When most people think
about marketing, they
think advertising

When
most people think about marketing,
they think advertising. While advertising is a part of marketing,
marketing
is much bigger than advertising. There are lots of different marketing
methods floating around out there, and the challenge as a business
owner
is figuring out when it's appropriate to use each one and the best way
to use it.
Public
relations, or PR, is the art of
getting someone else to write or talk about you or your business.
Preferably
in a favorable manner. Traditionally, "someone else" was the media. In
this day and age however, someone else can also be a blogger, a
freelance
writer, an e-zine publisher or even an owner of a big Web site. For
purposes
of this article, I'm using the word "media" to refer to all of those
folks.
PR is
also being able to get yourself on
a big talk show to talk about yourself or your business, or writing
your
own article that's published in a desired outlet. (Not your own
newsletter
or Web site.)
PR is
one of my favorite marketing methods,
but it can also be one of the more frustrating ones. Even when you do
everything
right, you still might not get the publicity you want. Or for that
matter,
ANY publicity at all. When a PR campaign doesn't work, you can find
yourself
wanting to pull out all your hair in frustration.
Even
with that in mind, I do believe most
if not all businesses can benefit from some type of PR campaign. But
before
you launch into something that could end with you becoming hairless
(and
investing in a sizeable hat collection) ask yourself the following
questions.
1. Do I
need to see results right away?
If you do, better pull out your wallet and pay for some advertising. PR
takes time. And it's not guaranteed. You might not see your article for
weeks, months or ever, and there isn't a darn thing you can do about
it.
If it's immediate gratification you want, don't look for it in a public
relations campaign.
2. Do I
have the time to consistently devote
to a public relations campaign? We're back to the time issue. PR not
only
takes time to see results, but you also have to take time to make it
happen.
Either you have to do it or you have to pay someone else to do it. If
you
do it yourself, you'll have the potential of garnering the equivalent
of
thousands of dollars of advertising for little or no money. But it will
cost you some time. If you pay someone else, you'll save time (which is
a good thing, I'm a big believer in outsourcing) but it can get
expensive.
Worse yet, you STILL might not get any coverage for your money.
3. Do I
have enough perseverance to run
a PR campaign? PR is about follow-up. It's about sending story idea
after
story idea to the same reporter before one finally connects (and maybe
it's the tenth one). It's about sending a little note or letter to the
same editor for as long as several years before you get a bite. It's
about
reminding your contacts you're out there until one day they realize
they
need you.
If
you're willing to court the media, develop
relationships and do whatever you can to make their lives easier, the
rewards
can be huge.
4. Do I
have newsworthy events happening
at my business? (Newsworthy is something media personnel feel would
interest
their readers.) Or, if I don't, can I create them?
I'm not
talking about making things up
here. But there are things you can be doing to make your business more
newsworthy. For example, you can do a survey and publish the results.
You
can tie a feature of your product or service to something that's
currently
happening in the news. You can hold an event. You can research a newly
published study that relates to your product or service. There are
countless
ways you can transform aspects of your business into newsworthy story
items
-- the creativity exercise below can help you come up with your
ideas.
5. Do I
want to build my credibility? Develop
my status as an expert? Then get that PR campaign off the ground.
Nothing
builds your credibility or expert status faster than having other
people
say you know what you're talking about.
6. Do I
want to augment my other marketing
efforts? Public relations definitely plays nicely with the other
marketing
methods. You can be building your long-term expert campaign with PR and
building short-term customers with advertising. Or you can turn your
community
relations strategies into PR campaigns. It's a great way to get the
most
bang out of your marketing time and dollar.
Creativity
Exercise -- How can you use
PR in your business?
Grab
some sheets of paper and pen (I like
the fun gel pens myself) and get ready for some brainstorming.
Start
by listing everything you do or sell.
Then write out all the features or descriptions of your products or
services.
For instance, if you have a book, what is your book about? What does it
offer people?
Now see
if you can turn those features
into something newsworthy. Is there a time of year when people are
interested
in your services? (Accounting and tax season). Are there any studies
you
can dig up? Is there something in the news that ties into your product?
Can you turn an aspect of your business into a human interest story?
(Something
like fitness tips for busy people or parenting tips for single parents,
etc.) Write everything down that comes into your head, even if it's
silly.
See if you can come up with 50 story ideas.
Now
look at what you wrote. Can you find
a few in there that you think would interest the media? Congratulations
-- you just came up with a PR campaign.
bio: Michele Pariza
Wacek is the author
of "Got Ideas? Unleash Your Creativity and Make More Money." She offers
two free e-zines that help subscribers combine their creativity with
hard-hitting
marketing and copywriting principles to become more successful at
attracting
new clients, selling products and services and boosting business. She
can
be reached at http://www.TheArtistSoul.com.
Michele Pariza Wacek
Advertising
Rates |Digital-Women Grants Loans Networking - Business
Loans for Women - Government
Grants - Sitemap
- Pro Membership
- Free Membership - BLOG
Copyright © 1998-2009 Digital Women
® Rebecca Hubbard rebecca@digital-women.com
|