PR Week offers some great tips on how to prepare your CEO for TV interviews. Most of these items are useful for print and radio, too. They're courtesty of Jerry Doyle, EVP at CommCore Consulting Group. 1. How well does he know the subject matter for the interview? It is perfectly reasonable to expect that the CEO has only top-line knowledge of … [Read more...]
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Piggyback off the weather
The spring's unseasonably cold weather here in Wisconsin--complete with wool socks, furnaces at full blast and hot soup for lunch--is a good reminder about one of the easiest ways to gerate publcity--by piggybacking your story idea off the weather. After sweating through a week of 100-degree temperatures a few summers ago, Publicity Hound John … [Read more...]
Hounds help author of book on grief
Fourteen Publicity Hounds had advice for Julie Berry of Rivendell Communications in Sugar Grove, Pennsylvania. Julie's company represents an author who has become an expert on grief and loss. The author is also a mountain climber and nature lover who enjoys sharing the lessons she learns from physical challenges with nature. Julie said typical book … [Read more...]
Pitch stories for TV’s warm & fuzzy finale
Just before the local evening news is coming to an end, you hear the TV anchor lead off the final story of the night with the same two words. "Finally, tonight..." What follows is a warm and fuzzy finale, a 60-second slice of fluff that makes you smile as you head to bed. It might be a story about a worker from the sanitation department … [Read more...]
Publisher gets tips for promoting Hispanic newspaper
Publicity Hounds have helpful tips for Fernando Lopez of Chicago, Illinois who asked about how to get publicity for his new free weekly Hispanic newspaper. From Howard Pierpont of Hillsboro, Oregon: "First, get as many copies into the target market as possible. Stock up all the locations your market visits: the local bodega, any of the popular … [Read more...]
Fodder for bios
A frustrated Publicity Hound wrote to me recently, asking how she can write an interesting bio, even if she doesn't have any "newsworthy" accomplishments.
"How can you write a bio when you don't have an MBA, have never received any awards, and haven't appeared on TV or radio or in magazines?" she asks.
Bios or professional … [Read more...]
Hot ideas will help promote Cold War museum
Publicity Hounds come out of their bunkers to help Marion Grobb Finkelstein of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Marion asked for ideas on how to promote a local museum called the "Diefenbunker." It's an underground facility built during the Cold War and located about 30 minutes from downtown.
From Florence Rabusseau of London, England:
Revamp … [Read more...]
How to revive a dying book marketing campaign
Two to three months after the typical book hits bookstores, sales usually start to diminish, sometimes for as long as eight or nine months.
Many authors go into panic mode, frightened that their sales can't possibly regain momentum.
Book publicist Lissa Warren knows the feeling. And she tells her clients that the slump is to be … [Read more...]
“Side door strategy” relies on not-so-obvious angles
Proteges in The Publicity Hound Mentoring Program heard me lecture recently on the "side-door strategy" to publicity during a teleseminar I hosted just for them. Even though I've always understood and promoted the concept, I first heard the phrase "side-door strategy" when I read an article by publicist Jodee Blanco.
The "side-door … [Read more...]
Put limitations on sensitive TV video
Night after night, we see stories on the local and national TV news about topics like obesity, alcoholism, drug abuse and mental illness.
The reporter's narration accompanies generic film footage of people walking on a crowded sidewalk, or students making their way to class on a college campus.
No problem--except if the story happens … [Read more...]