Headlines that Grab Attention

Young lady looking down at her phone smiling

Four Easy Tips to Capture Your Readers

If your headline doesn’t grab your readers’ attention in a few short seconds, you’ve lost them.

We live in a universe of scanners. No one has time to actually read everything that comes across our computer screens. So you MUST write effective headlines that pull them in. And you have one shot at it – exactly 3 seconds.

Here are some tips to get the edge on your competition:

1. Make the headline easy to read

When we scan, our eyes look quickly for certain words. If it looks complex – with big words that take focus and brain strain, our minds (perhaps subconsciously) tend to avoid it. So keep it simple. Make it easy to scan.

Instead of:

“Choose either pre-configured or custom-configured spaces for your equipment”

Simplify it:

“Standard or custom storage”

2. Lose the advertising hype

The internet has changed the way consumers want to hear messages. It’s no longer a one-way “push” campaign. Consumers want to be educated, engaged, and respected. We tend to tune out the old style “push” message. It doesn’t serve us!

Instead of:

“100% Opt-in Audience that has the Highest Response Rates, Guaranteed!”

Make it more believable:

“Need a reliable traffic magnet that delivers long-term clients?”

3. Include your top keyword

Ideally, it would be the first word in the headline. Both for the reader and for search engines, this gives weight to the topic of your text. If not the first word, place your top keyword as close to the beginning as possible. This gives the reader assurance that they’ve landed on the topic they’re looking for.

Instead of:

“New gel guaranteed to cure athlete’s foot”

Try:

“Athlete’s foot cure – guaranteed”

4. Use subheads

This tip is perhaps the single most important thing to KEEP the reader engaged.

If you grab their attention in the headline, you want to immediately draw them in on the subhead! Like a one-two punch, deliver the subhead with intrigue, and promise value in the text below.

Using the previous headline, try a subhead like this, which gives the benefits of the promise:

HEADING: “Athlete’s foot cure – guaranteed”

SUBHEAD: “Quick results, no mess, and low cost! Learn more here.”

(Thanks to Ginger Makela at Google for the inspiration.)

Do you have any MAGIC BULLETS for effective headline writing?

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For more resources, see our Library topics Marketing and Social Networking.

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ABOUT Lisa M. Chapman: With offices in Nashville Tennessee, but working virtually with international clients, Lisa M. Chapman serves her clients as a business and marketing coach, business planning consultant and social media consultant. As a Founder of iBrand Masters, a social media consulting firm, Lisa Chapman helps clients to establish and enhance their online brand, attract their target market, engage them in meaningful social media conversations, and convert online traffic into revenues. Email: Lisa @ LisaChapman.com

Top Viral Ads of All Time

Astonish woman with shocked expression

Fascinating! One of the most fun and challenging aspects of marketing – now exposed. Ad Age magazine just published their professional look at successful viral ads.

According to Ad Age reporter Michael Learmonth, 100 million views is the top tier of viral. The very top of the top is, “Will it Blend?” by Blendtec. It’s a brilliant creative that’s been around for four years. The company found a winning formula and stuck with it.

Interested in tracking the top viral ads? Keep this link among your favorites and enjoy the wonder of those who achieve the top viral distinction – against all odds: Ad Age’s Viral Chart.

The Top 10 Viral Videos of All Time

Brand Campaign Agency All Time Views* Launch Date
Blendtec Will It Blend? In-house 134,256,499 10/30/06
Evian Live Young BETC Euro RSCG 103,867,704 6/4/09
Old Spice Responses Wieden & Kennedy 57,132,669 7/12/10
Pepsi Gladiator AMV BBDO 46,742,892 1/1/04
Microsoft Xbox Project Natal World Famous 42,698,599 6/1/09
Dove Evolution Ogilvy & Mather 41,100,418 10/1/06
T-Mobile T-Mobile Dance Saatchi & Saatchi 35,487,575 1/15/09
Doritos Crash The Super Bowl 2010 Goodby Silverstein & Partners 34,168,845 1/5/10
Old Spice Odor Blocker Wieden & Kennedy 33,986,750 3/31/10
DC Shoes Gymkhana Two In-house 32,872,531 9/3/09
Source: Visible Measures

For the full Ad Age article, see The Top 10 Viral Videos of All Time

How to make an ad go viral

Your marketing message doesn’t have to be a video to go viral – but it helps. Basically, several common elements are essential to launch your ad to viral status.

  1. It’s emotional. Both positive and negative emotional experiences are ripe for passing around. In fact, the more emotionally intense, the greater likelihood that it will travel.
  2. It performs a public service. “Just click here and this sponsor will donate a can of dog food to the rescue shelter. Then forward to six friends.” Awwww. Who can hit delete?
  3. It’s funny. We all need an ear-to-ear feel-good during our harried and overwhelming schedules.

What’s your favorite viral ad? Why?

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For more resources, see our Library topics Marketing and Social Networking.

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ABOUT Lisa M. Chapman: With offices in Nashville Tennessee, but working virtually with international clients, Lisa M. Chapman serves her clients as a business and marketing coach, business planning consultant and social media consultant. As a Founder of iBrand Masters, a social media consulting firm, Lisa Chapman helps clients to establish and enhance their online brand, attract their target market, engage them in meaningful social media conversations, and convert online traffic into revenues. Email: Lisa @ LisaChapman.com

How to create a powerful marketing message

Marketing messages on a gray board

We are all over-messaged in this harried world – absolutely bombarded with thousands of messages every single day. So how can your business stand out?

To be successful, your company’s marketing must be creatively distinctive. That’s what it takes to:

  • Capture the attention of your target audience, and
  • Deliver a clear and memorable message.

Your marketing must be laser-focused. It cannot be everything to everybody. What should your marketing message achieve?

  • Image & Branding
  • Recognition, Credibility & Trust
  • Call to Action

Business branding basics

Your company is only as powerful as your BRAND. A company’s brand, like an individual’s personality, is unique – and should clearly convey the culture of your organization.

In a nutshell, effective branding takes:

  • Strategizing about who your company is,
  • Aligning your brand with the your company’s core values,
  • Creating an image and advertising that is distinctive, &
  • Integrating all media into an effective and memorable brand message.

These are the basics of business branding. The most successful brands maintain a consistent voice – in the media, on the web, and in person.

What is a brand strategy?

Brand strategy is the who, what, why, where, and how of branding. A well-crafted brand strategy:

  • Captures your company’s personality
  • Creates messaging that resonates with prospects
  • Establishes your company’s competitive advantage
  • Converts prospects’ interest into revenue

A good marketing firm with experience in your competitive niche can listen to key employees (and even customers) to craft a message that clearly and succinctly speaks to your target audience. It’s an important investment in your entire marketing effort – and will make your future advertising expenditures powerful.

For a great example of a rebranding campaign that achieved these objectives, consider Financial Marketing Solutions’ creative work for FirstBank. These concepts can be applied to any business in any industry.

Branding food for thought:
What’s your company’s brand?
How do customers and prospects perceive your company’s personality?
Is it what you want them to think and feel about you?

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For more resources, see our Library topics Marketing and Social Networking.

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ABOUT Lisa M. Chapman: With offices in Nashville Tennessee, but working virtually with international clients, Lisa M. Chapman serves her clients as a business and marketing coach, business planning consultant and social media consultant. As a Founder of iBrand Masters, a social media consulting firm, Lisa Chapman helps clients to establish and enhance their online brand, attract their target market, engage them in meaningful social media conversations, and convert online traffic into revenues. Email: Lisa @ LisaChapman.com

Validate Parking? Easy. Validating Your Work Life with Good Communications…..???

Man and Woman Discussing in Workplace

They had been together for more than 12 years. Clients loved their work. Everybody on the 30+-person staff toiled really hard every day. Even though there were a couple annual parties to spread good will and share the love, something was missing…..Validation.

If the above scenario sounds like your workplace, take heed. The above company is a real one — and a virtual one to boot. Perhaps the lack of a bricks-and mortar setting — or validated parking perks everyday — added to the lack of feeling like “a real company,” a somebody, an affirmed entity. But the employees really did not feel like they were working for a bona fide company until a business profile of the company in the leading local newspaper gave them that boost, that third-party validation, that blessing from outside to make them feel “whole.”

A couple of blogs ago, we looked at an international acquisition that had prepared all of the messages and nuances for the news release. And then the question was asked, “What about the employees of the acquired company and those in the existing company?” What were they being told? A public relations strategy was quickly put in place to communicate internally with the people who report to work everyday, because employees are ultimately public people too who need to be related to with the same professionalism displayed to the company’s customers/stakeholders, media and others.

Memo to self: Create the environment and tools to do that consistently and go the extra mile when big news is in the pipeline.

Internal communications are just as important as your external ones — and in some cases, they may be even more important: How many news stories have you read about “a disgruntled former employee” doing something to avenge his or her treatment, a grudge, or a valid complaint at their former workplace?

Given the variety of channels people have today to flamethrow their pet peeves or their legit rants about where they have worked, validating employees through good communication tactics is simply a no brainer. It doesn’t even have to be a story that’s written about where they work (but that kind of third-party affirmation is priceless — and has a long shelf life). But it does need to be effective.

P.S. You probably didn’t notice — and thank you, if you did — but this blog has been on vacation recently. I should have warned you, or sent a memo around, but I didn’t, I apologize. Nothing personal. It won’t happen again, dear readers and blog constituents. It’s August. If you haven’t taken your time off, get to it. The dog days of summer have set in to be followed quickly by the fall toss of the pigskin and the ringing of the school bell.

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For more resources, see the Library topic Public and Media Relations.

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Martin Keller runs Media Savant Communications Co., a Public Relations and Media Communications consulting company based in the Twin Cities. Keller has helped move client stories to media that includes The New York Times, Larry King, The CBS Evening News with Katie Couric, plus many other magazines, newspapers, trade journals and other media outlets. Contact him at kelmart@aol.com, or 612-729-8585

8 Social Media Tips Marketers Can Learn From Dave Matthews Band Lyrics

Person holding a smartphone with social media icon

Guest Post by Brian Rice

For the last decade, I have associated summer with seeing DMB live. Below are 8 social media tips that we can learn from Dave Matthews Band lyrics:

“If you hold on tight to what you think is your thing, you may find you’re missing all the rest.” Consumers have become savvier in their ability to filter out advertisements so as marketers we must find comfort outside of our comfort zones. In order to be successful, it is important to constantly test and experiment with tactics outside of our current mix.

“I will go in this way and find my own way out.” While experts have created numerous tips and best practices for participating in social media, ultimately the journey begins with you. You are responsible for defining how you will use it and measure success.

“She could change everything about her using colors bold and bright but all the colors mix together – to grey.” Social media involves the interaction of people, with the goal of creating quality relationships. The only way to achieve this is to be yourself. In the long run, if you try to be all things to all people your campaigns will fail.

“Wondering what the other is thinking, but we never say a thing. These crimes between us grow deeper.” One of the most powerful tools in social media marketing is the ability to listen to the conversations consumers are having about your brand, products and competitors. However, individuals are looking to have real conversations so in order to be successful you must humanize your brand and participate in the discussions.

“Hello again, it’s been too long, too long too long, hello again.” According to a recent study, individuals are exposed to roughly 13,000 marketing messages a day and on Twitter, alone, there are over 50 million discussions (tweets) a day. Social media requires a consistent presence so before launching a campaign, make sure you have the resources to maintain an active profile.

“Pay your dues, and your debts. Pay your respects, everybody tells you. You pay for what you get.” As mentioned above, social media success does not happen overnight. It requires that you connect, follow, watch, listen, learn and engage. It is important to add value to the communities that you participate in because you must nurture relationships before you can create brand advocates.

“Pay no mind to taunts or advances.” If you find yourself in a situation where the conversation turns negative it is important to acknowledge their rights to complain, apologize or assert yourself if warranted, assess what will help them feel better, act accordingly and abdicate if necessary. If you have done a great job of cultivating a strong following and the complaint is unwarranted, the best case scenario is that you your connections will come to the defense of your brand.

“So why would you care to get out of this place, you and me and all our friends.” Social media is a fantastic tool and it is imperative that your campaigns (online and offline) help your audience connect with your brand via these social media channels. However, it is also critical that you do not find yourself “living” solely in these channels. Social media will never replace the value of face-to-face interactions so in order to develop deeper relationships plan for live events such as “TweetUps” to help put a face on your social media profiles.

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For more resources, see our Library topics Marketing and Social Networking.

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About Brian Rice: B2C Marketing Insider aims to provide a balanced view of the current marketing landscape based on industry news and trends, as well as real-life experiences. http://www.b2cmarketinginsider.com

Empowered Employees for an Unequivocal Customer Experience

Cheerful young colleagues co working together

Whether you are part of a small or a large organization, you have the same challenge of finding the right people to be the face and voice for your company. It is likely these front-line people are the only contacts with whom your customers and clients interface when buying or using your products and services. Do they have the power and the right perception to service your customers?

Last week we had a sudden death in the family. Unfortunately many of us were away on vacation when we heard the news. This tough time presented an opportunity for our airlines and our hotels to demonstrate exceptional empathy. Emergency flights were arranged. Hotel reservations were cancelled.

Empathy

Your client facing employees need to be able to demonstrate and communicate empathy. When we tried to tell the hotel of our immediate departure after checking in just a few hours earlier, the young attendant brought us a box of tissue so we could gather ourselves while trying to explain our situation. The simplest gestures are sometimes the most lasting. We received a definitive affirmation that we could check out 3 days early without penalty. No proof was required. No unending list of questions. Just a confirmation that we were free to leave at no cost to us. Confident, concise and empathetic.

Empowered Employees

You need to empower your employees to make decisions that are right for your clients. On the airplane it was clear the vacationing daughters were distraught. The flight attendant quickly provided them with drinks to comfort them. Supervisors didn’t have to be contacted. No discussion had to take place about whether this flight attendant could or should reach out with a little special treatment.

This has been a particularly tough week on our family and friends. What has been so helpful is working with vendors who know how to demonstrate empathy and will rise to the occasion for unplanned events and inconvenient requests.

Do you lead by example by demonstrating empathy? Do you encourage empathy? Do you empower your employees so they can be empathetic with your customers, business partners, and vendors? Allowing negative talk about them creates an unsupportive underlying tone in their customer interactions. Lead by example as my friend and sister-in-law did during her short life.

20 Power Marketing™ Tips

Marketing Tips

Guest Post by George Torok

Use these powerful yet simple tips from the national best-seller, “Secrets of Power Marketing: Promote Brand You” – the first guide to personal marketing for non-marketers.

  • Create and grant an annual award.
  • Send hand written congratulations and thank you notes.
  • Send greeting cards for some occasion other than Christmas.
  • Send postcards when you travel and even when you are at home.
  • Give a good book to special clients. Always sign it with a positive message.
  • Build relationships with the media before you need them.
  • Associate with winners – attend awards functions.
  • Build and maintain a database of clients, prospects, and key influencers.
  • Earn certifications and win awards from your associations – and tell everyone.
  • Ask happy customers to write testimonial letters for you.
  • Recruit your suppliers as marketing agents. They work for free.
  • Join and be active in your chamber of commerce.
  • Write tips sheets for your customers.
  • Write and send articles to magazines and newspapers.
  • Send a news release to the media every three months.
  • Do something crazy and newsworthy at least once a year.
  • Send photocopies of your news coverage to your clients.
  • Build and maintain an informative and interesting web site.
  • Sponsor a cause, event, charity or community group.
  • Volunteer for your association, charity or community group.

Have you had powerful experiences using any of these? Tell us about it!

What powerful marketing tactics work for you?

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For more resources, see our Library topics Marketing and Social Networking.

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© George Torok is co-author of “Secrets of Power Marketing: Promote Brand You”. To arrange your keynote speech or training program call 905-335-1997 or email George@Torok.com. To receive a free copy of 50 Power Marketing Ideas® and your free subscription to monthly marketing tips visit www.PowerMarketing.ca

Online Reputation Management (ORM)

A young lady working with a laptop

Guest Post by Robert Stretch

Monitor Your Web Presence

Since anybody can publish anything online, protecting your brand is more critical than ever. One or two bad reviews wield more power than ever by influencing potential customers and colleagues.

Damage control in the form of (ORM) needs to be one of your top priorities. Online reputation management is monitoring your company’s web presence across the internet. It means watching competitors’ websites, keeping up to date on social media mentions, and monitoring what is said about you through the search engines.

What is ORM?

The gist of ORM is to keep negative content about you, your company and/or brand from popping up on the World Wide Web. Though it sounds tasking, ORM requires little time as long as it’s conducted routinely. To get started, follow a few easy steps to keep your online rep clean.

Think Like the Slanderers

People who want to ruin your reputation—such as disgruntled ex-employees or angry customers — may go to unthinkable lengths to do so. However, if you try to anticipate their moves, you give yourself an advantage. For example, it’s a good idea to buy domains similar to your primary one. But your slanderers might buy domains that defame you, such as johndoefails.com. Of course, if you buy these first, no one else can claim them.

Defend Yourself

ORM is just as much about creating new content as it is countering existing content. First, you need to discover complaints before you post a rebuttal. Start by creating a Google alert. An example for our company would be VA Mortgage Center.com complaint, and variations of that. Once you know where the content is, you may appropriately defend yourself. Getting loyal customers to write testimonials is a great strategy. There’s no harm in asking customers for their support via positive reviews on websites such as Yelp.

Stay Up To Date

Though that Google alert will help, it’s a search confined only to Google’s servers. Scavenging the rest of the information superhighway means manually searching certain terms on Yahoo!, Bing, AltaVista and Dogpile. Branch out, and try different phrases that include your name/brand/company.

Produce and Publish

Now that you know what you’re up against, it’s time to produce content. Blogs are a great, inexpensive method of publishing content. From there, you can share what you’ve done on social networking sites. Don’t get too carried away in your work by boasting excessively, but highlight some recent accomplishments.

Consider making your work a weekly or bi-monthly piece that covers everything you or your company has done. Remember, ORM is about proving that you’re a professional in your field and keeping that image squeaky clean.

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For more resources, see our Library topics Marketing and Social Networking.

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Guest Author Robert Stretch works in web development for VA Mortgage Center.com.

How to Turn a PR Disaster into a PR Victory

Group of people talking together

 

You’ve heard of the NIMBY syndrome, Not in My Back Yard. It’s never pleasant when its symptoms are first detected and it’s usually around the building of new housing that might include public housing units, or a home for the mentally challenged, a halfway house or something similar. There are plenty of examples in any city and you don’t have to look far to find them getting voted up or (usually) down.

NIMBYism showed up like the angry mob in the name your favorite angry mob-Frankenstein-like-movie-here when a client wanted to tear down a butt-ugly old and long-unoccupied bank building and build a mixed use structure that included several public housing apartments and revitalize the rest of the block with new a retail space. Said client contacted their media consultant late in the game, as they were preparing to attend their first big public meeting about the project. (As a closet screenwriter, I would offer that given the basic three-act structure of a good, well-built screenplay, we were already in the early stages of Act III and things did not look good for the home team.)

The mob had been whipped into a near frenzy about the project, with circulating flyers containing a lot of distortions and stinging calls going out to people with rant-slanted talking points and other tactics — not unlike those we’ve sadly seen slithering through the electoral process these many years. The Mob Whipper Upper (MWU) was a seasoned lobbyist at the state legislature who also had property adjacent to the site. Man, the MWU wuz good! Even one of my best friends in that ‘hood was opposed to the project based solely on the garbage put in front of him.

The big meeting featured 300-400 people from several nearby neighborhoods in a crowded church community room, and was run by a neutral third party, the League of Women Voters, who had their hands full. It was a total failure in terms of trying to win over people with our own hastily prepared materials that relied on the facts, who the owners were, and how the neighborhood would actually be better — cosmetically if nothing else — once the block was rehabbed (a city councilman who later toured the site even called it “really distressed real estate” and couldn’t see what all the fuss was about).

Nonetheless, after that first big meeting, the owners felt forced to scale back the scope of the project to just include the mixed-use building. Still, hot heads were still overheating and the MWU looked positively triumphant, as if nothing could stop the sweep of the ugly sentiment that had been purposefully generated.

The next meeting, a smaller one with the immediate neighborhood group where the new building was being proposed, also featured the city council rep from that district. Afterwards with the owners and architect and moi, who had yet to be introduced to the good gentleman, the councilman exclaimed, “This project is a PR disaster.”

“You got that right, Councilman,” I said, introducing myself as the guy in charge of the said miasma. “But we are just getting started.” He wished us well with a look that screamed, “Please don’t be seen with me in public again.”

Fast forward two months down the long and winding road: The Zoning Commission approved the project and it went forward as the NIMBY outrage faded to black once the facts got out and the public process played out. Today, the butt-ugly building is long gone. The now-attractive building has a nice real estate operation on the first floor and the apartments are all rented. The rest of the buildings on the block still look like crap, but their tawdry look just makes the new place shine so much brighter.

Here’s what we did to turn this Hindenburg flame-out into a fairly standard Space Shuttle Lift-Off — and you can do it, too:

1) We met with the editorial writers of the daily and community papers and put the facts on the table, defending the project against the MWU allegations and stressing the fact that the owners and architect all lived in the neighborhood.

Both papers’ editorial boards came out in favor of the project for all the right reasons.

2) We lined up some key interviews on public radio and a couple of commercial stations. During the public radio interview with the MWU, wherein MWU was asked about NIMBYism, the interviewer offered enough rope and MWU took it like a lunk-headed fish chasing after and biting a fancy lure. Hook!

3) We contacted daily and community reporters to cover subsequent meetings, which did not play that well in the press for the angry mob, and it quickly grew thinner and less vociferous as the drama came to a conclusion.

4) We sent out a simple direct mail piece asking people to call local government and support the project, offering the talking points that we used in our media materials.

5) The owners met with people willing to talk with them around the neighborhood. One of them, who really knew her away around the housing bureacracy and city hall, worked all her contacts and sent them our background materials when requested. In short, the client made nice ‘cuz that’s who they were.

And that’s how a PR disaster morphed into a PR triumph, which was a win ultimately for all parties, even the ones who once opposed it.

“All’s well that ends well,” the poet says (and it’s easy for him to say, he didn’t fight battle).

“Roll the credits,” adds the closet screenwriter (including the line, “No MWUs were harmed during the writing of this blog”).

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For more resources, see the Library topic Public and Media Relations.

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Martin Keller runs Media Savant Communications Co., a Public Relations and Media Communications consulting company based in the Twin Cities. Keller has helped move client stories to media that includes The New York Times, Larry King, The CBS Evening News with Katie Couric, plus many other magazines, newspapers, trade journals and other media outlets. Contact him at mkeller@mediasavantcom.com, or 612-729-8585

Six Steps for Getting National Media Coverage

Fingers climbing a step stairs

Guest post by Drew Gerber

PR expert Drew Gerber has insider advice for us – quite exciting for small business owners:

National Media Coverage

Getting national media coverage in top print, broadcast or online media can boost your business in ways it is hard to imagine.

A single placement in a glossy national magazine is worth tens of thousands of dollars, sometimes a lot more, and not just in the value of ad space in the publication. Getting covered by national media lends a level of credibility, prestige and buzz that money cannot buy.

Sales Skyrocket

At Wasabi Publicity Inc., we sent out a pitch that landed author Dr. Jill Murray on Dr. Phil’s TV show less than eight hours after she had signed up as a client. Within one week, that same pitch also got her coverage with CNN Weekend News, Issues with Jane Velez Mitchell, 20/20, syndicated radio shows, and several magazine articles. Sales rankings of Dr. Jill’s newest book “But He Never Hit M” shot up to number 16 on Amazon.com and number 23 on Barnes & Noble within hours of her Dr. Phil appearance (see the exact pitch at http://www.publicityresults.com).

Despite the enormous value of national publicity, many business owners and entrepreneurs don’t understand how to go about attracting the media’s attention. It’s not complicated if you follow six basic steps:

1. Brand Your Message

Be crystal clear about who you are, what makes you unique and why the media should care. Assure you have a consistent message by having all your press materials ready before the press calls. A great way to do this is to get an online press kit. We created a technology called PressKit 24/7 (http://www.presskit247.com) which allows people to create press kits simply and easily without any special technical knowledge. More than 90 percent of journalists prefer to get their information from the Web. Having an online press kit is crucial to giving them the facts they need to cover you, your product, service or business.

2. Develop Your Pitch

Pretend you are in an elevator with Oprah and have 30 seconds to tell her why she should have you on her show. Your pitch should be concise, reflect your passion and stress what makes you unique. As PR professionals we have found that short pitches are often more effective for getting the media’s attention than long press releases.

3. Find the Media

The Internet provides countless ways to research media that may be interested in you. Pitchrate.com (http://www.pitchrate.com) is a free service we created to connect media and sources. You can also research media list sites such as http://www.usnpl.com. Watch your favorite show and find out the producer’s name from the credits, or read your favorite newspapers and magazines to find out who covers your topic area. When you contact reporters, compliment their work to let them know you have taken the time to research.

4. Respond Immediately

When the media calls or emails expressing interest in covering you, respond immediately. Reporters usually work on very tight deadlines, so the sources that respond fastest with the most concise and useful information are most likely to get covered.

5. Be Prepared

Thoroughly prepare for your interview. Decide what you want to say and practice saying it in short, concise sound bites. This is where professional media coaching can be valuable, since many people have had little experience in front of cameras and microphones.

6. Keep it Simple

Try practicing what you plan to say in front of an 8-year-old. Really! If you do this and the child can repeat back to you what you have said, you know that you’re communicating in a way that’s easy to understand.

So remember: brand your message, hone your pitch, find your media and give them what they need to make interviewing you interesting and rewarding. That brings us to a final piece of most important advice: Focus on what the reporter needs and how you can provide content that is useful to the audience, rather than hard-selling yourself or your product. Remember, you are getting great publicity for free, and pay it forward!

Have you garnered great free publicity? Share your story with us.

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For more resources, see our Library topics Marketing and Social Networking.

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About the Author:

L. Drew Gerber is CEO of www.PublicityResults.com and creator of www.PitchRate.com, a free media connection service for journalists, experts, and publicists. Sign up now for free publicity advice including a free online marketing course. Gerber’s business practices and staffing innovations have been revered by PR Week, Good Morning America and the Christian Science Monitor. His companies handle international PR campaigns and his staff develops online press kits for authors, speakers and companies with Online PressKit 24/7, a technology he developed (www.PressKit247.com). Contact L. Drew Gerber at: AskDrew@PublicityResults.com or call him at 828-749-3548.