PR Information

Media Relations: Ending the Press Release Crutch


When most people think of media relations, they think of press releases. To be sure, writing and distributing them is one of the most important parts of the job. But press releases may be the most overused tool in the media professional's arsenal to the detriment of other tools that might have greater results.

When I worked in broadcast news for ABC News and CNN, the fax machines virtually never stopped. We got press releases by the dozen, and by the end of each day, we had a ream of press releases. They each had something in common. They each went unread.

To break through the clutter, you'd be wise to occasionally skip the press release and send a personalized note to a reporter instead. This works particularly well when offering a reporter an "exclusive," a story that you will only pitch to a single news organization.

Here are three tips to help make sure your letter gets read:

1) Offer an Exclusive -- News is a competitive business. If a reporter likes your story - and is convinced that his or her cross-town rival won't have it - they are much more likely to carry your news. The offer of an exclusive is an effective tool, but should be thought out carefully, since the news organization that doesn't get the story may hold it against you.

2) Conduct Reporter Research -- You may have a brilliant pitch - but if you send it to the wrong reporter, it's useless. Make sure you properly identify the correct reporter for your type of story.

Once you've done that, indicate to the reporter that you've been following his or her work, and that your story is similar or related to another story he or she has recently written. Mention his or her previous articles by name. A shockingly small number of media relations professionals take the time to do this, so the reporter will instantly deem you more credible than the average "PR flack."

3) Subject Line -- Reporters from National Geographic Traveler and People magazines recently told me how critical they consider an e-mail's subject line. A boring subject line means that the e-mail will probably never even get opened!

There are certain things you can do to break through the clutter. I've found it effective to write "Offer of Exclusive" in the subject line, or to include the reporter's name in the subject line, as in "To David - New Research Shows Children Increasingly Illiterate."

But virtually nothing beats a genuinely creative and attention-grabbing headline. I recently saw an e-mail sent by a company that uses clamshells to make jewelry. Their subject line? "Clams aren't just for chowder anymore." You better believe that most reporters were curious enough to open that e-mail!

Brad Phillips is the founder and president of Phillips Media Relations (http://www.PhillipsMediaRelations.com). He was formerly a journalist for ABC News and CNN, and also headed the media relations department for the second largest environmental group in the world.


MORE RESOURCES:

PR Newswire High Technology Summary, Friday, Nov. 21, 2008
MarketWatch - Nov 21, 2008
Nov 21, 2008 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Following is a summary of technology news releases transmitted today by PR Newswire. The full text of these releases ...


PR Newswire Summary of EntertaiNet Copy, Friday, Nov. 21, 2008
MarketWatch - Nov 21, 2008
Nov 21, 2008 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Following is a summary of entertainment news releases transmitted today by PR Newswire. ...


Two Pr. George's Firefighters Hurt in House Fire
Washington Post, United States - Nov 21, 2008
AP County fire department spokesman Mark Brady says a 27-year-old firefighter suffered significant burns to his upper body while battling a blaze at a ...


Prop 8 involvement a PR fiasco for LDS Church
Salt Lake Tribune, United States - 23 hours ago
By Peggy Fletcher Stack LDS Church President Thomas Monson waves to the audience after speaking during the closing session of the LDS General Conference on ...


SED International Holdings, Inc. Names Elite Financial ...
MarketWatch - Nov 21, 2008
Through the firm's PR division, Elite Media Group, Elite offers traditional and new media outreach, corporate communications, brand-building, ...


WELT ONLINE

Obama considers Hillary: PR gone awry
Examiner.com - Nov 21, 2008
by Carrol Van Stone, Publicity Examiner What has happened to the Obama PR machine? Why have we spent close to two weeks with Hillary and Bill Clinton back ...
Video: New US Administration to clean up the mess RussiaToday
Balance of Opinion: A post for Hillary? Dallas Morning News
First thoughts: Busy week on tap MSNBC
Gawker
all 3,370 news articles


Prescott official questions PR contract
KTAR.com, AZ - 6 hours ago
by AP A Prescott City Councilman is questioning a large public relations contract awarded to promote a joint water pipeline project with the town of ...
PR contract raises questions about council 'transparency' Prescott Daily Courier
all 5 news articles


Examiner.com

Cowboys PR overriding underachieving season
Examiner.com - Nov 21, 2008
And the NFL’s newest Boy Scout, Romo--is this guy for real or is this all a PR stunt? Helping an old couple change a tire on the side of a dark road then ...


Examiner.com

Pay for Performance: PR for today’s economy
Examiner.com - 11 hours ago
by Carrol Van Stone, Publicity Examiner The tightened marketing budgets of today’s companies are dictating a return to value and accountability in PR. ...


dBTechno

Black women more likely to have ER/PR-negative breast cancer
HemOncToday, NJ - Nov 21, 2008
“We found that 35% of breast cancers among black women were ER/PR-negative compared with 20% of tumors in white women, which is consistent with what has ...
ER/PR Negative Tumors Associated with Insurance Status Newswise (press release)
all 603 news articles

PR - Google News

home | site map
© 2006