Years ago when my Dad owned a group
of local newspapers I spent my school and college vacations working in the
editorial office. We used to amuse ourselves over our sandwiches at lunchtime
looking through and trashing the endless press releases that would arrive in
the mail each day, all beautifully produced with glossy photographs (this was
in pre-internet days).
We trashed them because all but the odd one or
two were ill-considered, highly subjective, barely camouflaged advertising copy
that had about as much editorial news value as last weeks shopping list.
Why am I telling you all this?
Because despite the fact that
this happened many years ago, its still happening today. Both offline and
now online editors continue to laugh sardonically at the self-promoting garbage
they receive from corporate sources exactly as my Dad and I laughed umpty-dump
years ago. I salivate just thinking about how I could spend the fortunes wasted
on those releases and photographs over so many years.
And why does
this continue to happen? I believe it is because the organizations who send out
this stuff particularly their financial managers just cant
get their heads around the difference in culture between what they want to say,
and what editors need to deliver to their audiences.
Good PR advisers
try hard to compensate, but ultimately its the client who pays their
fees, and if the client insists on issuing garbage theres not much a PR
adviser can do other than resign the business.
Time after time after
time Im called into companies and asked to comment on why the PR coverage
they get in the media is so poor. 99 times out of a 100 its because
theyve issued press releases that are only of interest to themselves and
their bosses. And yet when I point this out to them they cant understand
it.
"But our development team worked 14 hours a day for three years to
win that contract!" they shout indignantly. "And the CEO had to cut short his
vacation in Turks & Caicos just so he could sign the documents by the
deadline! I mean, its the most important thing to have happened to us in
the history of the company!"
"I know," I croon soothingly, "but those
points arent of much interest to the readers of your regional business
press, or your trade press for that matter."
"Well, maybe not," they
reply. "But they are very relevant to us, and to our shareholders. Thats
why we made such an elaborate issue of those points in the press release."
Ah, I think to myself as I gaze out of the window to see if my
creatively-parked car is going to attract the attention of passing traffic
policepersons. Here is another problem we encounter with press releases.
Its called "when is a press release not a press release?" The answer
is, when a press release is to be used to impress all sorts of people who are
not members of the press. Only we want them to think that this is what the
press will write about us, so we put it in a press release. That would be okay
as long as thats as far as it goes.
But the awful truth is the
same document (paper or electronic) really does get sent out to the press. And
quite rightly they ignore it, once again because it is of no interest to the
readership of the publication concerned.
For Heavens sake, you
folks who do this sort of thing, please grow up and face reality. If you want
to promote your achievements to your share/stockholders or staff or suppliers
or whoever, then just go ahead and do it and dress it up in "press release"
costume if you must, although I dont think that fools anybody.
But whatever you do, dont send it to the press and dont
kid yourself or anyone else that to use the same document for both purposes is
a way to economize. Its a sure way to shoot yourself through the foot and
indirectly could cost you a fortune.
If you want to get coverage in
the media then you must forget all elements of self-congratulation. Whatever
information you send out has to have something "in it for them" (the audience)
- something new, interesting and relevant. It doesnt have to be
earth-shattering, just worth reading.
If your organisation has done
something brilliant and youre proud of it, by all means say so; just be
sure to emphasise whats great about it for the audience and/or the rest
of the world, not merely for yourselves. Let the facts tell the story. If your
organisation genuinely deserves to be congratulated, it will be.
And
you dont simply have the audience to consider in this case, because
unlike the forms of communication you control, with media coverage the decision
of whether or not to transmit your message rests with someone else
usually the editor. Editors and journalists are either very busy or very lazy
or both (and dont chastise me for admitting that, guys. Ive been
there, done it, got the T shirt and drank too much in the brasserie at
lunchtime too.)
If you supply them with material they can see is
relevant to their readers and preferably is usable with the minimum of editing,
they will warm to it a lot faster than something that may hold a grain of
interest but will take someone a whole evening to rewrite and several phone
calls or e-mails to check for accuracy.
Try to match the style and
writing approach of the publication. If youre sending a release out to
several publications that circulate among the same readership, then one release
should be relevant to all. But if youre aiming at different press groups
say the trade journals and the business pages of the regional dailies
you will need to rework the approach of your press release according to
the different audiences.
Youll usually find that the basic core
of a press release can remain pretty well the same across all media groups,
because it consists (or should consist) of the pure facts the old
journalists formula of who, what, how, where, when and why.
What
changes is the angle, and particularly the lead-in. That means the headline,
which should be short and attention-grabbing, and then the first two or three
sentences that support the headline and set up the whole story. Often its
worth trying to work in a clever bit of word-play with headlines, but be very
careful a pun or play on the words that doesnt work is worse than
writing the headline straight.
By far the best guidance youll
get, though, comes from studying the audience the people who read the
publications. What in your story is going to interest them?
· Readers of a trade journal will be interested in
whats new and different about your new product and how it could improve
the way they do business.
· Readers of local or regional
business sections will be interested more in how your new products
manufacturing and distribution, say, will impact on the local business
community and economy.
· Local general newspapers and
other media will be interested in the human side, i.e. how many new jobs the
factory producing the new product will create.
·
etc.
And one last tip on how to get the best from press releases
use "quotes" from the key people involved in the story.
Not
those awful, meaningless corporate-babble quotes you so often see in company
press releases
"We are delighted to be able to announce the new contract
at this moment in time and we have every confidence that our latest investment
will be of significant benefit to our
" you know the type of thing. These
are usually the first elements that get chopped out by the editor.
Its perfectly OK to write quotes for your senior people, by the way.
They very rarely give real quotes for anything other than TV or radio
interviews but dont seem to mind quotes being written for them, provided
theyre given the opportunity to check them before theyre issued.
So, write them quotes that far from being beatific banalities
actually are telling important parts of the story. This is good for two
reasons:
1. It makes your senior exec look intelligent and
aware of whats going on in the organization, which is 100% more than the
banality-quote will do for him/her.
2. Because its an
important part of the story and contains useful facts, the publications
staff will be far less likely to edit it out.
Possibly youre
beginning to feel that in order to get press coverage youll have to turn
yourself, your product and your entire board inside out and upside down. You
could be right, but thats PR. Remember that press coverage is not
advertising**. Yes, its free and thats wonderful, but as always
theres no such thing as a free lunch.
Editors will only put your
stuff in, for free, if it is genuinely good for their publication and their
readers, not for you. They do not care about your sales figures. They care
about their own sales figures. Successful PR people and writers of press
releases always, always bear these points in mind; in fact thats why
theyre successful.
**An exception to this is whats known
(in the UK at least) as "advertorial." In case you dont already know this
is advertising copy written in editorial style, but the space it occupies is
really an advertisement you pay for. If youre obliged to write it, please
just try to make it as honest as you can. Not easy.
Online
tips
Nearly all the theory pertaining to offline PR is relevant to
the online equivalent especially in terms of what content is of interest
to publishers and what isnt.
Online publishing of relevance to
organizations usually falls into one of two pretty obvious groups; one,
websites, portals etc that are totally independent and uniquely on the web, and
two, those which are the online alter egos of offline publications.
In
either group if you want the publications to take your releases or submissions
seriously, its very important that you follow the format and structure of
articles that appear on the websites concerned. Whatever you do dont make
the mistake of submitting a general press release to these organizations, even
though you do it by e-mail.
Check first how long the teaser paragraph
is that appears on the home or section page, and check how they lay out the
full articles. Then submit material that fits perfectly, both in style and in
word counts. Heres why:
1. You will be saving them the
trouble of reworking your piece which makes it attractive in the first place
2. Because it fits so perfectly you will discourage them from
changing anything, which is also a huge advantage for you.
The other
point I would make about online press work is dont assume that just
because you submit a release to the offline publication (and even if they run
it) it will be forwarded automatically to the publications website. It
wont. At least not necessarily. And Ive found that one out the hard
way, believe me.
Treat offline and online versions as entirely
separate entities; find out who the movers and shakers are on each, and often
youll see that the online version is run by an entirely different group
of people.
© Suzan St Maur
ABOUT THE
AUTHOR
Canadian-born Suzan St Maur is an international business
writer and author based in the United Kingdom. Read more - and check out her
free biweekly business writing tips eZine, Tipz from Suze, - at her website,
SuzanStMaur.com




