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P.T. Barnum


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Cultural Communications Enews - Inside Tips from PR Central, Spring 2008
New York City Skyline

 

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Demystifying the Publicist's Job
Most people assume that a publicist with good media relationships will "make everything happen."  You simply hire one with the right connections and media coverage will appear like magic.  Right?  Wrong!  Read on to learn more.

Preparing for Publicity.  Of course, maintaining relationships with journalists is
central to our work.  But publicists also need good content to interest the media
That means interesting, newsworthy or riveting information about events, books, business news, exhibitions and your other projects.

We also need to know your goals.  If you want to be on Oprah, in The New York
Times
or in The Huffington Post, your publicist will tell you whether they are viable possibilities.  (If they are not, we will suggest other options…or recommend a
publicist that is better suited to your goals.)

Most publicists specialize.  What are you targeting?  Television?  Radio?  Blogs?  Newspapers and magazines?  If you are promoting visual culture, radio may not be your first choice.  If you have a new book coming out, a blogging campaign is key. 
All publicists keep a portfolio of the media coverage they have generated.  Evaluate them by how their samples match your goals.

Publicity campaigns take time.  Unless your news item or event is pegged to a specific date, it can take weeks or months for coverage to begin appearing.  That is especially true for companies and enterprises seeking general media coverage,
and it's why some PR companies require a year contract to represent a new client.

Strategic publicity planning.  Every publicist has their own approach to publicity campaigns.  Here is mine:

  1. Identify the ten most important media outlets.  I ask clients to identify their
    ten most prized media outlets...and then supplement that list with fifty or more additional options.

  2. Develop a succinct pitch.  A pitch is a ten-second sound bite, or a three-sentence e-mail, that conveys the essence of your story and is designed to interest journalists.  If they like the pitch, they might read the press release.  Journalists from three different major publications have recently made a few comments to me that emphasize why the pitch is so critical:

    • "We don't write stories from releases...but if you give me the basic
      idea I might look into it."

    • "I was on the escalator in [a building in Midtown] and couldn't read the press release on my Blackberry.  Can you explain it in five seconds?"

    • "What are the facts?  I don't have time to read the press release."

  3. Pitching.  Once the pitch is established, we approach the media outlets on
    your top ten list.  Sometimes one is approached before any of the others.  If journalists know they have first crack at an exclusive story, they will be more likely to cover it.

    We then contact dozens more journalists from our extensive list of contacts.  The bigger the net, the greater the range of coverage.

My strategy isn't glamorous, but it produces results.  Following those steps can generate interviews, feature stories, illustrated items and reviews in major publications, Web sites and radio and television shows, as well as other forms
of publicity.

And the impact on your book, business, exhibition or event can be tremendous.  Nothing opens doors like media coverage, which is why it is so sought-after.

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Cultural Communications | Promoting Culture, Events & Lifestyle


Cultural Communications
455 Park Avenue, 9th Floor, New York, NY 10022 | www.culturalcommunications.info
212.505.1253 tel | 917.591.7633 fax | contact@culturalcommunications.info



© 2008 Cultural Communications