As an entry level position to PR, I found myself typing up a forecast by a major Public Relation's firm for a major pharmaceutical company of what life would be like in the year 2000. Market research predictions included telephones with monitors that could help you see people while you talked, fax machines that could transmit information over telephone wires, microwave ovens for reducing food defrosting time from hours to minutes and other devices that have certainly come to pass. In the lifestyle area, predictions proved less valid. Not only would Americans be enjoying longer lives, it foretold, but they would have shorter work weeks, more vacations and overall, a more leisurely lifestyle. An iota of truth, but mostly wishful thinking when we read 2005 front pages.
I will always remember being called to account because the final document the Client saw had several typos. Presentation counts in this field.
PR firms attempt to influence the major media who in turn help persuade viewers, listeners and readers to think or act in a particular way. The people who enter the profession and those in the media usually have a gift of gab, a facility with the written word, a decent IQ and a certain love affair with risk.
Fortune tellers don't make much money. But most PR firms charge a substantial amount of money to present their client, product or service in a positive light to the media. People are continuously reporting polls or surveys as if they are fact, when, in truth, often the questions asked are the reason for the results tendered. Trends are so swift these days, just when buzz begins, another bee is buzzing a different tune.
Here is the PR agency drill. A brainstorming session consists of several persons who try and identify a project, tag line or campaign hook that will capture the right response from the media while delivering the Client message. Then a qualified person writes the plan, another person interfaces with the Client and still other people "pitch" the media. Often times in large firms, a separate TV department usually has close ties with the producers of various programming. You can pitch the same story to ten different venues, and come up with ten different responses. It is an expensive process.
Since everyone is trying for the biggest hits first, and the spots are truly limited, the pitchers have to be focused and persistent. Then it becomes a numbers game. The more balls you throw, the more likely you are to get a strike. The more strikes you pitch, the more likely your team will win, and the competition will be beaten. The more consistent your story, the more believed you will be. The more you can afford to spend, the more you get to use credible spokespeople to help tell your story. It is a numbers game.
So by all means pitch "Oprah" first if you have a story that will hug her heart. Next work the syndicated morning shows. Then try the syndicated writers at the major news services when your news is hard and important. Talk to AOL when you have the money, or put it in the movie theatre, the newest venue for enlightening if not annoying a captive audience.
But you can also tell your story with incredible reach and exciting response if you use newspaper mat features to newspapers nationwide via Points of Persuasion Syndicate. For $2100, your message gets faxed to 10,000 plus print and online newspaper outlets immediately. Newspapers use the free columns. Your message gets printed exactly as you tell it, or your captioned color illustration tells the story just the way you approved it. You've increased your chances of the public reading a product or service mention, you've had the help of expert PR people with years of presentation skills behind them, your story will stay on their editorial website for six months to a year, and you get quarterly usage reports to help impress you if you are the business owner or your Clients if you are an agency.
Best of all, the educated, well-off suburban consumer gets time to find out something informational that can help them and their family live a better life. It seems likely that any marketer would find this a low-budget risk worth taking.
# # #
Myrna Greenhut is currently president of P-O-P-S(http://www.p-o-p-s.com), a service designed to supply incremental PR impressions for companies, Associations and PR agencies. As a consumer product publicist, she has been with numerous independent and advertising affiliated PR agencies like The Rowland Company, Ogilvy & Mather, Cairns & Associates, D-A-Y as well as having done major freelance PR projects for Avon Products Incorporated
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
Strong for business, non-profit and association managers when they use... Read More
Public relations is the art, as one of my colleagues... Read More
What do you do with junk mail? Are you like... Read More
Recently I had a craving for... Read More
Hundreds of thousands of News Releases are sent out all... Read More
When you pay good money for public relations services, you... Read More
Business, non-profit and association managers committing their public relations resources... Read More
Each of us is exposed to people from other cultures... Read More
To get someone's name in the newspaper or a product... Read More
When ABC News anchor Peter Jennings announced he had lung... Read More
Tis' the season for business and corporate gift-giving! If you... Read More
What else, for goodness sake, could you as a business,... Read More
When, as a business, non-profit or association manager, you are... Read More
Your boss just stopped by your office. He tells you... Read More
Trade publications present an excellent opportunity for organisations to gain... Read More
A musician spends years honing his craft. He writes world-class... Read More
Wherever the fundamental premise of public relations is practiced.Look at... Read More
Every reporter, from the cub at the small town paper... Read More
There'll never be a better time for a manager working... Read More
Small businesses have always known the importance of word of... Read More
Fiercely combative business, non-profit and association managers use every PR... Read More
You can have dozens of marvelous ideas to get free... Read More
I got the latest issue of Internet Works in the... Read More
Is that what we are? Fanatic, over-the-top disciples of some... Read More
When times are tough, it's no time to ignore those... Read More
Well, autumn is upon us and with the onset of... Read More
You won't accomplish much if you call the gas company... Read More
You are getting a good deal when you accept the... Read More
So, you've had your book published or you've gone the... Read More
Writing an effective press release is a way to draw... Read More
Think of a triangle. On the left, imagine the story... Read More
Public relations is a very important part of the marketing... Read More
So you've put yourself "out there" with a public relations... Read More
When your public relations results pretty much depend on whether... Read More
Taking your ad and turning it into paragraph-style prose is... Read More
Small businesses have always known the importance of word of... Read More
Years ago when my Dad owned a group of local... Read More
Sure, as tactics usually presented to business, non-profit and association... Read More
Being part of a trade show gives small business a... Read More
Commit this to memory, please: To get in the media,... Read More
If you are in Australia at the moment, it is... Read More
SORRY?WERE YOU SAYING SOMETHING?Many spokespeople approach media interviews the same... Read More
Media management has become one of the strategic tools for... Read More
Financial planners, the first thing to know about reporters is... Read More
You are in business for yourself, but how well do... Read More
Tracking your correspondence with reporters, via phone or email, is... Read More
As many of you already know, promoting and marketing your... Read More
Anything that lets managers achieve their managerial objectives is a... Read More
1) Package your story. Two critical elements will help you... Read More
Do it by restructuring your business, non-profit or association public... Read More
1) Establish Rapport, then get the editor/producer excited.There's not a... Read More
Most small businesses have logo'ed shirts, usually polo shirts with... Read More
And here it is: public relations alters individual perception leading... Read More
The next time a newspaper photographer takes your photo, remember... Read More
Well, autumn is upon us and with the onset of... Read More
What a shame! Potentially productive public relations people resting on... Read More
So you've put yourself "out there" with a public relations... Read More
Shooting from the hip always creates anxiety.Especially when managers order... Read More
A great way to celebrate your achievements and capitalize on... Read More
If you don't have a grip on public relations, how... Read More
Being invited to appear on radio and television used to... Read More
The words are pop culture heroes.Movies such as "The Insider,"... Read More
The easiest way to meet city council members is to... Read More
Trade publications present an excellent opportunity for organisations to gain... Read More
As a business, non-profit or association manager, occasions will arise... Read More
When I talk with business people, they tend to believe... Read More
Public Relations |