiest of journalists. Here
are my top 10 tips for getting the press to sit up and take
notice and actually get them to report:
1. Identify holidays,
seasons and special months that correlate to your product and
pitch the press during that time. For example, if you are a
chocolate company, call the press with a February Valentines Day
story. If you are a bra company, call during October Breast
Cancer Awareness Month.
2. Extract the aspect of
your product that makes it totally different from the
competition and focus on that only when you talk to the press.
Note: Price, service and speed do not count. For example, for
two former Seagram's executives, we focused on Redcliff liqueur
as the "first American liqueur" because it used a cola taste.
Cola is a flavor uniquely American and born of Coca Cola fame.
3. Look through a magazine
and notice all the different sections that might include your
product. Come up with a sentence pitch about your product for
each section, then call the editor with your customized pitches.
There may be up to three places your product may fit in one
magazine. For example, there are "new product" sections near the
front of the magazine, "feature" stories in the middle, and
sometimes "back of the book" profiles on personalities and
CEO's.
4. Tie your product launch
to a nonprofit. The press are more apt to report about a
commercial product if part of the proceeds benefit a charity.
Find an organization that matches the purpose of your product.
For example, Wine & Spirits magazine works with water
conservation organizations because the publisher believes that
water bottles litter the environment. They even created a slogan
around it: "Drink Wine. Save Water."
5. Develop a one sentence
"elevator speech" that pithily describes your product, and let
it be the first thing out of your mouth when you pitch the press
or are selling someone on your product. Tokyo Coca Cola's Green
Tea Terrace made green tea lattes and cappuccinos. When we
called the press about them, we started with "The 'Starbucks of
Green Tea' is opening stores throughout the U.S." Making the
comparison to Starbucks describes what the company does, and the
phrase provides a vivid Polaroid picture image in the mind.
Developing words into images is a killer secret that wins the
hearts of journalists and tells the story of your product in one
simple sentence.
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