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Priming Your
Business For Publicity
By Todd Brabender
Spread the News Public Relations, Inc.
When it
comes to putting together your initial business plan or making out
your annual marketing budget, the amount of money you allocate toward
“marketing supportives” can make a big difference in the success of
your business’ impending public relations/publicity campaign.
Although it sounds obvious, many new entrepreneurs don’t realize that
typical sales marketing materials you budget for can certainly be used
for your “media marketing” as well. What I consider “marketing
supportives” that are effective for publicity/media exposure are
things like: product photos; product samples; website links; sales
fulfillment options, etc.. The more supportives in place -- the more
media coverage you might expect.
Case in
point, I recently launched a consumer product publicity campaign for a
client who had many strong supportives: great product photos (hard
copy & digital); product samples for the media; an online ordering
vehicle on his website. We got tremendous media response in magazines
and newspapers and even a number of TV shows & newscasts. Because the
product was very visual, the coverage on the TV medium would have
increased tenfold had the client had a VNR (Video News Release) with
product footage. When many shows requested the VNR and found out the
client didn’t have one, they simply could not give us coverage because
they didn’t have the time to shoot the video themselves to meet the
show’s deadline.
(The same
principle holds true for product photos.)
This is not
to say that your publicity/media campaign will fail if you don’t have
EVERY marketing supportive available. (VNR’s for example can be very
expensive to produce, duplicate and distribute. Many new entrepreneurs
decide against them for that reason.) I have launched publicity
campaigns for very small start-up businesses that didn’t even have
simple product photos. (Although I strongly recommend having as many
supportives as possible.) Because the client’s product had strong,
widespread consumer interest value, media outlets picked it up because
of the newsworthiness of the pitch/product. Again, if the client had
more money in his limited budget to afford a FEW supportives – at
least photos or media samples – our media coverage would have been
even more extensive.
Bottom line
-- from a publicity standpoint -- your marketing supportives should
help the media cover your product with as little effort as possible.
The less effort the editor/producer has to put forth to place your
product in an article or news story, the better your chances for good
media coverage.
If you are
planning and/or budgeting for a publicity campaign and you have strong
marketing supportives in place you stand to gain much more from your
campaign. Conversely, maybe you hadn’t thought about a publicity
campaign for your business. But if your marketing budget has, in fact,
allowed for a few of the supportives listed below, you are more primed
than you realized for a campaign that should lead to some great media
exposure.
But does
your business/product have what it takes to initiate a successful
publicity campaign? How do you know if you are ready to initiate a
publicity campaign? Although PR campaigns can be implemented for any
type of business/product, there are a number of factors that can help
make a campaign more successful. In my professional experience, the
most effective publicity campaigns are generated from:
-
New
Product Launches (Consumer or Industry/Trade-Specific)
-
Start-Up
Businesses with Innovative Product Lines
-
Successful
Case-Study Information (Stats/Stories of Product’s Effectiveness)
-
Expert
By-lined Articles
Businesses/products with the following “supportives” tend to generate
better publicity:
-
Professionally Manufactured/Packaged Products
-
Professionally-Produced Photo/Art (Color or B/W Prints, Slides,
Digital Files)
-
Promotional Samples Available for Media Reviews
-
Reliable
Sales Fulfillment Vehicles (retail placement, online ordering
capabilities)
-
Video News
Release (B-roll - video of product and its applications)
The items
listed above are simply suggestions to help you get the most out of
your prospective publicity campaign. Each PR campaign should be
evaluated on an individual case-by-case basis before determining which
“supportives” would be most effective.
Todd
Brabender is the President of Spread The News Public Relations, Inc.
His business
specializes in generating media exposure and publicity for innovative
products, businesses, experts and inventions.
http://www.spreadthenewspr.com
todd@spreadthenewspr.com
(785)
842-8909
 
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