...and how it can benefit your business.
The call came into my office and the voice on the other end was very energetic, almost giddy:"I have finalized my marketing budget and need your help launching an
advertising campaign for my new product," he breathed.
"Congratulations," I
replied, "but before we implement an ad
campaign, I want to make sure you
have explored potential PUBLICITY
opportunities that could generate some
cost-efficient media exposure first."
Then, silence. "I never thought about
that," he sighed. "Frankly, I donīt
know much about it."
He is not alone. Itīs a common
conversation. Although many
entrepreneurs or
business people know a bit about
publicity or media exposure, the
majority
of them simply donīt understand the
full benefits of "publicity placements"
or how to go about generating them
successfully.
Publicity placements have
always been a cost-efficient way to
market a product/business and generate
clients or customers, but because of
lack of knowledge or a misunderstanding
of what publicity is and does, many
entrepreneurs donīt take full advantage
of publicity opportunities -- and that
can lead to missed marketing chances.
I recently surveyed a few dozen
business owners and entrepreneurs in
some
newsgroups and business chat rooms
about their knowledge of "publicity
placements" in the media.
I found out
that only 37% knew that a simple
"product profile" in a magazine was
generated as a result of publicity
efforts. Most thought the company had
paid the media outlet to run the
feature, much like an ad. And of that
37%, less than half of them knew HOW
to generate a similar placement.
Another interesting fact, because of
the recent slowdown in the economy,
expensive advertising budgets have been
slashed. As a result, many
businesses, like your competitors, are
turning to publicity/PR campaigns as
a more affordable means of marketing to
compete with other companies.
Here
are some ways to use publicity
placements to help your business:
Editorial Placements/Media Notification
What some entrepreneurs might not
realize is that we see editorial
placements from publicity efforts
everyday in the media: product profiles,
feature articles and contributed by-
lined articles in magazines, newspapers,
trade industry newsletters or on
TV/radio/cable newscasts & shows.
This
is
not advertising, this is "EDITORIAL
Placement" or "Media Notification" of a
product, business or industry expert.
Notify the appropriate media that your
newsworthy product is on the market or
your business is offering a unique
new service and let them run a feature
placement that will spread that
message to your consumer market.
These
placements can detail your product or
business very effectively, giving
consumers some objective, pertinent
information that may well entice them
to become future customers.
These editorial placements are looked
upon much more credibly than ad
placements. That is not a slam on
advertising. Paying for advertising
placements is indeed an effective way
to market your product.
But the fact
is, a positive editorial placement such
as a product profile in a magazine
or a newspaper can be much more
persuasive than a glossy, over-hyped
advertisement - and a fraction of the
cost.
My point is that editorial
placements are an often time overlooked
marketing vehicle for a business,
and that entrepreneurs should
understand the full benefits of these
placements to make the most of their
marketing efforts.
Editorial placements are a wonderfully
reciprocal way for you and the media
to work together for the betterment of
your business. The media needs to
fill its pages and airtime with
interesting information -- and you need
to
get the word out to your market.
Research the media market to find those
media outlets and editorial contacts
with which you can forge that mutually
beneficial relationship. But you have
to do your part and do it right - or
the media will forge that relationship
with your competitor.
Make sure your
media message is solid, contains
newsworthy angles and isnīt disguised as
overly commercialized ad copy. Have
high-quality photos and media samples
available and do all you can to make
the mediaīs job of featuring your
product as simple as possible.
It also
helps to have some sort of clipping
service in place to track your
placements and get you copies so you
can use
them in your secondary marketing
programs.
Expert Branding
This type of publicity placement
generating takes advantage of the expert
knowledge within a particular business.
It is an effective tool for
entrepreneurs whose businesses are more
service related, like consultants or
specialists.
Expert branding basically
treats the expert like a product.
Alert the media as to your expertise on
a specific topic and avail yourself
to serve as an expert interview
resource for future articles or news
feature
segments.
Additionally, the expert
should write a few brief articles on a
specialized topic and make them
available to editors for review and
possible
publication.
The challenge of this type
of publicity placement is the
tedious task of finding out which
outlets accept "expert editorial
contributions" or contributed by-lined
articles in their publications.
Again, it comes down to meticulously
researching your media market to find
those media outlets that may be in need
of the editorial content that you
can provide them.
With some creativity, expert branding
can be effective for product-based
businesses as well. One client of mine
runs a fresh wild salmon distribution
business in the Pacific Northwest and
was looking to increase consumer
awareness of his products.
Based on his
more than 20 years of experience in
the wild salmon harvesting business, we
are expert branding him as a viable
interview resource to health/food
editors for features detailing the
differences and benefits of wild salmon
over farm-raised fish, as well as
other related topics.
In this case, my
client (the expert) is identified and
quoted in features and the name of the
business and even a link to a website
are often included for consumers to
check out. This is great credibility
building exposure at little or no cost.
Overall, when using the media to help
market your product or business, take
advantage of as many FREE media
opportunities as you can. If you lack
the
expertise or time, a PR agency or
publicist can generate the editorial
placements for you.
But the fee you pay
them is a FRACTION of what it would
cost you to buy similar sized ad
placements. And those publicity
placements
typically lead to a much better
consumer response right out of the
gate -
which is just what you need to boost
your business to the next level.
Todd Brabender can be reached via email or at http://www.spreadthenewspr.com.
Todd Brabender is the President of
Spread The News Public Relations, Inc.
His business specializes in generating
media exposure and publicity for
innovative products, businesses,
experts and inventions.
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