How To Write A Press Release: The 10 Commandments Of A Great Lead Paragraph
How to write a press release is a major challenge facing both experienced and aspiring PR professionals.
Press release writing is a learned skill. This article contains press release sample writing, including that all important first paragraph.
“If it bleeds it leads” is a famous saying amongst news editors on why certain stories are on page one or first up in a TV or radio news bulletin.
Is The Traditional Press Review Still A Business Tool Of The Future?
Press reviews are a common and basic feature for surveying the market situtation, your company’s public image and the coverage of your competitor’s business. Only if you are well-informed about theses topics, you can make sound business decisions.
But can the traditional press review ? also called press clipping - with cut-out and pasted articles really retain its relevance in the age of internet, mobile computers and digitalised communication?
The internet has caused workflow processes to become much faster, and it is hardly possible to reserve time just to read business and news publications.
The Right Hook
Have you fantasized about spreading word of your business on a top-rated TV show like The Today Show or Oprah?
Eileen Roth, a professional organizer just a year into her business, was able to get on both shows using the time-honored technique of the news hook.
Understanding the News Nook
Do-it-yourself PR people often tell prospects that the print and broadcast media will interview you simply because you are an expert in your field.
How To Write A Press Release
A well structured press release in an excellent way of receiving free publicity for very little effort and cost. It is simply the process of writing a newsworthy story about your company, products or services in a reasonably standard format, and then distributing it in the correct way to relevant media contacts.
Your Online Newsroom: How to Give Reporters a Tip
It’s hard to imagine a reporter working today who doesn’t regularly visit "official" company websites. And it’s hard to imagine just how much those websites have improved reporters’ lives.
Instead of calling a company for more information and waiting days for their press pack to arrive, reporters can now get the information they need in minutes with a few clicks of a mouse.
5 Critical Tests Every Press Release Must Pass
You’ve heard “them” say it, haven’t you?
By “them” I mean the experts. The teachers. Even some people from advertising & PR agencies.
They’ll tell you there’s only one way to do a press release “right.”
Single page, double spaced, 12 point type.
Bull…
I’ve been working in radio and TV full time or part time since 1972, and that means I’ve seen thousands of press releases.
3 Essential Elements For Turning Your PR Pitch Into Publicity Exposure
1) Establish Rapport, then get the editor/producer excited.
There’s not a shortage of stories, but there is a shortage GREAT stories. If you are exciting, unique, or provocative that may be exactly what you need to get the attention of the editor/producer.
2) Think Audience.
Once you get the attention of the editor/producer, she will be inclined to publish/broadcast stories and segments that stimulate, interest, fascinate, provoke or stimulate his or her audience.
Publicity: Nailing a Media Interview, Part II (Crisis Management)
We’d all like reporters to ask us about our career successes and personal triumphs-heck, we’d all like anyone to ask us about those. But reporters must look out for their clients, the reading public. Think about it from your own perspective as an investor-when you read a story about a company, you want to know that the reporter has asked difficult questions, not just relied on the PR hype.
Managers: Can We Agree on This?
Your public relations effort really should involve more than press releases, brochures and special events if you are to get your PR money’s worth.
In particular, you should be pursuing those three pots of gold at the end of the PR rainbow.
First, when you use the fundamental premise of public relations to produce external stakeholder behavior change ? the kind that leads directly to achieving your managerial objectives.
Do-It-Yourself Public Relations
“Advertising is what you pay for. Publicity is what you pray for.”
What is a small business owner to do? You have dozens, hundreds or even thousands of competitors around the world. How do you make yourself known amid all the noise and confusion? One thing is for certain. You may or may not have a budget for marketing and promotion but you want to get the most bang for your buck.
Fri, 31st October 2008
