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  • Will You Add? - Media Relations - It's All About Relationships

    Travel Nursing - Smooth Ride or Bumpy Road?
    Travel nursing is an up-and-coming profession that appeals to many nursing professionals for several reasons. Excellent pay and benefits, the chance to travel at the expense of someone else and variety are among the positive points of travel nursing. Sound great? It's not all the "bowl of cherries" that some believe.The idea of getting paid to travel appeals to many people. The problem is that we want to have time to take in the sights, relax and enjoy our travels. Travel nursing is similar in some ways to driving a truck. You may get to see some incredible sunsets and view awesome scenery, but you're
    town, ask the reporter if they’re planning on attending. If they are, make a point of seeking that reporter out and introducing yourself. Start a relationship, just as you would with a prospective customer. A caveat – be aware that journalists have ethical standards dictated by their industry and their employers. Gifts, even a free lunch, have to be reported, and in most cases refused. What you need to offer is information, good information, not bribery.

    Once you’ve established a relationship with a reporter, value it. Offer them stories, not self-serving fluff – the relationship will only pay off if it’s win/win, just like every other business relationship. Is what you have newsworthy? Is a new branch office for your

    It's Good to Know Your Banker
    Recently my bank opened a new branch that is a few miles away from my house. I used to visit the local branch that was located in the grocery store and enjoyed seeing the ladies on a weekly basis who were the tellers.Since the store branch closed, I’m forced to travel a few miles more down the road to the new beautiful building that also offers drive through service. I’ve been getting used to that recently and so only spied at the tellers through the camera lens.I’ve since discovered that it’s worth it to go inside the bank and get to know the tellers. And I also learned that it’s good to know t
    Your company is about to launch a new product or service that will raise the achievement bar in your industry. You want to make sure that every customer for your innovative offering hears the buzz, and acts on it by buying it – in droves. You write a press release announcing your exciting news, and fire it off to Business Wire, PR Web, several industry magazines, your local paper’s business editor, and the newsrooms of local broadcasters. You post it, with a big headline, on your company’s website. You sit back, and wait for the world to beat a path to your door.

    Some time later, you notice that your door is still on its hinges. Your hoped-for media response was underwhelming. In fact, it was non-existent. You saw the headline on the Business Wire page. You know it was near the top for several hours on PR Web. But no industry writers called, and your press release wasn’t even run in your local paper’s business pages. Why not? Where did you go wrong?

    In your business, you’ve no doubt discovered that relationships are what make customers out of prospects. The same principle is in play with media relations – it’s not what you know (or how well you write your press release), it’s who you know. And how they feel about you and your company.

    When you were developing your business plan, you put an advertising budget in under marketing, didn’t you? Here’s another question: What’s the best advertising in the world?

    Answer: free publicity.

    I can hear you – you’re saying...”OK, Casey, but how do I get free publicity?”

    You develop relationships with reporters who cover your industry, that’s how.

    Look at your local daily newspaper, and local TV news. Pick up the last copy of your industry’s trade magazine. What stories have they run in the last year about people, companies or events in your business sector? Who reported the story? Print media needs to fill the news holes in their pages – the news hole is the part of the page that isn’t paid advertising – and television news needs to have something to report between commercials. Reporters will welcome a heads-up about news on their beats that they don’t have to go out and dig up on their own.

    The approach here should NOT be to call or email the reporter and tell them all about your company. You want to be a source, but not a source of annoyance. The best way to open a dialog with a reporter is to offer yourself as an expert on your business sector – for example, if the reporter’s beat is real estate and development, and you’re a Realtor with a lot of experience in commercial development, you’d be a great source for that reporter.

    Make contact with the reporter after you’ve read or watched some of her or his recent pieces. Start a conversation – email is ideal here – with some of your observations about the piece, and about where your industry is headed. Keep it short, not a dissertation. If there’s an industry event coming up in town, ask the reporter if they’re planning on attending. If they are, make a point of seeking that reporter out and introducing yourself. Start a relationship, just as you would with a prospective customer. A caveat – be aware that journalists have ethical standards dictated by their industry and their employers. Gifts, even a free lunch, have to be reported, and in most cases refused. What you need to offer is information, good information, not bribery.

    Once you’ve established a relationship with a reporter, value it. Offer them stories, not self-serving fluff – the relationship will only pay off if it’s win/win, just like every other business relationship. Is what you have newsworthy? Is a new branch office for your c

    Pilot Jobs: The Ever Changing Market
    If you are looking for work as an airline pilot, you can’t help but notice that the news is constantly filled with information [mostly negative] about the job situation for the industry as a whole. Unfortunately, newsmakers only get part of the story right as the airline industry is always in a state of flux. Pilot jobs are available, but you must broaden your horizons beyond the conventional ways in which most pilots go about finding work. Let’s take a look at some of the options available to you.Independence Air’s recent demise has thrown hundreds of Airbus pilots out of work in the US. Press
    n the Business Wire page. You know it was near the top for several hours on PR Web. But no industry writers called, and your press release wasn’t even run in your local paper’s business pages. Why not? Where did you go wrong?

    In your business, you’ve no doubt discovered that relationships are what make customers out of prospects. The same principle is in play with media relations – it’s not what you know (or how well you write your press release), it’s who you know. And how they feel about you and your company.

    When you were developing your business plan, you put an advertising budget in under marketing, didn’t you? Here’s another question: What’s the best advertising in the world?

    Answer: free publicity.

    I can hear you – you’re saying...”OK, Casey, but how do I get free publicity?”

    You develop relationships with reporters who cover your industry, that’s how.

    Look at your local daily newspaper, and local TV news. Pick up the last copy of your industry’s trade magazine. What stories have they run in the last year about people, companies or events in your business sector? Who reported the story? Print media needs to fill the news holes in their pages – the news hole is the part of the page that isn’t paid advertising – and television news needs to have something to report between commercials. Reporters will welcome a heads-up about news on their beats that they don’t have to go out and dig up on their own.

    The approach here should NOT be to call or email the reporter and tell them all about your company. You want to be a source, but not a source of annoyance. The best way to open a dialog with a reporter is to offer yourself as an expert on your business sector – for example, if the reporter’s beat is real estate and development, and you’re a Realtor with a lot of experience in commercial development, you’d be a great source for that reporter.

    Make contact with the reporter after you’ve read or watched some of her or his recent pieces. Start a conversation – email is ideal here – with some of your observations about the piece, and about where your industry is headed. Keep it short, not a dissertation. If there’s an industry event coming up in town, ask the reporter if they’re planning on attending. If they are, make a point of seeking that reporter out and introducing yourself. Start a relationship, just as you would with a prospective customer. A caveat – be aware that journalists have ethical standards dictated by their industry and their employers. Gifts, even a free lunch, have to be reported, and in most cases refused. What you need to offer is information, good information, not bribery.

    Once you’ve established a relationship with a reporter, value it. Offer them stories, not self-serving fluff – the relationship will only pay off if it’s win/win, just like every other business relationship. Is what you have newsworthy? Is a new branch office for your

    Marketing: Can I Trust You?
    We live in an unprecedented era of communication. Because of this, your prospects are literally bombarded from all directions with marketing messages. They’ve heard so many hyped claims, that they automatically distrust them all.How can you avoid this in your marketing messages? How can you convince them that what you promise is what you will actually deliver?First of all, tell the truth. Don’t promise that your widget will do something it won’t. You may get sales in the short term, but long term, nothing you say will be believable ever again.Now that we’ve got the obvious out of the way,
    p>

    I can hear you – you’re saying...”OK, Casey, but how do I get free publicity?”

    You develop relationships with reporters who cover your industry, that’s how.

    Look at your local daily newspaper, and local TV news. Pick up the last copy of your industry’s trade magazine. What stories have they run in the last year about people, companies or events in your business sector? Who reported the story? Print media needs to fill the news holes in their pages – the news hole is the part of the page that isn’t paid advertising – and television news needs to have something to report between commercials. Reporters will welcome a heads-up about news on their beats that they don’t have to go out and dig up on their own.

    The approach here should NOT be to call or email the reporter and tell them all about your company. You want to be a source, but not a source of annoyance. The best way to open a dialog with a reporter is to offer yourself as an expert on your business sector – for example, if the reporter’s beat is real estate and development, and you’re a Realtor with a lot of experience in commercial development, you’d be a great source for that reporter.

    Make contact with the reporter after you’ve read or watched some of her or his recent pieces. Start a conversation – email is ideal here – with some of your observations about the piece, and about where your industry is headed. Keep it short, not a dissertation. If there’s an industry event coming up in town, ask the reporter if they’re planning on attending. If they are, make a point of seeking that reporter out and introducing yourself. Start a relationship, just as you would with a prospective customer. A caveat – be aware that journalists have ethical standards dictated by their industry and their employers. Gifts, even a free lunch, have to be reported, and in most cases refused. What you need to offer is information, good information, not bribery.

    Once you’ve established a relationship with a reporter, value it. Offer them stories, not self-serving fluff – the relationship will only pay off if it’s win/win, just like every other business relationship. Is what you have newsworthy? Is a new branch office for your

    The Voice of Customer Service
    Customer relationship management tools abound, yet let's hear it for old technology. Your voice is the most multifaceted customer service tool in your toolkit. Your voice can convey concern, care and compassion. It can alternately convey boredom, neglect or contempt. Your challenge: to insure your voice reinforces the service you strive to deliver through your actual words and action.Customer service is about more than mouthing the words customers want to hear. You have to sound believable. How do you sound? Try this experiment. Call your own answering machine and leave yourself a message normally inte
    ch here should NOT be to call or email the reporter and tell them all about your company. You want to be a source, but not a source of annoyance. The best way to open a dialog with a reporter is to offer yourself as an expert on your business sector – for example, if the reporter’s beat is real estate and development, and you’re a Realtor with a lot of experience in commercial development, you’d be a great source for that reporter.

    Make contact with the reporter after you’ve read or watched some of her or his recent pieces. Start a conversation – email is ideal here – with some of your observations about the piece, and about where your industry is headed. Keep it short, not a dissertation. If there’s an industry event coming up in town, ask the reporter if they’re planning on attending. If they are, make a point of seeking that reporter out and introducing yourself. Start a relationship, just as you would with a prospective customer. A caveat – be aware that journalists have ethical standards dictated by their industry and their employers. Gifts, even a free lunch, have to be reported, and in most cases refused. What you need to offer is information, good information, not bribery.

    Once you’ve established a relationship with a reporter, value it. Offer them stories, not self-serving fluff – the relationship will only pay off if it’s win/win, just like every other business relationship. Is what you have newsworthy? Is a new branch office for your

    The Purpose of a Leader in the Business World
    If there were no leaders, everyone in a business would take their own path, resulting in a hit or miss opportunity for success. A manager or executive has the power to influence others to complete tasks necessary to the businesses growth.The problem with most companies is that they promote a man or woman to a position of leadership without giving them the tools necessary to earn the respect of their subordinates.A leader can’t just bark orders and realize success. Even if everyone on staff does what they’re told, if they do it begrudgingly, you will have missed out on even greater success that c
    town, ask the reporter if they’re planning on attending. If they are, make a point of seeking that reporter out and introducing yourself. Start a relationship, just as you would with a prospective customer. A caveat – be aware that journalists have ethical standards dictated by their industry and their employers. Gifts, even a free lunch, have to be reported, and in most cases refused. What you need to offer is information, good information, not bribery.

    Once you’ve established a relationship with a reporter, value it. Offer them stories, not self-serving fluff – the relationship will only pay off if it’s win/win, just like every other business relationship. Is what you have newsworthy? Is a new branch office for your company news: is it offering employment in an economically disadvantaged area, or is it just another suite of offices in an upscale office park? There has to be a news “hook”, something that makes your story more than just your story.

    Harking back to the scenario I drew at the top of the article, if you have a fresh solution or product that you believe will have the world beating a path to your door, the way to tell the world certainly involves writing a great press release. You’ll get a lot more mileage out of that release if you send it to reporters who know you, who regard you as an expert, and who will tell your story to their readers – your market – who will then beat a path to your door.

    Becoming an expert is what you did on the path to starting your business. Being recognized as an expert by the media will give you visibility worth thousands, even millions, of advertising dollars that you don’t have to spend.

    Does this give you a new view of reading the morning paper, watching local news, reading a trade journal? Are you itching to make a list of reporters who cover your industry? Great – now go do it!

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