If you don't subscribe to Bulldog Reporter's excellent ezine "Journalists Speak Out," you're missing some terrific pitching tips. Brian Pittman passed along several tips last week after interviewing Penelope Dunham, producer for ABC-TV's Channel 7 in San Francisco, on how PR people can pitch in the wake of a disaster. He gave me … [Read more...]
Search Results for: journalists
Use powerful subheads on press releases and other copy
Of the five stories that appeared on the front page of today's edition of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, my local newspaper, every one of them had a subhead just below the main headline. In today's edition of the Wall Street, all four stories on Page 1 also have subheads. You'll probably find something similar if you check your own local … [Read more...]
How to find a reporter’s hot button
One of the best ways to generate publicity for a product, service, cause or issue is to find a reporter who has experienced a problem that's related to the story you want to pitch. It's called finding a reporter's hot button and sometimes it happens purely by accident. Publicity Hound Carol Adams of Charlotte, North Carolina said she was having … [Read more...]
The news release is dead
Do you write news releases that require six levels of approval before they can go out the door? Do you labor over every word in your releases, and worry what reporters will think about the lame B.S. quote in the third paragraph---the one the boss insists be kept in? If so, you might welcome the claim from Sally Saville Hodge that the typical news … [Read more...]
Media hungry for news on “citizen journalism”
As I mentioned yesterday, I'm fascinated by all the "citizen journalism" experiments under way throughout the U.S. I'm not alone. Blogger Steve Outing says he wondered if he was writing too much about the topic, but that the responses to his blog items, and queries from "real" journalists, leads him to believe this could eventually be a hot … [Read more...]
CDs, tapes available from Media Relations 2005
If you missed the Media Relations 2005 conference in San Francisco in April, you can still learn terrific PR and publicity tips by buying the CDs or cassette tapes for $15 each. Read the entire list here. It includes the panel I participated in titled "The 10 worst Journalist Faux Pas You Can Make." I highly recommend three sessions: … [Read more...]
Newspaper editor wants how-to books, info
David Foster, managing editor of the Journal Register Company's News Gleaner family of newspapers, feeds feature stories to all the newspapers in his chain, including 24 dailies. "Each week I write a lead feature (usually linked to a book), an Off The Shelf column that focuses on overlooked titles, and 'How to ... ' which shows readers how to do … [Read more...]
From PMA University—4 principles for book publicity
Book publicist Alice Acheson gave 200 members of Publishers Marketing Association her four principles of publicity success this afternon at PMA University, the annual educational program for authors and publishers. Her principles are: 1. Start marketing the minute your book contract is signed. Write one paragraph about the book and one paragraph … [Read more...]
Every author should hear this media panel
If you're going to New York City next week for the BookExpo America convention, don't miss Steve Harrison's media panel on Saturday. I'll be there. I attended this last year when it was part of the convention, and it was one of the highlights of my trip. A panel of top-tier print and broadcast journalists offered their best tips on how … [Read more...]
Why food bribes work with broadcast media
The Milwaukee Brewers are off to a good start this year--yet another reminder of how using food to entice reproters to cover your story works. While Harley-Davidson was welcoming several hundred thousand bikers at its giant 100th anniversary reunion in Milwaukee several years ago, popular afternoon drive-time talk show host Mark Belling opened … [Read more...]
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