
Short version of bio:
Joan Stewart's free publicity campaign started at age 10 when
her hometown newspaper wrote a story about a blue ribbon she won for
a 4-H sewing project at the Ohio State Fair. From then on, she was
hooked on publicity.
Today, Joan
teaches Publicity Hounds how to catch the attention of frazzled news
directors, busy reporters and grumpy editors. In fact, she worked as
a grumpy editor at three daily newspapers and The Business Journal
in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
As a media
relations consultant and professional speaker, she shows people how
to use the traditional media and social networking to establish their credibility, enhance their
reputation, position themselves as experts, sell more products and
services, promote a favorite cause or issue, and establish their
companies as employers of choice.
Her popular electronic
newsletter called "The Publicity Hound's Tips of the Week" goes to
more than 30,000 subscribers worldwide and includes the best
publicity tips and good clean dog jokes (one in each issue) you'll
find anywhere. She lives and tries to stay warm in Port Washington,
Wisconsin.
Long version
of bio:
Joan Stewart’s free publicity
campaign started at age 10 when The Maple Heights Press, her
hometown weekly newspaper, wrote a four-inch story about a blue
ribbon she won for a 4-H sewing project (a bright blue apron) at the
Ohio State Fair.
From then on, she was hooked on publicity. A few years later, while
other girls her age were playing with Barbie dolls and listening to
Beatles albums, Joan was always scheming and thinking of ways to get
into the giant newsroom at The Cleveland Press, her local
metropolitan newspaper, so she could meet reporters and ask them
about their jobs.
During the next 10 years, Joan
used every excuse imaginable to get into the newsroom. She
interviewed reporters for class projects. She visited The Press
during school field trips. She talked her way into the newsroom
again when she was named sports editor for her high school newspaper
and told the grizzled sports reporters at The Press that she wanted
to visit them to learn “how the pros do it.” She was mesmerized by
the clanging of Underwood manual typewriters, editors barking orders
to reporters, and the fog of cigarette smoke.
In 1974, she was involved in her
first investigative story as editor of The BG News at
Bowling Green State University in
Bowling Green, Ohio. Rumors had circulated throughout campus that
local fraternities were encouraging their members to cast multiple
ballots in the student elections so their favorite candidates would
be elected. She and three other newspaper staffers entered the
voting booths several times on election day and stamped “The BG
News” on the paper ballots, then dropped them into the ballot
boxes—proving that the lax election system indeed made it possible
for students to vote more than once. The university threatened her
and the other journalists with expulsion. They were later cleared,
but a story about the controversy appeared along with her photo in
none other than The Cleveland Press. “I was thrilled because it gave
me one more reason to be able to visit the newsroom,” she said. But
she was mortified when the article misspelled her name. "Joan
Gestl" appeared as "Joan Grestl." It was her first valuable lesson
in the importance of accuracy.
Joan worked as a reporter, then
managing editor at The Lake
County News-Herald in Willoughby, Ohio. From there, she worked
as editor at The Sheboygan
Press in Sheboygan, Wisconsin;
The Express-Times in
Easton, Pa.; and The
Business Journal in Milwaukee, Wis. She left the newspaper
industry in 1994 to start her own business. As a media relations
consultant, speaker and trainer, she shows people how to use the
media to establish
their credibility, enhance their reputation, position themselves as
experts, sell more products and services, promote a favorite cause
or issue, and establish their companies as employers of choice.
Today, Joan travels the United
States giving
workshops on media topics, lugging her plastic popcorn forks,
rubber masks and other props with her to show her audiences how some
of the most obscure products have gotten thousands of dollars in
publicity on top media outlets like CNN and The New York Times. She is a past president of the
Wisconsin chapter of
the National Speakers
Association.
Joan also publishes the popular
electronic newsletter “The Publicity Hound’s Tips of the Week” which
goes to more than 30,000 subscribers worldwide. She actively seeks publicity
success stories from her readers, as well good, clean dog jokes that
are featured in every issue.
She loves riding rickety
roller-coasters, eating hot buttered popcorn, walking several miles a day,
listening to anything by Joni Mitchell or Laura Nyro, and watching
"The Sopranos" and reruns of "Andy of Mayberry."
Her one goal in life? "To learn
to drive a stick-shift."
She lives and tries to stay
warm in Port Washington, Wisconsin.
How Joan can help the media:
-
If you are looking for
publicity success stories, I can share sources and contact information.
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If you need articles,
columns, tip sheets, or other short items, I can meet even the toughest
deadlines without fail.
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I can provide more than 50
publicity and media-related articles you
can reprint--and adjust the word count to meet your needs to save you
time editing. See my
Free Articles page for a partial list.
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I write freelance articles for a variety
of publications and have built a reputation for suggesting
off-the-wall topics, writing clean and compelling copy, and respecting
deadlines.
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I can provide a list of other experts and
contact information on the topic of free publicity.
-
I can provide expert
commentary, background and story ideas on the topic of publicity.
Call 262-284-7451 or email
JStewart@PublicityHound.com
Joan's Recent Press Releases
Download Joan's 300 dpi photo
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