If you're like most publicity seekers,
you probably think one
project at a time.
You've got a new
product coming out in April,
so you send out a release in March.
You've hired a new executive,
you'll put out a release when she's on
board, etc.
For hard-core publicity insiders,
though, there's a rhythm to
generating coverage, based upon the
natural ebb and flow of the
seasons.
Such an approach can help you
score publicity throughout
the year, and will help keep your eye
on the ball from January
through December.
Essentially, a yearlong approach
consists of two strategies:
- Timing your existing stories (new
product introductions,
oddball promotions, business page
features, etc.) to fit the
needs of the media during particular
times of the year.
- Crafting new stories to take
advantage of events, holidays
and seasonal activities.
Before we run through the four seasons
of publicity, a few words
about lead time. In this age of
immediacy (only a few seconds
separate a Matt Drudge or a CNN from
writing a story and putting
it before millions), it's easy to
forget that, for many print
publications and TV shows, it can be
weeks -- and sometimes
months -- before a completed story
sees the light of day.
The phrase lead time simply refers to
the amount of time needed
for a journalist to complete a story
for a particular issue of a
magazine or episode of a TV news
program.
For example, a
freelancer for an entertainment
magazine may need to turn in a
story on Christmas movies by September
15.
That's a lead time of
three months, time needed for the
editor to review and change the
piece, the issue to be typeset and
printed and distributors to
place the issues on newsstands before
December.
Lead time can
range from a day (for hard news pieces
in newspapers) to a few
days (newspaper features) to a few
weeks (weekly magazines) to
many months.
The longest leads are the domain
of "women's books" like Good
Housekeeping and Better Homes &
Gardens.
These publications
often have a lead time of up to six
months, which means they need
information for their Christmas issues
as early as May!
Here's a tip to help you discover the
lead time of a particular
publication you're targeting: call
the advertising department of
the publication and request a media
kit.
Since advertisers need
to know when their ads must be
submitted, each issue's lead time
is clearly stated in the media kit.
Factor the lead time into your
planning as you look over the
following sections.
If you have a
great story idea for Rolling
Stone's summer issues, you need to be
on the ball well before
Memorial Day.
The Four Seasons of Publicity
First Quarter: January - March
What the Media's Covering: Early in
the year, the media is
looking ahead.
It's a great time to
pitch trend stories,
marketplace predictions, previews of
things to expect in the year
ahead, etc.
If a new President is
being inaugurated, you'll see
lots of "Will the new administration
be good for the
(textile/film/cattle
ranching/Internet/...or any other)
industry?" types of pieces.
This is a
good time to have
something provocative, or even
controversial, to say about your
industry.
The media also likes this time of year
to run "get your personal
house in order"sorts of pieces.
Tax
planning, home organizing,
weight loss, etc. Anything that's
geared toward helping people
keep their New Year's resolutions can
work here.
Key Dates and Events: Can you come up
with a story angle to tie
your business into an event that
typically generates lots of
coverage?
Put on your thinking cap --
I bet you can! Here are
some key events during the First
Quarter: Super Bowl, NCAA
Tournament, Easter, The Academy
Awards.
Second Quarter: April - June
What the Media's Covering:
An "anything goes" time of year.
With no major holidays or huge events,
April is a good time to
try some of your general stories
(business features, new product
stuff, etc.)
Light, fun stories work
here, as a sense of "spring
fever" takes hold of newsrooms
(journalists are human, you know.
They're just as happy winter is over
as you are and it's often
reflected in the kind of stories they
choose to run.). As May
rolls around, thoughts turn to
summer.
Now they're looking for
summer vacation pieces, outdoor toys
and gadgets, stories about
safety (whether automotive or
recreational), leisure activities,
things to do for kids and so on.
Key Dates and Events: Baseball opening
day, tax day (April 15),
spring gardening season, Memorial
Day, end of school, summer
vacation.
Third Quarter: July - September
What the Media's Covering: The dog
days of summer are when smart
publicity seekers really make hay.
Folks at PR firms are on
vacation, marketing budgets are being
conserved for the holidays
and reporters are suddenly accessible
and open to all sorts of
things.
Get to work here, with
creative, fun angles.
Entertainment-themed pieces do well in
the summer, anything with
celebrities works, lighter business
stories, new products, trend
pieces, technology news, back to
school education-themed
articles, you name it.
Reporters are
about to get deluged once
again come September, so use this
window of opportunity wisely.
Key Dates and Events: July 4th, summer
movies, summer travel,
back to school.
Fourth Quarter: October - December
What the Media's Covering: The
busiest time of the media
calendar, the Fourth Quarter is when
the business media turns
serious and the lifestyle media thinks
Holidays, Holidays,
Holidays.
Business angles need to be
hard news. Fluffy trend
pieces won't cut it, as business
editors begin to take stock of
the state of the economy and the
market.
It's a tough time to
put out a new product release. For
the non-business media, think
Christmas. Christmas travel,
Christmas gifts, Christmas cooking,
whatever.
If you have a product or
service that can be given as
a holiday gift, get on the stick early.
Nail down lead times for the
publications you're targeting, call
to find out who's handling the holiday
gift review article and
get your product in the right person's
hands in plenty of time --
along with a pitch letter or release
that makes a strong case
about how what a novel, unusual or
essential gift your product
makes.
After Christmas, you have a
brief window for "Best of the
Year", ""Worst of the Year" and "Year
in Review" pieces.
Be
creative -- the media loves these
things.
Key Dates and Events: Labor Day, World
Series, Thanksgiving,
Hanukkah, Christmas, New Year's Eve.