HOW TO GET FREE PUBLICITY FOR YOUR BUSINESS
Would you like to expand the volume of your business? You can let
thousands of people know about your serice, your store, or your new
products without paying a penny. Whether you want to make more sales,
or get an offer on television, you can broaden the scope of your clients
by free publicity.
You don't have to climb a flagpole or hire a dancing bear to attract
attention and sales. In fact, with just a telephone and follow up letters
and flyers, you can be making much more money than you are.
What product or business are you involved with that needs more clients
or customers? You might have a neighborhood store, or you might be
seeking exposure for a celebrity or politician. Maybe you have a new
invention that you can't get marketed or a recently released line of
designer furniture that you want to increase sales on.
How are you presently getting to customers? You may be advertising
in newspapers and magazines or trade journals. Or you may be relying
on a distribution agreement to retail the products your plant manufactures.
Perhaps you're an author depending on a publishing house to promote
your book, but it seems to be waning. Or you could be a young comic,
trying to get some more acts to further your career.
Regardless of your business or enterprise, free publicity is ayailable
to you. And yo-u don't need any particular background or training to
do it. What you do need is the belief in yourself and your product
ana the diligence and perseverance to continue when one idea doesn't
pan out.
Take a look at the variety of types of publicity. Whether you want
a local increase in sales, or national fame, free publicity is available
to you.
WHAT IS PUBLICITY?
Publicity is making something known to the public, spreading information
to the general-local or national-market. It is information with a news
value used to attract public attention or support.Everybody use publicity.
Politicians, manufacturers, celebrities-even the Detroit car makers
use publicity to further their causes and gain attention.
And publicity isn't limited to large organizations. Small committees
and enterprises use the local newspapers to publicize events and endeavors.
Publicity differs from advertising because it is free. Although
some groups or individuals do trade tickets or services for free mention
in publications, generally publicity is newsworthy copy that a publication
produces.
Publicity is a form of promotion, although promoting a product or
service may require other effrts that cost the company money. Godd
publicity is one of the best ways to let people know you have a worthwhile
business.
KNOW YOUR PRODUCT OR SERVICE
In order to gain publicity, you have to be totally familiar with
the product, service or business that you are promoting. If it is your
own product, you are the best one to describe the benefits and features.
If you want to publicize something else, talk to everyone involved
to et the facts and details.
Consider the radius of your market. If you have a local business
such as a retail store or service shop, most of your customers are
from the surrounding five miles. If you are located in a large city,
you may have a largþer radius, but at the same time, there may be stiffer
competition.
Your enterprise might be regional or statewide and your clients
may come from hundreds of miles-either in person or by telephone-to
use your services. And, if you are a large manufacturer, your clients
and customers may come from the entire United States-or you may have
a worldwide audience.
Profile your customers. Who are they and what do they do? If you
have a service, how often is this service used? If you have a product,
is it something that is bought again and again, or is it a lifetime
purchase?
How much do your customers pay for your products and are you competitive
with the other manufacturers of the same products? If you have an unusual
product, are you reaching the widest audience you can?
SURVEY THE MARKET
What do the customers want? Sometimes, the least expensive price is
not the most important element. With today's packaging, many customers
expect and will pay for things elaborately packaged.Where do these
people go to buy your products? Are they sold at retail outlets or
through trade publicatios or magazines? Or, are they special items
available from mail order or from certain regions of the nation or
the world?
Finally, why do your customers buy this particular service or product,
or use the particular business you have? An architectural design studio
produces blueprints for architects to construct buildings for homeowners
and industry. But your product may be aimed at a less precise group
of people, somewhat hard to define.
You can discover what consumers want from surveys. You can get copies
of surveys from special companies that conduct surveys, or you can
do your own. The best place to conduct a survey is at a trade show
for your product. You might run a drawing and ask people to fill in
information. You can have cards printed with boxes to check easily
so people will spend the time to answer your questions.
Manufacturers use surveys with warranties. Appliance makers often
include a few questions along with the warranty that the consumer sends
back.
Most major manufacturers have their own teams of product testing.
Toymakers bring in children and watch their reactions. Book publishers
have people look at covers and decide which they'd buy. Even the car
manufacturers run surveys and opinion testing on style and pricing.
Before you seek publicity or even advertise, KNOW YOUR PRODUCT.
Be familiar with the people who buy your product or service, and have
a full understanding of the general competition and the full scope
of marketability.
WHERE TO PUBLICIZE
Depending on your product, you have a full gamut of possibilities
for advertising without paying - free publicity. Deciding on the type
of media is as important as knowing your product and the people who
buy.
As a manufacturer, you want to let retailers know of your product.
The trade magazines would be a good place for new products and comparisons
of product reliability.
If you want to publicize directly to the general public national
publications, metropolitan newspapers and Sunday supplements are ways
to tap into the market.
For a local enterprise - either a profitable business or a charity
or community service - the local newspapers are the best places for
free publicity.
Once your product or news is of national importance, the television
and radio can be good sources of publicity. Even the local public stations
produce interesting shows about local people and products.
For international significance, the newspaper syndicates and wire
services provide the publicity you'll need.
Don't go for the biggest first; move up to the larger markets. Start
with the local news, then expand as your product interest grows.
MAKE IT NEWSWORTHY
In order to qualify for publicity, your information must be newsworthy.
Anything published in the newspapers, magazines or trade journals must
be important to readers - either as information for an event, or interesting
insights in the industry.
You may have a new product or product line that can be publicized
in magazines. If not, you need to come up with unique angles to get
the publicity you seek.
An unusual background for the inventor of the product or owner of
the manufacturing plant may make good news for the new product.
Or you may need to come up with fresh ideas for your service. For
example, a short item about famous people using the service is noteworthy,
or an unusual combination in the owner's biography may make a good
story.
Some businesses produce literature that points out facts of the
particular industry - either historical or contemporary. For example,
a television news feature was done on a group of companies that check
the quality of houses for interested buyers. Or, a pamphlet on cutting
costs on building an addition onto your house is a natural for a construction
company.
YOUR BEST ANGLE
What is unusual about your product or service that can become newsworthy?
Even if nothing stands out at first, you'll find you can think of several
angles that are worthwhile from a publicity point-of-view.
What about anecdotes? Failure stories can be as entertaining as
success tales. How people have trouble getting their businesses off
the ground can be newsworthy.
And don't forget simple endurance. A business that's been profitable
for twenty-five years is a sure bet for local newspapers.
If you want to publicize an event, consider the radius of the participants.
A national trade convention should receive national interest in the
magazines and publications geared towards that particular industry.
More local events can be publicized in metropolitan newspapers. The
most local neighborhood events can be publicized by flyers and notices,
or through the schools.
Look for common trends in your product or service. Think often about
what makes it different from the other thousands of products and services.
Make lists List the features of what you want to publicize; list the
eople who use the product or service; list why people use it.
What do you come up with? Do more young people use it? Do more womþen,
or members of special groups? You may use an angle of publicizing a
person not in our typical consumer group purchasing or using your product
or service.
The most important consideration in choosing an angle is to make
your item newsworthy, so the editor of the publication will print it.
MAKING CONTACT
Whether you are sending products, press kits, or news releases,
the most important element in getting them publicized is to send it
to the right person. If it doesn't reach that person's desk, it may
well end up in the wastebasket.
When you decide on the media market you want to publicize in, contact
the people who will make it happen. On a local level, a small town
newspaper will have a features editor, or a specific person who takes
care of the notice you want to place. Call up the publication and get
that person's name. Speak briefly and say you'll send in a notice.
A larger metropolitan newspaper is a busy place. Consider the section
you'll want your story to appear in. Many newspapers have entertainment,
travel, business, sports, food sections. Contact that editor.
Editors rarely have time to talk to strangers soliciting publicity,
so you might try talking to the assistant. Speak briefly, introduce
yourself, and say you'll send in a news release.
For a radio message, contact the program director, or assistant.
Make enough telephone calls to be sure you have the correct name of
the person to send your release to.
Television programming directors may be more difficult to reach;
use perseverance. With active pursuit, you can get your message through
to anyone.
The easiest connection for promoting a new product is with the editors
of trade magazines or with national magazines that have a new products
section, You may want to send a sample, or at least a photograph or
drawing of the product. And, you need to incluae all pertinent facts
and features.
Magazine editors can also be difficult to reach-but try. If you
can speak directly to the person who handles new products, try it.
If not, be sure to contact the person who does handle the feature angle
that you have chosen.
As soon as you've contacted the right person to use your material,
send it out immediately. If you have arranged a personal appointment,
follow up with a short note that confirms the date and time.
A few days after you send out your materials, call that person again.
Simply ask if the information was received; don't push for a commitment
to run the release. By pointing attention to the materials, you have
a better chance.
NEWS RELESES
News releases, also called press releases, are the most important
selling tool of publicity. The release must capture the editor's attention,
be precise and easy to read.
A news release can go to just one newspaper or many publications
at once. It can be a community notice about an organization's library
sale or an international insight into inflation.
The same standard form is used for every type of news, whether an
executive promotion in the trade magazines, or a local event such as
an author signing books at a neighborhood bookstore.
If you want your notice to get into a special edition of a publication,
be aware of the deadlies. Sunday news editions generally have more
readers than the daily editions. Find out when your release must be
received at the editor's desk.
Never mix publicity with advertising. If your newspaper features
specific businesses in special industry supplements, you may be chosen
because you advertise. But otherwise, editors frown on any releases
that merely imitate advertising and are not newsworthy.
Don't embarrass yourself by sending anything that is not worthy of
being printed in the publication as news. Not only will your release
be thrown away, but you wil destroy any chance you had for subsequent
releases with that editor.
WRITING THE RELEASE
Keep the news release to one page. Type it clearly on white bond
paper, double spaced, and never send it with typographical errors.
Since the release might be published exactly as it is received, be
sure the copy is professional and worthy of publication.
At the top left, put your name and address and the phone number
you can be reached at during business hours. In full capital letters
at the right, type, FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE, PLEASE or for release on
or after a certain date.
Use a headline appropriate to the event or topic, and keep it short
- just like newspaper headings. Capitalize the letters and underline
the headline.
Start the copy with a dateline, which is the city and date. Then
write the rest within a few paragraphs. Include the important information
in the standard who, what, when and where. Use good English, but don't
run on with unimportant adjectives or boring information. You can capitalize
the first letters of important events such as Public Auction or the
name of your new product.
If you have a release to send to many publications at the same time,
have it printed by photo offset so the copy is clear and looks original.
Include a personal letter to the editor. Be cordial, but keep it
short. If your product is convenient to mail, you may include a samþple
if the editor is amenable.
Watch the publications and clip the printed publicity yourself.
Never ask the publication to send you a copy.
PROMOTIONAL LITERATURE
You can publicize your service or product with a pamphlet or booklet.
Topical subjects such as saving energy or cutting costs are always
newsworthy. Naming new trends or buying habits can equally be publicized.
Take a look at the magazines and trade journals in your area of
endeavor. Are there special sections for interesting tidbits of the
industry? Maybe there's a section for new products, or even a section
that compares products.
Does your product or service have something special that competitors
don't? Maybe yours is the best - and -best' is newsworthy. Does yours
have the longest resiliency, or is it made from the best materials?
Maybe your service is noted for complete satisfaction or reliability.
These aspects are especially important for the big manufacturers.
Trade journals cater to the special industries, and those in the trade
always want to consider the best product investment - especially when
spending thousands of dollars.
An oil company sends out free booklets on maintaining your car;
a travel agent prints a brochure on the most beautiful vacation spots;
a dry cleaners gives out a flyer on getting out stains as soon as they
happen.
What promotional literature can you tie into your business? And
it doesn't need to be product orinted. Some large companies produce
tips on employee relations or benefits. Many print their own newsworthy
in-house publications .
Any special message booklet is a public service and is worthy of
free publicity. Some interesting information can make a good feature
if followed up by a reporter. Or you may write your own feature for
magazines.
You can get your literature designed and printed by a local printer
at minimum cost. Don't go for an elaborate four-color booklet unless
you can afford to. Consider what you can get at the least expense and
then work from there. From a small investment, you may get thousands
of dollars worth of free publicity.
Always include the name and address ad business number of your enterprise
on the brochure, and offer copies for the general public as a free
give-away or as a bonus for services.
PITCH LETTERS
When you don't have a specific news release or a special booklet
to publicize your enterprise, you may solicit publicity with a letter
to the editor of the section that suits your endeavor.
Rather than providing complete information, suggest the practicality
and timeliness of a feature or article on your business or the owner
of the business. Some people or organizations are famous in their own
right and start side businesses or enterprises. For example, celebrities
open restaurants or community theaters; financiers donate art collections;
a local orphanage may raise a phenomenal amount of money for a special
cause.
A pitch letter is a highly motivating letter to get the editor interested
in the topic that will benefit your cause. Type it on letterhead and
send it personally to the editor. You might call in advance and use
it as a follow up.
Get right to the point. Present the topic and the angle immediately.
Then, support the worthiness with some poignant information concerning
the topic.
Send copies of local publicity if you're building to a national
level, or send copies of other news features that relate directly to
your person or product.
Don't deluge the editor with too many clippings or an overload of
information. A few choice tidbits wlll suffice to get that person's
interest in doing a feature.
Close your letter with a mention of calling that person and then
follow up with a telephone call a few days later.
USE YOUR TELEPHONE
The most important tool to the publicist is the telephone. People
who make their livelihoods with publicity make calls all day long.
And persistence is the greatest attribute.
Whether you use a hard-sell or a soft-sell approach on the phone,
it's a great way to make and keep contact with important people. Just
one phone call may seal up a lifetime business relationship with someone
who will provide you with thousands of dollars worth of free publicity.
A telephone call is the most efficient means of reaching somebody,
introducing yourself and your desires, and firming up a contact for
follow through. Don't be afraid of calling people and don't be shy
in asserting yourself.
If you have a clear idea about your product or service and believe
in what you're selling, your tone of voice will be the best selling
feature. Know your facts and present them clearly.
If you are working for a specific person or trying to get a meeting
for the owner of Vour company, know when you can set up an appointment
and settle on it immediately. Don't forget business lunchþes - a great
way to sell yourself or your product in a relaxed atmosphere. Follow
up with a memo that same day to confirm the date and time of the meeting.
When you meet with rejection, don't take it to heart - there are
so many ways you can ake solid connections that a few nos shoulan't
stop you.
COLUMN RELEASES
Some trade journals have specific columns written by a reporter
that run weekly or monthly. If you have a newsworthy item for a column,
you can build up a working rapport with the writer and supply material
from time to time.
The entertainment trade papers have daily columns that keep celebrities
in the limelight. Metropolitan newspapers run daily columns that mention
politicians. And industry publications have columns that pertain to
a certain aspect of your enterprise.
When you write a column release, copy the style of the writer and
use the format of the news release. Instead of for immediate release,
type in capital letters, for exclusive release to the name of the person.
Use your imagination when you write the column release, and don't
get discouraged if it's passed by. Keep building relationships with
the columnists and you'll get your news publicized.
PRESS KITS
The press kit is made up to publicize celebrities or new products
or a product line. They may be put together for a trade show or
convention, or a press conference.
Generally, a press kit includes a biography of the person who is
being publicized or the inventor or the head of the company. A news
release is included and a photograph or drawing with a caption is attached.
Copies of news stories and newspaper clippings are enclosed-anything
pertinent to the item you want publicized. An entertainer's schedule
might be included if it's a conference about a tour.
The press kit is usually in a folder or envelope and is handy to
send to publications or for press conferences or to give information
to the local media.
THE BIOGRAPHY
A bio of a personality - whether a famous celebrity or the president
of your company - is fact, not hype. It usually is included in press
kits for background information only; it's not meant for release.
Although important information concerning the person's career should
be included, make it informative and interesting to read. Many editors
or reporters will use that information in a news story or feature.
It should be single spaced, and never make it more than two pages
- even if the person deserves a full book.
PHOTOGRAPHS
Regardless of the scope of your news, photographs are an asset.
If you are looking for extra publicity for a politician after a town
meeting, include a photo of the person with your press release.
New products alwavs deserve to be seen. Whether it is a full expensive
professional shot later used for advertising, or a simple black and
white photo, it should be clear and uncluttered with extraneous objects.
Generally for a small business, the black and white glossy photo
is your best bet. Have a professional take the shot with the product
seen in its best light. High contrast photos are the best for newspapers
and magazines. If your product is mainly light colored, it will stand
out on a black background, and vice versa.
Always have them professionally duplicated and be of the highest
quality. Forget about polaroids or anything that closely resembles
amateur work. The editor won't take your release seriously.
Have them printed on 5 x 7 or 8 x 10 paper anc to enclose a cardboard
backing when you send them through the mail with a news release or
a pitch letter.
MERCHANDISING
When you do get coverage from your efforts, clip those pieces from
the publications and exploit them. You may have seen this done in restaurants.
They often enlarge and mount copies of local restaurant reviews and
post them in windows for potential customers.
Good publicity in one form may lead to a wider scope of publicity
in a larger publication. You can use local newspaper clippings for
pitching a feature in a national magazine. And you can use write-ups
in large circulation publications to give credentials for a television
appearance.
Many businesses exploit reviews. Look at the back of books; they
list the quotations from reviewers to promote the product. And films
do that too. How many times have you seen a film advertised by quotations
from famous film reviewers?
What can you do to use the publicity at its best and spread its
effects as widely as possible? Take a look at your metropolitan newspaper.
In the features section, there are often stories about interesting
people and their enterprises. With a little ingenuity, this coverage
can go national.
An obvious way to use good publicity is simply to photocopy it and
send it as a direct mail piece to your customers or to include it in
your brochures. Even a stack of flyers at the counter can promote your
business.
How far do you want to go?
PROMOTION
In most cases, you can use the normal media channels to get the
publicity you need for your product or service. And, although you don't
need to come up with schemes to get attention, they do work.
Sometimes promotion departments of manufacturers stage marathon
events or contests with their products - especially with toys and games.
Apparel companies may sponsor athletic races; manufacturers of motorcycles
sponsor races.
Although promotion schemes do cost money to stage, the efforts usually
pay off in a long run with the number of customers sold on the product.
For local coverage, charity drives and dinners are good ways to
get in the paper. Some enterprises strive for a more national coverage
with special prizes connected to sports events.
If you are clever enough, and there's no big news break that day,
you may get your scheme on television. Even local footage reaches thousands
and thousands of people.
What gimmicks can you think of that will pay off for their investment?
How is your product or service used that it can commercially be exploited
by the news? Can you keep going with it-making it an annual event,
drawing customers from near and far?
HIRING OTHER PEOPLE
What if you don't want to do the publicity yourself? If your product
or service is a natural for free publicity, you can hire a company
or a person to do your public relations work.
There axe many free lancers in the large cities who have a numer
of clients that they publicize. They've already broken the ice with
the editors and the media, so they can get their releases printed.
If you want to hire someone for a special project, get a person
who has the contacts and who specializes in your product line. If you're
a celebrity, use someone who has a reputation in the entertainment
industry. If you are a manufacturer with new appliances, likewise consider
a person with expertise in that field.
Check out the person or firm. Talk to other clients and find out
what has been done for them. Have they increased their sales or public
exposure?
Investigate the reputation with people in the media you want to
publicize in, and be sure there is a clean slate with the local business
associations.
Then work efficiently with the person who will nandle your publicity.
Communicate effectively and be sure your ideas are understood. Listen
well and absorb any ideas thrown your way. Between the two of you,
you can come up with an excellent publicity campaign that will make
your business boom.
TRY IT
The wonderful thing about free publicity is that you have nothing
to lose. A few phone calls; a few personal letters, maybe some investment
in quick printing news releases. And, you can reap many times that
investment in additional sales and orders.
Whether you have an international personality to publicize or a
community barbecue, you can get that information to the public at little
expense.
What is unique about your service or product? Is it the best? The
most used? The longest lasting? Do customers return year after year?
Consider all the angles, then consider again.
Be sure to make solid contacts and be thorough with your follow
ups. Being polite and efficient will always create effective business
relations. Then exploit your own publicity. Use it again and again;
post it in the store or rewrite it for more national distribution.
Go as far as you can with your ideas.
And, it doesn't cost you. That is the true joy - with a little effort
and persistence, you can reap great profits from free publicity.