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MyMediaInfo Home Page >> Media Room >> Hal Alpiar
Is Your Business News Getting Coverage?
Hal Alpiar
Link to the original article
If your business isn’t getting the kind of news coverage you would like, maybe you’re giving too much attention to what your news release says and not enough to those who decide its newsworthiness.
Whether or not your news release prompts media coverage has first to do with how newsworthy (and UN-self-serving) it is. Second, it will only get meaningful placement attention when you (or whomever you designate) give(s) meaningful appreciation attention. This doesn’t mean fawning over or patronizing reporters and editors. It means appreciating their situations and responsibilities.
In most cases, you will not break through the clutter with an email or printed page and a half of sensational news about your company’s products, services, activities, or ideas. It will take more than that. The word here is empathy — putting yourself in other’s shoes. Maybe you think you shouldn’t have to do that as a matter of business practice.
But consider that media people (as much as we may justifiably bash the network TV anchors and often extremist editorial board behaviors) tend to be sensitive beasts. They are caught in the middle of the need to balance legitimate value stories with the illegitimate ones that will sell more newspapers and magazines and more broadcast airtime to keep enough revenues flowing to pay their salaries.
In fact, over 50,000 traditional journalists now use Twitter on a regular basis. (Source: www.MyMediaInfo.com) But, still, for really big news coverage, many continue to look to major media coverage as the difference between news and N E W S.
Okay, so do you think a single news release delivered to the Wall Street Journalfrom any lower level name awareness than Mr. Goldman or Mr. Sachs is going to get your new WhizBang Production Facility on the front page? On ANY page?
The best business coverage only happens 999,999 times out of a million because relationships are established and nurtured.
Like every other industry and profession, there are “tricks of the trade” you need to know in order to make your efforts pay off.
It cost money to learn and apply these secrets. Many PR firms charge $10,000 to $20,000 a month to play the PR game for you, but a good PR Coach (who will help you play the game yourself) shouldn’t be more than $1,200 to $2,500 a month (including writing a monthly release!).
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