This document provides 550 public relations, marketing, and social media tips for growing a business in 140 characters or less. It covers topics such as pitching to journalists, developing relationships with media contacts, creating engaging social media content, monitoring online conversations, handling customer service issues and crises, and more. The tips are concise and aimed at helping businesses maximize their marketing and PR efforts.
This document outlines Shane Jewett's personal brand social media marketing plan. Shane had an epiphany about using social media to advance his career after realizing he was behind in leveraging tools like LinkedIn. His plan objectives are to make contacts in the marketing industry, build his professional profile online, and consistently create quality content to engage followers and potentially employers. Shane believes marketing success comes down to communication skills, high-quality content creation, and an ability to adapt to changing technologies and platforms. His goal is to use social media to help land a job and build business relationships.
content marketing voor organisaties en (lokale) besturenKoen Denolf
This document provides guidance on developing an effective content marketing strategy that integrates both print and digital channels. It recommends determining objectives, analyzing target audiences, defining the narrative, prioritizing channels, choosing appropriate formats, assigning responsibilities, and establishing an evaluation process. The document emphasizes starting with the audience and their needs rather than the available channels, and taking an integrated, cross-media approach across owned, paid and earned platforms. Regular evaluation is key to ensuring the strategy remains aligned with goals and the audience.
Rosie Siman is a social strategist who presented on her job and how to enter the field. Her typical day involves client presentations, planning campaigns, developing creative content, and tracking performance. As a strategist, she defines tasks, writes briefs, helps with creative development, sells work, and tracks optimization. She provided examples of successful campaigns for Oreo and Dentyne that drove engagement through timely, culturally relevant content. Rosie encouraged attendees to gain experience through internships and practicing their skills in order to pursue a career in social strategy.
Inbound Marketing for the Arts with PersonasChris Handy
The document introduces inbound marketing as an alternative to outbound marketing, noting that inbound marketing uses content, SEO, and social media to attract potential customers rather than relying on interruptive advertising. It outlines the key benefits of inbound marketing such as lower costs per lead compared to outbound techniques. The document then provides steps for businesses to implement a successful inbound marketing strategy including creating and optimizing content, promoting it on social media, and converting visitors into leads and sales.
Social Media Marketing GPS, is an innovative a strategy guide -- written via Twitter -- designed to help organizations and individuals leverage social technologies efficiently and effectively.
The document discusses social listening and how non-profits can engage supporters on social media by responding to mentions of their organization or related topics in real-time. It provides tips on identifying influencers and supporters talking about key issues on platforms like Twitter and Facebook using tools like Attentive.ly. The document also outlines strategies for rapid response, preparing for big events, thanking and recognizing supporters, and driving conversions through personalized, timely messaging.
Abby's personal brand social media planAbby Mlinar
This document outlines Abby Mlinar's personal brand social media plan. The plan includes a personal analysis, problem statement, industry analysis, goals, objectives, target audience, brand, social media tools, and implementation strategies. The implementation strategies include using LinkedIn to network, using Twitter to share content, using a WordPress blog to demonstrate expertise, using Facebook to engage connections, and using Pinterest to curate content. Key objectives are to utilize social media to communicate her brand and skills, network and build relationships, and learn from thought leaders. The target audience includes marketing professionals and the target companies include current connections at Medtronic, 3M, and Westmoreland Flint.
This document outlines Shane Jewett's personal brand social media marketing plan. Shane had an epiphany about using social media to advance his career after realizing he was behind in leveraging tools like LinkedIn. His plan objectives are to make contacts in the marketing industry, build his professional profile online, and consistently create quality content to engage followers and potentially employers. Shane believes marketing success comes down to communication skills, high-quality content creation, and an ability to adapt to changing technologies and platforms. His goal is to use social media to help land a job and build business relationships.
content marketing voor organisaties en (lokale) besturenKoen Denolf
This document provides guidance on developing an effective content marketing strategy that integrates both print and digital channels. It recommends determining objectives, analyzing target audiences, defining the narrative, prioritizing channels, choosing appropriate formats, assigning responsibilities, and establishing an evaluation process. The document emphasizes starting with the audience and their needs rather than the available channels, and taking an integrated, cross-media approach across owned, paid and earned platforms. Regular evaluation is key to ensuring the strategy remains aligned with goals and the audience.
Rosie Siman is a social strategist who presented on her job and how to enter the field. Her typical day involves client presentations, planning campaigns, developing creative content, and tracking performance. As a strategist, she defines tasks, writes briefs, helps with creative development, sells work, and tracks optimization. She provided examples of successful campaigns for Oreo and Dentyne that drove engagement through timely, culturally relevant content. Rosie encouraged attendees to gain experience through internships and practicing their skills in order to pursue a career in social strategy.
Inbound Marketing for the Arts with PersonasChris Handy
The document introduces inbound marketing as an alternative to outbound marketing, noting that inbound marketing uses content, SEO, and social media to attract potential customers rather than relying on interruptive advertising. It outlines the key benefits of inbound marketing such as lower costs per lead compared to outbound techniques. The document then provides steps for businesses to implement a successful inbound marketing strategy including creating and optimizing content, promoting it on social media, and converting visitors into leads and sales.
Social Media Marketing GPS, is an innovative a strategy guide -- written via Twitter -- designed to help organizations and individuals leverage social technologies efficiently and effectively.
The document discusses social listening and how non-profits can engage supporters on social media by responding to mentions of their organization or related topics in real-time. It provides tips on identifying influencers and supporters talking about key issues on platforms like Twitter and Facebook using tools like Attentive.ly. The document also outlines strategies for rapid response, preparing for big events, thanking and recognizing supporters, and driving conversions through personalized, timely messaging.
Abby's personal brand social media planAbby Mlinar
This document outlines Abby Mlinar's personal brand social media plan. The plan includes a personal analysis, problem statement, industry analysis, goals, objectives, target audience, brand, social media tools, and implementation strategies. The implementation strategies include using LinkedIn to network, using Twitter to share content, using a WordPress blog to demonstrate expertise, using Facebook to engage connections, and using Pinterest to curate content. Key objectives are to utilize social media to communicate her brand and skills, network and build relationships, and learn from thought leaders. The target audience includes marketing professionals and the target companies include current connections at Medtronic, 3M, and Westmoreland Flint.
Life is a PITCH - Brand Communications and Public Relations 101Creative For More
If you are an entrepreneur, SME owner, or just looking to home your media skills, this webinar will help you understand the fundamentals of brand communications & public relations. You will learn the fundamentals of brand communications, how to build a purpose-driven narrative alongside a media strategy, and how to get media coverage for your business. We will also cover what it means to run a PR campaign and what angles are most likely newsworthy.
Clases sobre Social Customer Engagement impartidas por @RamonLaguna en la #CEA en el módulo Marketing through Social Networks (in English, of course) de Marketing Management & Public Affairs.
Social Media Marketing for Real Estate Agents: 21 TipsWishpond
Are you a real estate agent? Does social media scare you?
Realtors are some of the best marketers in an offline person-to-person environment. You’re incredibly brilliant at getting to know your clients on a very personal level, getting involved in your community, and connecting with your local market.
What you’re not very good at is applying this to your social media. (Well, most of you aren’t!)
You need to think of social online like you do social offline!
Social media provides a way to further connect with your local clients and groups. Social can build trust, and spread your marketing through friends of friends. But how do you do it?
In this presentation, I’ll give you tips for Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest (and a few more) on how real estate agents can use them for social media marketing.
Read more at: blog.wishpond.com
Meme - A Whitepaper by RapidValue SolutionsRapidValue
Meme is a concept that has become popular and is spreading through the word of mouth, email, blogs etc. It may be a video, picture, text, etc., especially humorous in nature, which gets recreated by the user and reaches a large audience, with some slight variations.
Internet meme is an idea or a concept which is popular through the Internet media. It contains visual elements and photos with witty text, jokes, urban legends, viral videos, funny pictures or contagious music.
This paper provides details about meme. How it originated, Why meme is popular, use cases of meme and tools available to create memes.
‘Meme’ is pronounced as ‘meem’, which rhymes with ‘seem’ or ‘team’. An evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins, in 1976, introduced the term meme. ‘Meme’ originated from the Greek word "mimema" (which means "somewhat imitated"). Dawkins described memes as a form of cultural propagation, through which people can transfer social memories and ideas to one another.
Modern internet memes are humor-centric (e.g. Dog Shame, Ask a Ninja, Lolcats, Dancing Baby, Domo-kun, Numa Numa Dance). Most common type of internet memes is about shock-value and drama (e.g. Angry German Kid, Dogs Go to Heaven). Other memes are urban myths that taught some kind of life lesson (e.g. The Littlest Fireman, Mel Gibson and Man Without a Face, Kurt Warner). A few internet memes are about deep content, and involve social commentary and intellectual absurdity (e.g. Flying
Spaghetti Monster, Russell's Orbiting Teapot). In a few cases, a meme can become a conversational expression as well as a viral curiosity (e.g. You Mad Bro ). Through memes, cultural or personal experience is shared among people, rapidly, and at a fast pace like fashion.
Here is my "ProductCamp Austin, PCATX, PCA8" presentation: "Are you a Pirate or a Patriot?Are you watching your Marketing Execution?" It was really fun to give this prezo to the Feb. 2012 ProductCamp Austin and facilitate a discussion about how various marketing tactics can be
The document discusses using a holistic "Paid, Owned, Earned" (POE) model for guiding brands through social media. It states that a one-dimensional communications strategy is not effective and that disseminating messages relies on converging paid, owned, and earned media tactics. It asserts that the whole of the POE communications model is greater than the sum of its individual parts, and taking a holistic POE approach can help consolidate return on investment.
How do you use social media not only to market your upcoming event, but also to manage your event as it happens? This white paper walks you through social media and event management procedures and best practices as an event producer as well as an attendee.
These are my slides from a free public workshop I conducted for JCI Beirut about the basics of Social Media Strategy that includes examples of brands that do not have a proper strategy, defining your goals, the sales cycle, asset mapping, defining your audience and creating personas, choosing channels, voice & tone, posting frequency & time, crisis management, and understanding Facebook's algorithm.
PR 101 - Communications for Startups and EntrepreneursLars Voedisch
1) How to tell your story and why anybody should actually listen
2) Knowing your audiences is everything
3) Social media isn't the holy grail - are you sure you wanna go viral
The what, why and how of Social Media ROI: Business definitions, methodologies and situational narrative. This presentation's purpose is to clarify what ROI is and isn't within the context of Social Media and offers a basic explanation of how to tie Social Media activities to real ROI.
The document discusses the importance of creating value for audiences on social media through engagement rather than just growing follower counts. It recommends first understanding what audiences want and listening to existing customers to tailor social media activity accordingly. The ultimate goal is to increase awareness, engagement, and sales through approaches like quality content, conversations, and connections rather than one-way broadcasting.
Supercharge Your Event Marketing with TwitterSafe Rise
This document provides strategies for using Twitter to promote events. Some key points:
- Twitter is a useful tool for event promotion because many people use it to discover information and engage in conversations about events.
- The strategies discussed include creating an event hashtag, collecting attendee Twitter handles, running contests on Twitter, facilitating pre-event conversations, and amplifying key moments during the event on Twitter.
- The document breaks event promotion into four phases - promotion, pre-event, during event, and post-event - and provides tactics for each phase, such as building buzz before the event and facilitating sharing after the event.
In the Social Business Journal Volume 1, eighteen thought leaders share their insights on key topics on the road to social business success. Sign up to receive Volume 2 on the last slide. Enjoy!
Social Media Basics and Using Social Media to Monitor the Competition or Comp...Regina Walton
Social media allows two-way conversations between brands and customers to build awareness, learn customer needs, and respond creatively. It is cheaper than traditional marketing and provides insights not previously available. To use social media for competitive intelligence and marketing, one should listen on sites like blogs, forums and social networks to understand discussions and viewpoints. Content should then engage customers and start debates to express expertise. Metrics like traffic, followers and comments help measure success and inform adjustments to strategy. Monitoring keywords, competitors and industry trends aids competitive intelligence.
11 ways to build your brand on social mediaCDRealEstate
There are many benefits of using social media to grow a business and to craft an online persona that showcases a brand’s values and services. A defined social media strategy can help businesses be more profitable, establish credibility, and gain a strategic edge over the competition. Social media has become a powerful tool in marketing as it’s accessible anytime, anywhere, and is a fun, engaging way to share and collect information.
Learn what works for others & get ideas for your business.
Do you know that the internet can help your business grow but you don’t know where to start? Do you feel that you need to spend too much time or money to get results?
See this seminar to find out:
• The myths and realities of internet marketing
• How successful business use the internet to get more customers
•What you can do right now to attract and retain more paying customers
•How to avoid wasting time and money doing things that don’t work
For more visit: http://codesm.com
George Brands Marketing Systems provides marketing consulting services to help companies develop strategic marketing programs. They take time to understand each client's business and objectives to build customized programs that give clients a competitive advantage. Their approach focuses on collaborating with internal teams to generate excitement and motivate carrying out objectives for long-term success. George Brands emphasizes developing marketing as a business strategy rather than just advertisements, with every tactic having measurable goals and all efforts being tracked.
This document provides six tips for improving social media marketing strategies for B2B brands. It recommends defining social media policies, examining etiquette, scheduling posts for consistency, using social media insights in sales, engaging prospects across multiple channels, and measuring return on investment from social media efforts. Integrating social media with marketing automation can help optimize efforts.
Social media has transformed public relations by facilitating constant conversation and engagement between brands and customers; PR professionals must now market conversations through social platforms and forge genuine connections. New technologies are converging media and allowing for more interactive and immediate communication between journalists, brands and audiences. PR strategies must fully integrate social media to provide value, tell vibrant stories, monitor progress and engage media.
Life is a PITCH - Brand Communications and Public Relations 101Creative For More
If you are an entrepreneur, SME owner, or just looking to home your media skills, this webinar will help you understand the fundamentals of brand communications & public relations. You will learn the fundamentals of brand communications, how to build a purpose-driven narrative alongside a media strategy, and how to get media coverage for your business. We will also cover what it means to run a PR campaign and what angles are most likely newsworthy.
Clases sobre Social Customer Engagement impartidas por @RamonLaguna en la #CEA en el módulo Marketing through Social Networks (in English, of course) de Marketing Management & Public Affairs.
Social Media Marketing for Real Estate Agents: 21 TipsWishpond
Are you a real estate agent? Does social media scare you?
Realtors are some of the best marketers in an offline person-to-person environment. You’re incredibly brilliant at getting to know your clients on a very personal level, getting involved in your community, and connecting with your local market.
What you’re not very good at is applying this to your social media. (Well, most of you aren’t!)
You need to think of social online like you do social offline!
Social media provides a way to further connect with your local clients and groups. Social can build trust, and spread your marketing through friends of friends. But how do you do it?
In this presentation, I’ll give you tips for Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest (and a few more) on how real estate agents can use them for social media marketing.
Read more at: blog.wishpond.com
Meme - A Whitepaper by RapidValue SolutionsRapidValue
Meme is a concept that has become popular and is spreading through the word of mouth, email, blogs etc. It may be a video, picture, text, etc., especially humorous in nature, which gets recreated by the user and reaches a large audience, with some slight variations.
Internet meme is an idea or a concept which is popular through the Internet media. It contains visual elements and photos with witty text, jokes, urban legends, viral videos, funny pictures or contagious music.
This paper provides details about meme. How it originated, Why meme is popular, use cases of meme and tools available to create memes.
‘Meme’ is pronounced as ‘meem’, which rhymes with ‘seem’ or ‘team’. An evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins, in 1976, introduced the term meme. ‘Meme’ originated from the Greek word "mimema" (which means "somewhat imitated"). Dawkins described memes as a form of cultural propagation, through which people can transfer social memories and ideas to one another.
Modern internet memes are humor-centric (e.g. Dog Shame, Ask a Ninja, Lolcats, Dancing Baby, Domo-kun, Numa Numa Dance). Most common type of internet memes is about shock-value and drama (e.g. Angry German Kid, Dogs Go to Heaven). Other memes are urban myths that taught some kind of life lesson (e.g. The Littlest Fireman, Mel Gibson and Man Without a Face, Kurt Warner). A few internet memes are about deep content, and involve social commentary and intellectual absurdity (e.g. Flying
Spaghetti Monster, Russell's Orbiting Teapot). In a few cases, a meme can become a conversational expression as well as a viral curiosity (e.g. You Mad Bro ). Through memes, cultural or personal experience is shared among people, rapidly, and at a fast pace like fashion.
Here is my "ProductCamp Austin, PCATX, PCA8" presentation: "Are you a Pirate or a Patriot?Are you watching your Marketing Execution?" It was really fun to give this prezo to the Feb. 2012 ProductCamp Austin and facilitate a discussion about how various marketing tactics can be
The document discusses using a holistic "Paid, Owned, Earned" (POE) model for guiding brands through social media. It states that a one-dimensional communications strategy is not effective and that disseminating messages relies on converging paid, owned, and earned media tactics. It asserts that the whole of the POE communications model is greater than the sum of its individual parts, and taking a holistic POE approach can help consolidate return on investment.
How do you use social media not only to market your upcoming event, but also to manage your event as it happens? This white paper walks you through social media and event management procedures and best practices as an event producer as well as an attendee.
These are my slides from a free public workshop I conducted for JCI Beirut about the basics of Social Media Strategy that includes examples of brands that do not have a proper strategy, defining your goals, the sales cycle, asset mapping, defining your audience and creating personas, choosing channels, voice & tone, posting frequency & time, crisis management, and understanding Facebook's algorithm.
PR 101 - Communications for Startups and EntrepreneursLars Voedisch
1) How to tell your story and why anybody should actually listen
2) Knowing your audiences is everything
3) Social media isn't the holy grail - are you sure you wanna go viral
The what, why and how of Social Media ROI: Business definitions, methodologies and situational narrative. This presentation's purpose is to clarify what ROI is and isn't within the context of Social Media and offers a basic explanation of how to tie Social Media activities to real ROI.
The document discusses the importance of creating value for audiences on social media through engagement rather than just growing follower counts. It recommends first understanding what audiences want and listening to existing customers to tailor social media activity accordingly. The ultimate goal is to increase awareness, engagement, and sales through approaches like quality content, conversations, and connections rather than one-way broadcasting.
Supercharge Your Event Marketing with TwitterSafe Rise
This document provides strategies for using Twitter to promote events. Some key points:
- Twitter is a useful tool for event promotion because many people use it to discover information and engage in conversations about events.
- The strategies discussed include creating an event hashtag, collecting attendee Twitter handles, running contests on Twitter, facilitating pre-event conversations, and amplifying key moments during the event on Twitter.
- The document breaks event promotion into four phases - promotion, pre-event, during event, and post-event - and provides tactics for each phase, such as building buzz before the event and facilitating sharing after the event.
In the Social Business Journal Volume 1, eighteen thought leaders share their insights on key topics on the road to social business success. Sign up to receive Volume 2 on the last slide. Enjoy!
Social Media Basics and Using Social Media to Monitor the Competition or Comp...Regina Walton
Social media allows two-way conversations between brands and customers to build awareness, learn customer needs, and respond creatively. It is cheaper than traditional marketing and provides insights not previously available. To use social media for competitive intelligence and marketing, one should listen on sites like blogs, forums and social networks to understand discussions and viewpoints. Content should then engage customers and start debates to express expertise. Metrics like traffic, followers and comments help measure success and inform adjustments to strategy. Monitoring keywords, competitors and industry trends aids competitive intelligence.
11 ways to build your brand on social mediaCDRealEstate
There are many benefits of using social media to grow a business and to craft an online persona that showcases a brand’s values and services. A defined social media strategy can help businesses be more profitable, establish credibility, and gain a strategic edge over the competition. Social media has become a powerful tool in marketing as it’s accessible anytime, anywhere, and is a fun, engaging way to share and collect information.
Learn what works for others & get ideas for your business.
Do you know that the internet can help your business grow but you don’t know where to start? Do you feel that you need to spend too much time or money to get results?
See this seminar to find out:
• The myths and realities of internet marketing
• How successful business use the internet to get more customers
•What you can do right now to attract and retain more paying customers
•How to avoid wasting time and money doing things that don’t work
For more visit: http://codesm.com
George Brands Marketing Systems provides marketing consulting services to help companies develop strategic marketing programs. They take time to understand each client's business and objectives to build customized programs that give clients a competitive advantage. Their approach focuses on collaborating with internal teams to generate excitement and motivate carrying out objectives for long-term success. George Brands emphasizes developing marketing as a business strategy rather than just advertisements, with every tactic having measurable goals and all efforts being tracked.
This document provides six tips for improving social media marketing strategies for B2B brands. It recommends defining social media policies, examining etiquette, scheduling posts for consistency, using social media insights in sales, engaging prospects across multiple channels, and measuring return on investment from social media efforts. Integrating social media with marketing automation can help optimize efforts.
Social media has transformed public relations by facilitating constant conversation and engagement between brands and customers; PR professionals must now market conversations through social platforms and forge genuine connections. New technologies are converging media and allowing for more interactive and immediate communication between journalists, brands and audiences. PR strategies must fully integrate social media to provide value, tell vibrant stories, monitor progress and engage media.
Christian Grey has certainly taught us something about PR and we've laid it all out in this presentation. Here are 52 facts about Public Relations you should know for your small business or startup.
Christian Grey has certainly taught us something about PR and we've laid it all out in this presentation. Here are 52 facts about Public Relations you should know for your small business or startup.
Social Media: The Old Game Has New RulesHeather Lytle
Presentation to understand the basics of how social media has changed the landscape of marketing. It is the same game, just with new rules. Identifies "Presence" as the most important "P" in the new media marketing mix.
This presentation version includes more detailed text for those unable to attend presentation in person.
Digital PR combines traditional PR techniques with content marketing, social media, and search engine optimization. It allows news to spread further and faster to targeted audiences online through sharing and repurposing content. Effective digital PR strategies include collaborating with influencers, communicating your brand's values to build trust, and creating engaging content rather than advertisements. Traditional techniques like securing press in newspapers are still important alongside developing an online presence through blogs, social media, and thought leadership.
Content shared by advocates performs 10 times better than content shared to paid channels, and seven times better than content in owned channels. That’s why smart brands are empowering their employees to create authentic brand content, including unique photos and videos.
As Employee Advocacy programs mature, companies are finding new ways to leverage the power of their brand ambassadors.
In this webinar, you will learn to boost your content marketing by empowering your employee advocates.
You will also learn:
• How to enable employee advocacy for content creation
• How to create collaboration between marketing and employee advocates
• Implementing and managing content strategies for your employees
Develop killer content that will resonate with your audienceChris Marocchi
This presentation was given at the OCMA (Orange County Marketing and Advertising association on 10/16/13. It's filled with fun and insightful information about how your company can improve its content marketing by curating and sharing content that your customers will engage with.
The document discusses social selling and using social media in sales. It defines social selling as salespeople using social media like LinkedIn to interact with prospects, provide value through content, and build relationships until prospects are ready to buy. The four pillars of social selling are creating a professional brand, focusing on the right prospects, engaging with insights, and building trusted relationships. Successful social selling involves sharing knowledge and interesting content rather than self-promotion to gain attention. Content should have certain factors like being positive or providing value to increase the likelihood of being shared. Salespeople are expected to check company social media regularly and share relevant, engaging content.
Influencer marketing, instagram marketing, and branding the ultimate slide de...Joe Teo
This document provides an overview of influencer marketing, social media marketing, and branding strategies. It discusses how influencer marketing can drive sales, awareness and authenticity. It outlines best practices for finding influencers, measuring success, and minimizing risks. It also covers how to prepare brands for influencer partnerships and implement effective influencer programs. Additional sections explore social media tactics on Instagram, the pillars of social media marketing, and tips for creating engaging sponsored content. The document concludes with strategies for magnetic branding, co-marketing, and building an adaptive agency.
This document provides guidance on developing an effective social media strategy for businesses. It recommends determining goals and objectives, researching relevant social media platforms and target audiences, creating a list of industry contacts and content sources, joining online conversations to build relationships, strengthening relationships through offline interactions, measuring results against goals, and continually analyzing and improving efforts based on what works best. The overall message is that a social media strategy requires a long-term commitment to building relationships, not just short-term marketing tactics, and should be integrated with a company's overall marketing plan.
The document discusses how PR is evolving in the social media world. It notes that the core of PR and social media is storytelling and ensuring relevant reach. It states that the format for stories is no longer just text, and sterile press releases do not make good stories. It recommends listening to what people say about brands, educating customer service on crisis management, newsjacking relevant stories, live streaming exclusive content, finding and working with influencers, and measuring the performance of stories. The key is staying focused on storytelling as social media evolves.
Similar to 550 PR, Marketing & Social Media Tips (20)
Self promotion versus self destructionCyndy Hoenig
The document discusses effective social media self-promotion strategies versus self-destruction. It provides 15 tips on how to win new customers rather than turn them away, including making social media about customers not yourself, telling rather than selling, connecting to convert, and being helpful, present, diverse, nice, and giving on social media. The document emphasizes monitoring social media efforts, finding the right pace, and having fun to effectively self-promote without coming across as self-absorbed.
The document discusses an upcoming webinar on June 30th about creating perfect press releases and press kits. It provides tips on writing effective press releases, including using compelling headlines and quotes, and keeping the content focused on informing readers rather than selling. The webinar will teach small business owners and consultants how to conduct low-cost public relations and social media strategies.
The document summarizes tips for finding news angles to pitch to media outlets from a webinar on public relations. It discusses brainstorming story ideas, focusing on what is unique about a business or organization, and provides examples of newsworthy topics. Case studies are presented on generating media coverage for charitable fundraising events and the 10th anniversary of a national memorial.
The Pitching Process, Establish Yourself as an ExpertCyndy Hoenig
The document provides tips for pitching story ideas to media outlets, including preparing well-researched pitches that answer why the story is newsworthy, understanding what the outlet is looking for, having backup story angles prepared, and following up appropriately with media contacts. Key aspects of the pitching process discussed are fleshing out story ideas with reporting details, framing the pitch from the editor's perspective, and being prepared with pitch points and media materials. Proper follow up and understanding media timelines and priorities are also covered.
The document discusses how to build an effective media list and contacts for public relations purposes. It recommends researching your target market and matching media outlets to that audience. The document provides tips on organizing media lists, finding journalists, making initial contact respectfully, and ways to utilize the list like newsletters. Resources for finding media contacts are also included.
The document discusses how to build an effective media list and contacts for public relations purposes. It recommends researching your target market and matching media outlets to that audience. The document provides tips on organizing a media list spreadsheet and finding journalist contacts. It also gives advice on initial contact, following up, and ways to utilize your media list beyond press releases.
The document summarizes tips for finding news angles to pitch to media outlets from a webinar on public relations. It discusses brainstorming story ideas, focusing on what is unique about a business or organization, and provides examples of newsworthy topics. Case studies are presented on generating media coverage for charitable fundraising events and the 10th anniversary of a national memorial.
This presentation was provided by Racquel Jemison, Ph.D., Christina MacLaughlin, Ph.D., and Paulomi Majumder. Ph.D., all of the American Chemical Society, for the second session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session Two: 'Expanding Pathways to Publishing Careers,' was held June 13, 2024.
Andreas Schleicher presents PISA 2022 Volume III - Creative Thinking - 18 Jun...EduSkills OECD
Andreas Schleicher, Director of Education and Skills at the OECD presents at the launch of PISA 2022 Volume III - Creative Minds, Creative Schools on 18 June 2024.
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In this presentation, we will explore how barcodes can be leveraged within Odoo 17 to streamline our manufacturing processes. We will cover the configuration steps, how to utilize barcodes in different manufacturing scenarios, and the overall benefits of implementing this technology.
A Visual Guide to 1 Samuel | A Tale of Two HeartsSteve Thomason
These slides walk through the story of 1 Samuel. Samuel is the last judge of Israel. The people reject God and want a king. Saul is anointed as the first king, but he is not a good king. David, the shepherd boy is anointed and Saul is envious of him. David shows honor while Saul continues to self destruct.
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A proprietary approach developed by bringing together the best of learning theories from Psychology, design principles from the world of visualization, and pedagogical methods from over a decade of training experience, that enables you to: Learn better, faster!
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering.pptxDenish Jangid
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering
Syllabus
Chapter-1
Introduction to objective, scope and outcome the subject
Chapter 2
Introduction: Scope and Specialization of Civil Engineering, Role of civil Engineer in Society, Impact of infrastructural development on economy of country.
Chapter 3
Surveying: Object Principles & Types of Surveying; Site Plans, Plans & Maps; Scales & Unit of different Measurements.
Linear Measurements: Instruments used. Linear Measurement by Tape, Ranging out Survey Lines and overcoming Obstructions; Measurements on sloping ground; Tape corrections, conventional symbols. Angular Measurements: Instruments used; Introduction to Compass Surveying, Bearings and Longitude & Latitude of a Line, Introduction to total station.
Levelling: Instrument used Object of levelling, Methods of levelling in brief, and Contour maps.
Chapter 4
Buildings: Selection of site for Buildings, Layout of Building Plan, Types of buildings, Plinth area, carpet area, floor space index, Introduction to building byelaws, concept of sun light & ventilation. Components of Buildings & their functions, Basic concept of R.C.C., Introduction to types of foundation
Chapter 5
Transportation: Introduction to Transportation Engineering; Traffic and Road Safety: Types and Characteristics of Various Modes of Transportation; Various Road Traffic Signs, Causes of Accidents and Road Safety Measures.
Chapter 6
Environmental Engineering: Environmental Pollution, Environmental Acts and Regulations, Functional Concepts of Ecology, Basics of Species, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, Hydrological Cycle; Chemical Cycles: Carbon, Nitrogen & Phosphorus; Energy Flow in Ecosystems.
Water Pollution: Water Quality standards, Introduction to Treatment & Disposal of Waste Water. Reuse and Saving of Water, Rain Water Harvesting. Solid Waste Management: Classification of Solid Waste, Collection, Transportation and Disposal of Solid. Recycling of Solid Waste: Energy Recovery, Sanitary Landfill, On-Site Sanitation. Air & Noise Pollution: Primary and Secondary air pollutants, Harmful effects of Air Pollution, Control of Air Pollution. . Noise Pollution Harmful Effects of noise pollution, control of noise pollution, Global warming & Climate Change, Ozone depletion, Greenhouse effect
Text Books:
1. Palancharmy, Basic Civil Engineering, McGraw Hill publishers.
2. Satheesh Gopi, Basic Civil Engineering, Pearson Publishers.
3. Ketki Rangwala Dalal, Essentials of Civil Engineering, Charotar Publishing House.
4. BCP, Surveying volume 1
Leveraging Generative AI to Drive Nonprofit InnovationTechSoup
In this webinar, participants learned how to utilize Generative AI to streamline operations and elevate member engagement. Amazon Web Service experts provided a customer specific use cases and dived into low/no-code tools that are quick and easy to deploy through Amazon Web Service (AWS.)
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
إضغ بين إيديكم من أقوى الملازم التي صممتها
ملزمة تشريح الجهاز الهيكلي (نظري 3)
💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀
تتميز هذهِ الملزمة بعِدة مُميزات :
1- مُترجمة ترجمة تُناسب جميع المستويات
2- تحتوي على 78 رسم توضيحي لكل كلمة موجودة بالملزمة (لكل كلمة !!!!)
#فهم_ماكو_درخ
3- دقة الكتابة والصور عالية جداً جداً جداً
4- هُنالك بعض المعلومات تم توضيحها بشكل تفصيلي جداً (تُعتبر لدى الطالب أو الطالبة بإنها معلومات مُبهمة ومع ذلك تم توضيح هذهِ المعلومات المُبهمة بشكل تفصيلي جداً
5- الملزمة تشرح نفسها ب نفسها بس تكلك تعال اقراني
6- تحتوي الملزمة في اول سلايد على خارطة تتضمن جميع تفرُعات معلومات الجهاز الهيكلي المذكورة في هذهِ الملزمة
واخيراً هذهِ الملزمة حلالٌ عليكم وإتمنى منكم إن تدعولي بالخير والصحة والعافية فقط
كل التوفيق زملائي وزميلاتي ، زميلكم محمد الذهبي 💊💊
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
THE SACRIFICE HOW PRO-PALESTINE PROTESTS STUDENTS ARE SACRIFICING TO CHANGE T...indexPub
The recent surge in pro-Palestine student activism has prompted significant responses from universities, ranging from negotiations and divestment commitments to increased transparency about investments in companies supporting the war on Gaza. This activism has led to the cessation of student encampments but also highlighted the substantial sacrifices made by students, including academic disruptions and personal risks. The primary drivers of these protests are poor university administration, lack of transparency, and inadequate communication between officials and students. This study examines the profound emotional, psychological, and professional impacts on students engaged in pro-Palestine protests, focusing on Generation Z's (Gen-Z) activism dynamics. This paper explores the significant sacrifices made by these students and even the professors supporting the pro-Palestine movement, with a focus on recent global movements. Through an in-depth analysis of printed and electronic media, the study examines the impacts of these sacrifices on the academic and personal lives of those involved. The paper highlights examples from various universities, demonstrating student activism's long-term and short-term effects, including disciplinary actions, social backlash, and career implications. The researchers also explore the broader implications of student sacrifices. The findings reveal that these sacrifices are driven by a profound commitment to justice and human rights, and are influenced by the increasing availability of information, peer interactions, and personal convictions. The study also discusses the broader implications of this activism, comparing it to historical precedents and assessing its potential to influence policy and public opinion. The emotional and psychological toll on student activists is significant, but their sense of purpose and community support mitigates some of these challenges. However, the researchers call for acknowledging the broader Impact of these sacrifices on the future global movement of FreePalestine.
1. THE BIG BOOK OF TIPS
550
PR, Marketing &
Social Strategy Tips
Tips To Grow Your Business
(in 140 characters or less)
By: Cyndy Hoenig (@cyndyhoenig)
& Heather Lytle (@hlytle)
audiences
www.hlmediapartners.com
perceptions
target
get
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social
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ud e c
speaking
communications
p method
public
leaders
s
es
ssages
messages
twitter
greet
relations
l ons s
advertisin
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ations
topics
p communication
t
ay
3. 1 #1 pet peeve of journalists. People who call and pitch not knowing what
they cover. Do your homework.
2 100’s of engaged followers will do more for you than 1000’s of token
ones.
3 After a pitch, make sure you give several contact #s to a reporter. The
press waits for no one.
4 Ally yourself w/local charity, sponsor sports teams. Commitment to so-
cial responsibility attracts customers.
5 Remember the 5th “P” of the new marketing mix, Presence. If they
can’t find you, they can’t work w/ you.
6 Instead of asking for new Facebook “Likes,” link your “Read More” email
mktg campaign messages to Facebook & encourage feedback.
7 Your “About” page is often your 2nd most visited. Focus on you & them.
Tell a great story of who you are & what you will do for them.
8 Transition from thinking about how SM strategy helps your biz to how
SM strategy helps your customers. Then you’ll see results.
9 Think about the phrase “You can’t change what you can’t measure.” Are
you using your analytics strategically?
10 SM is all about THEM, not all about YOU. Do an audit of your networks.
Is it just about you? Commit to engage to get results.
11 Acknowledge tweets, emails, comments. It’s not good PR or customer
service to ignore anyone.
2
4. 12 Ask how customers heard about you. PR is an ongoing process & needs
constant tweaking.
13 Be helpful. Reciprocity produces incredible returns on a simple tip or
referral.
14 Be on time, or early. Punctuality is a sincere form of courtesy.
15 Be sure & have press materials ready to be sent at a moment’s notice.
16 Be real, honest, genuine. Authenticity is catnip. -- Networking
17 Always pick up the check. People won’t remember what they had for
lunch, but they’ll always remember who picked up the check.
18 Transfer the enthusiasm you feel for your brand to everyone you meet.
You’ll see results.
19 A good press release - about 400 words. Shorter the better. Just
enough info to secure an interview.
20 A great pitch - Story angle tie-ins, description of where it could fit in the
media outlet & a call to action.
21 A happy customer is your greatest endorsement. Respond promptly and
honestly.
22 A media angle must have some distinctive quality. Journalists sniff out
what’s different, not what’s the same.
3
5. 23 A quick call or email to a journalist outlining your pitch tests the water.
24 A site that blasts your pitch to reporters & bloggers nationwide --
http://www.pitchforpr.com/
25 A strong brand can make any business stand out, particularly in competi-
tive markets.
26 Always say thanks to a journalist for a story, mention, item etc.
27 Smile, look engaging. Networking.
28 Apply for an award. Ck local Biz Journals, chambers. Like positive news
stories, awards confer credibility.
29 Segment your market based on consumer lifecycle. Provide content, add
value for each stage.
30 Make an editorial calendar & stick with it. Use as a reminder to add content,
update photo’s, Facebook, keyword research, etc.
31 Need inspiration? Keep a list of your targeted keywords at your desk.
Use as content/headline/alt text inspiration.
32 Schedule a free webinar: “What You Need to Know About....” or “5 tips
to...” Great for SEO, listbuilding.
33 Web copy should sell benefits not features.
4
6. 34 Don’t just share links on Twitter/FB/LI. Add your voice & personality,
Solicit feedback. Connect to convert.
35 Commit to updating your site at least once a week. Search engines love
new content.
36 If you haven’t already, sign up for http://www.helpareporter.com. In-
valuable for business owners.
37 People find your site while looking for a solution to a problem. You have
seconds to grab their attention & provide the solution.
38 Appreciate at least one person daily. By email, twitter, FB, phone.
Karma.
39 Are you monitoring your presence on Twitter? Try TweetBeep - Google
alerts for Twitter.
40 Are you prepared w/facts & figures so you can respond to a PR crisis
quickly?
41 Are you ready to handle the media’s questions -- no matter what they
are?
42 Are your news releases objective? Backed by facts & figures? Focused
on 1 or 2 main ideas?
43 As a marketing tool, news releases are only as valuable as the keywords
& phrases that are contained in them.
44 As you increase your network, remember follow up is key – b-day,
thank you, thinking of you, holiday cards.
5
7. 45 Assume your audience is inundated w/info and ask, what’s different
about my message?
46 Attract followers in your target market. Why care about 1000’s of fol-
lowers who don’t care about what you have to say?
47 B4 you pitch. Do your homework. Watch TV, read several issues of
magazines & blogs & a week’s worth of newspapers.
48 Bad PR? Respond immediately and never lie. The media are trained to
investigate and they WILL find the truth. Just ask Tiger Woods.
49 Be authentic. Email messages should read as if you’re telling a story.
On the phone? Relax.
50 Be briefed on current events. Always. You’ll be able to converse w/ any
CEO.
51 Be honest with journalists & reporters. They know. They make their liv-
ing talking to people.
52 Be humble. Journalists & bloggers need content to fill their pages, but
arrogance will get you nowhere.
53 Be proactive. Network weekly. Plan to meet at least one new person a
week. You’ll see results.
54 Be productive. Reach out to new clients and friends. Look w/in your
circle for a connection.
55 Use a monitoring app like Hootsuite or Tweetdeck. Create columns for
keywords, your industry, your competitors. Join the conversation.
6
8. 56 Have a new product/service? Select a few customers or clients to be
“beta” testers. Get feedback, they feel good about being hand selected.
57 Make it easy for readers to leave comments. If possible, avoid requiring
login, difficult captcha’s. Comments create authority, loyalty.
58 There is a balance between personal branding and blatant self-promo-
tion. Find yours.
59 Your customers Google you, read reviews about you, research your
competition...all before making contact with you. Monitoring matters.
60 Trial & error is now trial and measure. Focus on analytics to study
onsite behavior, craft targeted messages, identify opportunities.
61 The key to high quality, relevant content creation is knowing your audi-
ence. Do your homework to know what resonates with your target.
62 Create co-marketing opportunities w/ complementary businesses. Lever-
age each other’s networks with discounts/promotions.
63 Write copy like you talk. Be friendly, short, avoid marketing speak. Ask
yourself before you publish “Would I respond/react?”
64 Be realistic about when the media will cover you. Lead times vary &
media outlets can have a one-day to 4-month window.
65 Be thankful for every mention your company receives. There is no such
thing as a small hit.
66 Be your brand. Be in love w/ & inspired by your brand’s mission. This
translates trust & authenticity. Good press will follow.
7
9. 67 Before meeting w/ a journalist, read their last 5 articles in full.
68 Before you pitch -- Know editorial deadlines & be early.
69 Know your target market. Who do you want buying from you?
70 Build relationships. When people feel they know & trust who you are,
they will invest in your brand every time.
71 Boost your brand awareness. Make use of Leads Services. HARO,
Pitchrate, PRSourceCode, ProfNet.
72 Brainstorm various story ideas & angles. Each message needs its own
presentation, approach & delivery.
73 Brand yourself. You are an expert in your field. Execute your plan via
speaking, volunteering, Social Media. Blog, network.
74 Branding is complex yet simple: the creation & development of a spe-
cific identity for your biz, product or person.
75 Build relationships – lunches, trade events, seminars.
76 Who is your competition? It’s no longer the local competitor but breaking
through the noise. Understand what holds your customers attention.
77 Be sure your out of office reply includes links to your profiles, site, blog,
FAQ’s landing page.
8
10. 78 As the saying goes…Building a community is more effective than building
a following. Everything you share should have that in mind.
79 Instead of just using testimonials (I love this product!) use customer
case studies (this product/service resulted in......for me/my biz).
80 Set clear expectations of how you’ll use your opt in list & deliver what is
promised. Segment sign up for interest & increased targeting.
81 Stop using auto DM’s. Take 5 min/day to send a personalized message
to new followers about their bio/site. Make it about them, not you.
82 Not sure what to blog/post about? Focus on client/customer stories.
Makes future volunteers/donors envision working w/ you.
83 Try a new platform each month–video blogging, webinars, Foursquare.
Monitor results. New channels=New Opportunities.
84 Having 10K Twitter Followers or FB Fans means nothing if they aren’t
buying from you. Quality over quantity for true success.
85 Use @socialmention’s Q&A feature to find ppl asking about your prod-
uct/service. Answer w/ a link back to your site.
86 Submit your content-Benefit from their traffic & search power. Look for
industry or location specific sites that allow for blog creation.
87 Schedule 10 min/wk for blog/news commenting. Makes you the expert,
bonus SEO, drives people to your site. Provide value, not spam.
88 Nurture your relationships. When people feel they know & trust who
you are, they will invest in your brand every time.
9
11. 89 Build your list. Joint ventures w/experts who have an established data-
base.
90 Build your team. It’s not always the $$ that you need, it’s people w/ex-
pertise & contacts.
91 Building your media list - news editors decide which stories will be cov-
ered by which reporter.
92 Call your media contact with a brief phone pitch before sending materi-
als -- for a heads up.
93 Calling someone in the media? Your first 4 words should be - Are you
on deadline?
94 Community newspapers - Customize the story to their local readers.
95 Consider DIYPR for your biz. Excellent option for any size company. You’ll
see results quickly.
96 Consistency is king. Come up w/your 10-second elevator speech & use
it. Consistently.
97 Conversations about your biz occur every day on Twitter, FB, LI - for
public viewing. Make sure to monitor daily.
98 Create & maintain key relationships. Identify people w/common interests
& different skills.
99 Create & participate in special events to attract attention & customers.
Fairs, trade shows, conferences.
10
12. 100 Create a fact sheet for your biz. You need one to feed a journalist correct
info.
101 Great story angle. Start a Hall of Fame. Induct some of your industry’s
top people.
102 Create a media kit. Make it downloadable on your site. Carry print ones
in your car.
103 Create a story angle by tying in with Holidays, or create your own.
http://www.mhprofessional.com/category/?cat=3
104 Create alliance w/ charity to benefit from special events. This offers
you the op to drive coverage of your good works.
105 Create an online newsroom w/ press releases, links & PDF’s of media
coverage, etc.
106 Create links in releases to deliver potential customers to landing pages
on your website.
107 Create news by staging an event.
108 Create PR ops - submit articles, commission a survey, give expert opin-
ions, comment on blogs, letters to the editor.
109 Create strategic alliances. Partner w/ talented and super smart people.
110 Create valuable content targeted at solving problems for your custom-
ers. Offer solutions & you’ll receive enormous return.
11
13. 111 Creative releases can lead to stories that increase sales, enhance cred-
ibility & give you a competitive edge.
112 Creativity & a clear, focused, understandable message that can be com-
municated in seconds is paramount.
113 Create a resource section for your site–tips, events, how to’s, reports.
Being an information source=return visits=loyalty.
114 Can the person monitoring your SM (ex, marketing) address questions?
If not, have communication plan w/ the ppl who can.
115 Have a happy customer? Ask for a video testimonial. More personal,
easy to optimize, more authentic than text. Share on site/facebook.
116 Do a search for your target industry+associations. Most produce news-
letters & content, are underfunded & looking for guest contributors.
117 If repeating the same message on FB, Twitter or LI, vary the language.
Ex: if promoting event repeat the same concepts w/ different words.
118 Apply the social strategy to your email campaigns. Don’t sell or broad-
cast. Identify pain, provide a solution.
119 Use analytics to determine what is resonating with your customers/cli-
ents & to craft future messages.
120 Repurpose your best content by creating a drip email mini-course cam-
paign. Added value for your existing list, great list building tool.
121 Create alerts for yourself, your org, your key players & your competi-
tion. Know what is being said, identify opptys the competition misses.
12
14. 122 Before sending an email campaign, do a complete audit. Proofread,
check every link, do a spam check.
123 Using video? Remember the average attn span is 20-30 seconds. Be
professional, engaging & have a clear call to action. Brevity is key.
124 Crisis Checklist - Make lists of leading, difficult & tricky questions that
could be asked & practice answering.
125 Crisis PR - Acknowledge quickly, keep statements factual. Explain rem-
edy plan.
126 Whatever the scale & type of Crisis PR, own it from the start. You can
contain & minimize if you take control early.
127 Customer service first. The customer tells the true story. Make sure you
can support what you’re hyping.
128 Customers have choices and if you’re not consistently vying for their at-
tention, you’ll fall off their radar screens.
129 Daily Newspaper deadlines: every day, usually at the end of the work-
day.
130 Develop a low cost PR campaign & handle in house. PR is a powerful
tool & a successful campaign lends credibility.
131 Develop a mission statement that shows your reason for being and the
value you provide to your customers.
132 Develop calendar of events & make your biz visible in areas related to
potential clients’ interests.
13
15. 133 Develop your 10-sec tagline that expresses who you are & what you do.
134 Research topics relevant to your biz & who writes about them. Add to
your media list.
135 Develop your PR plan of attack. What communication vehicles will you
use?
136 Did you know that as many as 80% of job openings are filled by net-
working?
137 Do your homework before pitching. Familiarize yourself w/the outlet
& its focus.
138 Don’t be scared to call a reporter. You pitch your company every day to
customers. The media is no different.
139 Don’t forget -- Bloggers are journalists too. Find them at top100blog-
gers.com or Bloggers.com.
140 Don’t just donate time to an organization. Stake out a leadership posi-
tion. You’ll meet & help others.
141 Don’t overly promote. Be helpful. Show expertise & reputation will
grow. Your voice will be sought & respected.
142 Don’t take “no” personally. Editors receive several pitches a day.
143 Dress appropriately. Dignified dress is a sign of self-respect, something
you always want to convey.
14
16. 144 Effective PR doesn’t have to cost a fortune. Think about DIYPR. http://
hlmediapartners.com/.
145 Empower your life. Give to your community. Biz happens while volun-
teering & gives you a legit aura of leadership.
146 Engage media on Twitter - follow reporters you want to build a relation-
ship with. Find them at mediaontwitter.com.
147 Entertain while you inform or you won’t be noticed.
148 Even if you’re a Twitter naysayer, claim your handle before someone
else does – like your competition.
149 Everyone is clamoring for good press. You must bring the noise to your
release to make it stand out.
150 Face time - the most effective & underused method of communication.
People do biz w/who they know & trust.
151 Figure out your uniqueness. Use this as part of your brand. Use it ev-
erywhere. FB, Twitter, in your elevator speech.
152 Find execs to follow on Twitter - http://www.exectweets.com.
153 Find story ideas in the course of your daily routine. Keep a notebook
handy. You’ll be surprised at what you find.
154 Focus on the brand of you to take your biz to the next level.
15
17. 155 Focus on what your biz achieves for clients. Your brand is no good to you
if it’s not delivering what customers want.
156 For marketing purposes, assume that elderly consumers are 15 years
younger than they actually are.
157 Free service for non-profits to help maximize media coverage - Media
Trust http://www.mediatrust.org/.
158 Get your release off to a strong start w/a compelling headline. You have
one chance to make a 1st impression.
159 Give several contact numbers to a media contact. The press waits for
no one.
160 Good media angle? Determine need. Is your idea beneficial to others?
Does it serve a purpose?
161 Find a negative comment/post/tweet about your org? Acknowledge in
public (shows you’re listening), resolve in private.
162 Instead of focusing on connecting to convert, focus on connecting for
community. Conversions will follow.
163 People do business w/ people they like. Show some personality in your
SM efforts.
164 Your website is your most important piece of real estate. Look at it as a
customer/client. Are you impressed? Is it helpful? If not, fix ASAP.
165 Eye tracking studies reveal our eyes are drawn to the first few words of
headlines. Select headlines carefully for maximum impact.
16
18. 166 Forget marketing speak. Write sales copy how customers/clients speak &
search. Need ideas? Ask them to tell you in their words what you do.
167 Keep a list of emails you subscribe to that you actually read. What is
different from those you don’t? Apply that to your own campaigns.
168 Integrate your efforts. Ex: Include an email opt-spin form on your Face-
book page. Make clear the value for signing up.
169 Great stories can lead to awards & prestige for the media. That’s why
they’re always receptive to the next great idea.
170 Grow connections in categories you need to reach. Review each invite
before you accept. Make sure it’s a fit.
171 Have press materials ready to be emailed at a moment’s notice. Back-
grounder, bios, photos, quotes, links.
172 Having a successful PR & branding strategy is not all about you. Promot-
ing others builds your audience & reputation.
173 Honor your process. You are the best salesperson you have. Know your
work & don’t undersell yourself.
174 Host your own event. People do business with people. Face time.
175 How would you sum up your business if only given 10 seconds? Perfect
it.
176 How your information is delivered and framed impacts how the listener,
reader, viewer will react.
17
19. 177 Don’t swear on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin. It’s not good for your pro-
fessional image.
178 I love contests as part of a PR strategy. One successful contest can
double your biz overnight.
179 I’m loving Twitter, Facebook & Linkedin, but don’t ignore face time.
180 If someone reaches out to you, respond quickly. Karma. It’s essential
for good business & a happy life.
181 If the media is covering a national story of interest to your biz, offer
up a local angle.
182 If you believe in yourself, you can sell anything. Customers will recog-
nize your conviction and that translates trust.
183 If you don’t think every day is a good day, just try missing one.
184 If you really need something done, ask a busy person.
185 If you sell a product, carry it with you. Take it everywhere. If too big,
carry pictures.
186 If your release were about a biz you weren’t familiar with, would you be
interested in reading it?
187 I’m loving this site -- http://www.awardsync.com/ - Helps you identify
& track awards.
18
20. 188 In press releases, pay attention to the key words. These will boost your
ranking in search engines.
189 In the event anyone asks about negative comments found on the Net,
have key messages of explanation prepared.
190 Increase media coverage. Free Press release distribution @ free-press-
release.com, pr.com, prweb.com
191 Internet Public Library -- http://www.ipl.org/div/news/
192 It’s Twitter Karma to RT.
193 It’s much easier to reach the corner office than to stay there. Keep ad-
vancing your skill sets. Continue to learn.
194 Journalists & TV producers receive tons of pitches & story ideas daily. Be
grateful when they choose yours.
195 Journalists want 2 things: reliable facts & an interesting news angle.
196 Journalists work on deadlines. Give them what they need in the form
they need it. Respect their time frame.
197 Keep basic PR tools updated -- well-written press releases, press kit, fact
sheets, Q&A’s, backgrounders, key employee bios, high-res photos.
198 Keep biz bios updated w/ links to recently published articles, media
quotes, speaking engagements, CE courses.
19
21. 199 Keep pitches, VM’s short & to the point.
200 Keep up to date w/newspapers, websites, trade & professional pubs,
magazines, etc.
201 Keep your media list updated -- always. NewsLink -- http://www.
newslink.org/.
202 Know 3 easily recognizable advantages your product has over the com-
petition.
203 Learn to work the media. You have 3 choices: invisible, target, ex-
pert.
204 Let your customers know that you listen & engage on Social Media. It’s
critical for good customer service.
205 Let your work speak for you. Honor it. Reputation is everything -- in
business & in life.
206 List who you’d like to reach this year & their potential influencers. De-
velop timetable & calendar of outreach.
207 Listen attentively during your pitch. By listening, you’re able to steer
the conversation your way.
208 Quality over Quantity. Identify where quality traffic comes from & site
behavior by monitoring page views, time on site, goals met, bounce.
209 Having a SM strategy is important, but not as important as being flex-
ible. You don’t define success, your customers do.
20
22. 210 Studies show reviews are the most effective advertising. Encourage your
customers/clients to share their experiences.
211 Having a call to action is irrelevant w/o a clear follow-up plan. Don’t
focus on the lead, focus on what you need to keep them.
212 Too many miss the oppty of Google Local Listings. Claim, complete, opti-
mize & learn from the analytics.
213 Localize your content. Be sure to include localized keyword terms for
people searching for local solutions.
214 Social Media isn’t about selling. Don’t forget the “social”…it is what
makes SM effective.
215 Listen to questions your clients ask you. A trend may be starting you
can tie in to.
216 Listen to your market. Consumers are all over the web - making it easier
to survey their needs.
217 Make a list of your best clients. What media outlets do they follow? Find
out. This starts your media list.
218 Make brief phone pitch - have your pitch points in front of you - send
additional info, follow up.
219 Make sure you @ reply on Twitter. Be interested & engage others. Your
followers will tell theirs.
220 Make sure you know an outlet’s readership. Then research the right
contact before you pitch.
21
23. 221 5 reasons why your product or service cannot fail -Media Angle
222 Celebs who use your product. - News Angle
223 Create & promote a special event. - Media Angle
224 Do you have info that people always want to know about? Tax tips? Nu-
trition ideas? - Media Angle
225 Family-friendly initiatives. - Media Angle
226 How was your product/service technology discovered? By whom? -
News Angle
227 Increasing employee numbers due to business success. News Angle
228 Is your biz involved with charitable causes? News Angle
229 Make sure you’re always briefed on current events. This empowers you
to converse with any potential client. Subscribe to USA Today.
230 Make sure your marketing materials are downloadable.
231 Make sure your press release contains 3-5% SEO keyword density.
Headline - 15-20%.
22
24. 232 Make your message count. It should be compelling enough to attract at-
tention.
233 Market to where your clients are to be found, as opposed to marketing
w/in your own service industry.
234 Marketing to kids? Remember - children think they’re 5 years older than
they actually are.
235 Tie-in with a current trend. - News Angle
236 Top 10 tips to ... - Media Angle
237 What has been the personal impact on those who are using your prod-
uct/service - specific examples. News Angle
238 What makes you unique from other biz’s in your industry? Media Angle
239 Media angles must have some distinctive quality. Journalists sniff out
what’s different, not what’s the same.
240 Your Media list - news editors decide which stories will be covered by
which reporter.
241 Online, offline, social media - all build respect for your business. Expo-
sure creates pubic esteem and action that affects your bottom line.
242 Media folks are stressed & cranky when on deadline. Know deadlines
before calling.
23
25. 243 Media Hook or Angle - Useful advice. How can your biz make life easier
or better for the customer?
244 Cross market your communities. Include Facebook on email sig, link
Facebook to blog, Twitter on biz cards. Offer unique content on each.
245 Using Facebook for your biz? Make sure the “About” block includes
keyword rich copy.
246 73% of online activity is local. Be where your customers are. Think local
links, directories, listings, blogs, networks.
247 Customers don’t want examples, they want real world applications.
Consider the “What’s in it for me” perspective when considering sales
copy.
248 For online lead generation- don’t focus on what you do, focus on how
you fix their problem. Conversions come later.
249 Be mindful of what is “above the fold” on your site. Should include your
call to action, other ways to connect (FB/Twitter), RSS.
250 Don’t assume where your customers are or what the competition is do-
ing. Have data to change what you assume to what you know.
251 Understand emotional triggers for your customers. Study contact forms,
opt-ins, split tests, click rates to find what triggers a response.
252 Think about results in terms of Exposure, Engagement, Influence & Ac-
tion. Ask yourself: Is everything we do creating an action?
253 The Features Editor decides which longer articles will be included in
their pub.
24
26. 254 Comprehensive listing of world newspapers - http://www.refdesk.com/
paper.html
255 Hundreds of news resources world wide - http://library.uncg.edu/news/
256 U.S. and Worldwide newspapers -- http://www.refdesk.com/paper.html
257 Media Lists - U.S. Newspapers - http://www.newslink.org/
258 Media Relations is 98% prep & 2% execution. Make sure to research
the media outlet first.
259 Monitor mentions of brand names and key execs daily – Set alerts using
@socialmention.
260 Monitor your reputation online on a daily basis.
261 Monthly pub deadlines: 3-4 months ahead of street date.
262 Be honest, polite and fair & be sure to follow up. - Networking
263 Creation of relationship w/ local charity. - Media Angle
264 Did you recently launch a new product or service? - Media Angle
25
27. 265 Be open, honest, genuine, positive, supportive. Practice good communi-
cation skills.
266 Authenticity is catnip. - Networking
267 Networking - Contacts are the building blocks of a career. Hand your biz
cards out like candy on Halloween.
268 Keep referrals informed. - Networking
269 Networking – Make a strong first impression.
270 Networking – Talk to everyone you meet. Find common denominators.
271 Target the right audience. Networking
272 When attending events w/friends, separate. Groups are intimidating.
273 You never know who you’ll meet & what role that person might later
play in your life or career.
274 Do your homework. Craft your messaging around who your audience is,
where they play, what drives them to make decisions.
275 Think about your most common offline sales objections. Write web copy
anticipating, addressing & overcoming these objections.
26
28. 276 If traffic is the metric of quantity & community is the metric of quality,
community should be your priority.
277 Copying what others do is not a strategy. Know your customers, under-
stand their needs & be clear about how you provide the solution.
278 Your site appearance is only a fraction of the user experience. Focus on
usability, ease of information access, easy goal conversions.
279 Questions you should be able to readily answer: Who are my site visi-
tors? Where are they coming from? What are they viewing?
280 Networking Don’ts – Don’t act desperate, sell, monopolize, brag, in-
terrupt, misrepresent or overextend.
281 Networking is about being you in the best form - Authenticity.
282 Never burn bridges. Today’s intern could be tomorrow’s CEO.
283 Never commit if you can’t meet the deadline. People always remember
who screwed up.
284 Never discuss other media coverage w/ a journalist. They prefer to re-
port stories what are not overexposed.
285 Never go ‘off the record.” There’s no such thing. Everything is on the
record when you’re talking to the media.
286 Never overly promote. Be helpful. Show expertise & reputation will
grow. Your voice will be sought & respected.
27
29. 287 Never pitch a story to different journalists at the same outlet.
288 Never send attachments to the media - without permission.
289 Never send journalists attachments via e-mail. Cut and paste your info
into the body of the message.
290 News and Newspapers Online -- http://library.uncg.edu/news/
291 News angle – Customers like to know who has the best quality. Unbi-
ased tests that prove it?
292 News angle – Statistics to show business growth.
293 News releases are only as valuable as the keywords & phrases in them.
294 Newswires - Use free at PRLog.com, PRWeb.com, PR.com, ewebwire.
com
295 Newsworthy – Market research that led to a new business ides.
296 No one uses the phone anymore, it’s texts & emails. Make a short pitch
via phone first. Surprise!
297 Notify media of conferences & events with media advisories. Part of
relationship-building.
28
30. 298 Offer useful info on your site & journalists will get used to turning to you
as a resource. Media coverage will increase.
299 Online – If you know the answer to a question – answer it. You’re build-
ing your brand.
300 Only pitch to those that would be a good fit for your news.
301 Participate, attend, speak, host, present, show in at least 2 national &
local industry conferences/year.
302 Participation in conversations builds audiences. When done appropri-
ately, participation creates leads.
303 Participation in Social Media builds trust, relationships & targeted audi-
ences. Good branding strategy.
304 Perfect Press Kit - Fact sheet, backgrounder, bios, testimonials, publicity
reprints, most recent press release.
305 Photos boost your chances of getting your story covered. Always include
a photo with a press release.
306 Pitch Phone Rules -- never leave more than 2 VM messages for media
people. Call daily until your party picks up.
307 Pitching Process - Research the outlet. Find the appropriate editor. Don’t
pitch more than 1 @ the same outlet.
308 Pitching the media - Research the reporter. Read past stories & check
contact prefs.
29
31. 309 Pitching: Remember the 5 F’s -- be fast, fair, factual frank and friendly.
310 Polish your image. Ask friends & family what impression they have of
you.
311 Position yourself as an expert & provide media people w/original, inspir-
ing & creative stories.
312 Position yourself for opportunities by joining clubs, groups & organiza-
tions where you’ll meet new people.
313 Positioning: Be prepared. Dress appropriately. Have your 10 second
elevator pitch on the tip of your tongue.
314 Positive PR begins as soon as you meet or are seen by others. It’s how
you treat your clients, employees.
315 Good PR is generated when you’re perceived as an expert in your indus-
try. Write an E-book, blog, comment, twitter.
316 Post special events on an online publicity calendar so clients and pros-
pects can know where you’ll be.
317 Focus on your site search for insight into what visitors want & what
questions you aren’t answering that makes them leave.
318 What is your success metric? Sales, Qualified leads, Cost Reduction? You
must identify how you define success before you attempt to measure.
319 Write copy for both ppl who like to scan & those who like detail. Use H1
tags, bold text to grab attn, then provide details.
30
32. 320 Use a free tool like goTwitr or Buzzom to find new connections based on
keyword, location or mimic others.
321 Landing pages should deliver what you promised to make them click. If
visitors use site search from your landing page, rework.
322 Focus on Conversion optimization. Learn from bounce rates, change
what isn’t working. Think: user friendly, fast & easy.
323 Want your customers/clients to listen? Specifically address their pain
points instead of a bullet point list of what you do.
324 PR – most overlooked marketing tool – least expensive, least risky,
most effective – if you understand how to use it.
325 PR & SM blend – speaking in messages vs. engaging in genuine conver-
sations.
326 PR builds identity, increases visibility, generates name recognition, sends
your message, compels people to buy.
327 PR can establish you as an expert w/ just one article in print.
328 PR can soften the public up to your product or service and separate you
from your competition.
329 PR compels people to buy, invest, & do business with you.
330 PR efforts generate sales. Prospects are more receptive to sales calls
when it’s about something they’ve heard of.
31
33. 331 PR Fact - PR begins as soon as you meet or are seen by others. About
how you treat your clients, employees, vendors.
332 PR for new Product – Build a story around the product’s usage in the
lives of the reader.
333 PR generates name recognition, gets your message across & builds your
identity.
334 PR Goal - Pinpoint media that your potential clients read, listen to, view.
335 PR helps attract new clients. People do business with who they know
& like.
336 PR increases credibility. When people ready about you, hear about you,
or see you speaking, you are automatically considered an expert.
337 PR increases visibility AND credibility.
338 PR is 3rd party endorsement. Someone other than you telling your
story. This influences & persuades opinion leaders.
339 PR is a building process that gains momentum over time. To be suc-
cessful, you need to market your biz daily.
340 PR is a full-time job, it starts the second you walk out the door each day.
It’s also about human relations.
341 Find bloggers in your niche to pitch to. Don’t spam. Use Twitter search,
mediaontwitter.com or Google your industry+blog.
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34. 342 Do an audit across your channels. Consider comments, interactions,
sharing. If you aren’t soliciting a response, reconsider your message.
343 Be a great storyteller. From the about page on your website to your
Facebook posts, don’t sell…tell your story.
344 Determine what your value proposition is. Deliver it. Craft every mes-
sage based on how you are providing a solution for your customers.
345 Have a clear understanding of how you want to be perceived to deter-
mine your brand voice—before embarking on a campaign.
346 List building is important, but retention is key. Provide value. One
clear point, call to action, provide a solution.
347 PR is about follow-up - Reminding your contacts of your message until
one day they realize they need you.
348 PR is about how you interact w/ & represent yourself to the world.
349 PR is also about how your phone is answered to how your employees
present themselves to the public.
350 PR is every outward expression of you. Website, logo, tweets, partner-
ships, what you’re wearing. Everything.
351 PR is extremely cost-effective compared to other marketing tactics. Just
price advertising.
352 PR is soft-sell, subtle visibility. Learn to DIYPR.
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35. 353 PR is still about people & relationships, but the game has changed to
traditional PR fused w/SM.
354 PR is the best marketing tool -- the least expensive, least risky and
most effective -- if you know how to use it.
355 PR is very cost-effective compared to other communication tactics. Just
price advertising.
356 PR levels the playing field. Small biz are made to appear larger allowing
them to compete in any arena.
357 PR ops - New product launch, new hires, promotions, charitable activ-
ity, significant anniversaries, biz partnerships.
358 Social media drives conversions through conversations only when the
story resonates w/ your customers. Who else is telling your story?
359 Proofread your content. Read aloud, read backwords, use an editor. It is
the first impression of your brand.
360 Feeling overwhelmed about blogging? Think of it as a key oppty to dif-
ferentiate your business, position yourself as the expert, & the chance
to tell your story.
361 Make the most of photos. Be diligent about Alt Text. Remember, search
engines can’t “read” photos. Alt text gets you found.
362 Do your keyword research to know what translates into sales. It may be
price, reviews, product specific. Use this data to optimize efforts.
363 Doubt the power of Twitter? Do a Twitter search for “customer service”.
See the good & bad. Give great service & your customers will share.
34
36. 364 PR Plan - Budget, Goals, Target Audience, Referral sources, Communica-
tion vehicles, measurement.
365 PR presents an image of you & your biz in a way that conveys exactly
what you want to say w/out being too obvious.
366 PR removes price objections. If people believe you’re the best choice,
they’ll believe you’re the only choice. They’ll pay.
367 Prepare appropriate PR materials. This sets a professional standard.
368 Prepare pitch points w/all pertinent facts before your pitch.
369 Present your message to your audience in a controlled, planned fashion
w/o being too obvious.
370 Press Release - announces info to the public, your investors, the media,
your customers & your competitors.
371 Press release - How is your product/service better than what’s on the
market now?
372 Press release - Why is your product or service exciting?
373 Press Release Fact - Avoid the overuse of capital letters. Capitals slow
the pace of reading.
374 Press Release fact - End with your Boiler Plate - a brief company back-
ground.
35
37. 375 Press Release fact - Keep the body of the release under 400 words.
376 Press release facts - It should be a news story, not an ad. Delete the
promotional copy. Focus on content.
377 Press release facts - Use simple, everyday language. No complex words
or industry jargon.
378 Press releases - What will product/service do for consumers? Save time
& money? Make happier, healthier, richer?
379 Print interview? Have someone else in the room with you. He’s a wit-
ness.
380 PRLeads.com & BeatBlogging.org where you can offer story ideas &
expert opinions.
381 Profile clients on your website. You’ll send the message that you value
your clients & care about their successes.
382 Promote others and reciprocity, attention and trust is yours.
383 Have a brick & mortar and not sure if online monitoring impacts you?
Nearly 93% of us research online before buying off. Yes, it matters.
384 Look at your bounce rate. Where are ppl leaving from? Coming from?
Use data to tweak messages. If they leave, you haven’t grabbed them.
385 Want more from email campaigns? Segment your list based on your
consumer lifecycle. Increased relevancy=increased loyalty.
36
38. 386 Propose joint ventures w/experts who have an established database.
You’ll quickly build yours.
387 Publish great content online - still the best way to get noticed.
388 Publish reprints of speeches on your website for free downloads.
389 Punchy releases are vital, but direct contact w/news desks to see if
what you have is newsworthy is essential.
390 Read a different pub every day. Daily, Trade, Magazine, etc.
391 Reason to send press release - appointments of new staff, your 10th
anniversary, new services.
392 Reason to send Press Release - events, seminars, workshops, etc.
393 Reason to send press release - Profitable year or record sales.
394 Reason to send Press Release - You’ve won a major piece of new biz.
395 Recommend your Twitter followers to others. You’ll give your Twitter
Karma a boost.
396 Releases must be well written. Check the spelling and grammar or your
release will end up in the trash.
37
39. 397 Releases must be engaging and informative with a compelling angle.
Most journalists don’t read beyond the 2nd paragraph. Make it count in
the headline and first two paragraphs.
398 Remember the who, what, where, why, how & when writing press re-
leases.
399 Reputation is everything. If you give your word, honor it. Don’t commit if
you can’t deliver.
400 Respect your team. Never ignore the assistant, receptionist, etc. To-
day’s intern could be tomorrow’s CEO.
401 Schedule a meet & greet with one new person per week.
402 Search for key words associated w/ your market in Twitter search en-
gine, then sit back and see what they expect.
403 Secure a mentor. Seek the wisdom & counsel of others who have been
down the road before you.
404 Securing media coverage – Research the media outlet & appropriate
contact & craft a personal pitch.
405 Select media contacts wisely. Every news item is different. Tailor your
contact list for every campaign.
406 Study Digg, Sphinn, Facebook data to find what people are sharing &
find interesting. Use as ideas for your own work.
407 Consider writing a series. Keeps ppl hooked, returning for more. Repur-
pose series content into a free report, drip email campaign or E-news.
38
40. 408 If you accept online payments, reassure your customers the transaction
is safe. Use badges, text to explain security.
409 Only share selected information across multiple networks simultane-
ously. Your audience connected to you on Twitter, FB, LI deserve unique
info.
410 Use LinkedIn Groups and Answers. Connect with shared connections,
identify prospects, share your expertise.
411 Automate your efforts where it makes sense and doesn’t impact the
customer experience. ex: auto DM’s or feeds distract from the human
element.
412 Focus on backlinks: Use your signature on comments, press releases,
guest blogging, bookmarking. Set time aside weekly for dedicated
focus.
413 Put your RSS subscribe above the fold on your site and include a re-
minder in the body of your posts. Subscribers=loyalty.
414 Answers you should know about your competition: What keywords are
used? What sites link to them? How does their site look to search en-
gines?
415 Self-interested, veiled attempts @ promoting your biz will fall flat. Think
like a consumer. What interests you?
416 Self-promotion is essential. With practice, extolling your own virtues will
become easier.
417 Send your press release 2 weeks prior to when you need it to run.
418 Share lessons, knowledge, inspiration. This will encourage others to RT
& your name will enter the twitter stream.
39
41. 419 Sing your own praises. Your PR campaign starts w/you, so it’s your job
to prove your expertise.
420 Solicit testimonials & use them.
421 Sponsor events & contests. You can locate on-line contests to sponsor at
http://contests.about.com/
422 Stay in touch. Opportunities find you if you’re making contacts to find
them.
423 Stay updated w/ newspapers, websites, trades, professional pubs.
Piggyback on trends and localize news stories.
424 Story ideas - Listen to late night TV for inspiration. The writers are al-
ways up to date on trends.
425 Submit articles. Blog. Use creative byline. You’ll convert readers to loyal
long-term clients.
426 Submit press releases for free at PRlog.org http://www.prlog.org/sub-
mit-free-press-release.html
427 Tie in news trends to your online sales copy; example: economy, Going
Green, Back to School, Sporting events. Topical, timely; change often
428 Have doubts about why monitoring is key? Nearly 80% of us trust online
reviews when making buying decisions. What do yours look like?
429 Does your site tell a great story? Write sales content as if having a con-
versation w/ a single customer & addressing their individual needs.
40
42. 430 Fill out your entire profile on social networks. Use your keyword data to
identify opportunities & what’s important to potential customers.
431 Your meta description should expand on your keyword rich, attention
grabbing headline. Create a description with the human interest in
mind.
432 Success begets success. Dress appropriately & have your 10-sec mes-
sage ready to spill. If you believe so will others.
433 Successful branding is about promoting your strengths. What is your
business good at?
434 The media are always hungry for something new. Is your idea origi-
nal, exciting, different?
435 The media will respond favorably when you save them work & put a
story together for them.
436 The perfect media kit -- bios, photos, backgrounder, clipping reprints,
timely press release.
437 The perfect pitch -- personalized greeting, story angle, where it fits in
the media outlet, call to action.
438 The Pitching Process: Always be prepared to gracefully accept the word
no.
439 The power of a good headline hooks the reader to scan your release fur-
ther & puts you one step closer to coverage.
440 The power of Newswires, They can’t replace personal pitching, but can
greatly extend the reach of your campaign.
41
43. 441 The PR & SM blend is about understanding markets, the needs of people
and how to reach them.
442 The value of a 3rd party endorsing your brand publicly – as in media
coverage – is a form of branding.
443 The way you deliver your message is as important as the message itself.
The media needs to understand AND react.
444 There’s nothing more attractive than self-confidence.
445 Things change constantly in the media world. Do your own backup
research to find the most updated contact info.
446 Think w/a plan. Identify what you want to promote, your target audi-
ence & the tools you’ll need to reach them.
447 To determine which words sparkle & which are duds in your copy, read it
backward.
448 To find your target media, think about the demographics of your ideal
client: age, gender, income, geography.
449 To ‘test the water,’ a quick phone call or email to a journalist outlining
what you’re selling never goes amiss.
450 Train your employees well. Teach them to be able to take over your job,
if need be. It will make you look very good.
451 Treat yourself & others w/honor. When someone reaches out to you,
respond in kind. Karma.
42
44. 452 Try sending press releases in slow news days – day after a holiday, the
odd fifth week of the month.
453 Two of my fave searches are “Working on a story” & “Looking For
Sources”. Find journalists, do your homework, make connections (don’t
spam).
454 Sales copy should be short and to the point. You have seconds to grab
their attention & keep it. Write it, then cut it to the bare basics.
455 Create consistency. Your messages across each channel should reinforce
your story.
456 Join directories & networks based on industry, location, products.
Twellow, WeFollow are good places to start.
457 Your social network is your real time focus group. Solicit feedback, ask
opinions.
458 Make sure your content is easy to share. Include add this, tweet this,
email this. Include prominently on content.
459 Twitter brings great minds together & gives daily opportunities to learn
-- if you follow the right people.
460 Twitter statistic – more RT’s come from the east coast early in the a.m.
461 Update media list weekly. The list separates you from your competition.
No one is impressed by out of date websites. Especially the media.
462 US Newspaper List -- http://www.usnpl.com/
43
45. 463 Use Editorial Calendars to garner media coverage. Look at the pub’s ad
or media kit online to find.
464 Use SM to offer biz tips to extend image & market to potential clients.
465 Valuable biz tool - your database. Include customers, prospects & fans
who can refer you to others. Update weekly.
466 Value of a 3rd party endorsing your brand publicly - as in media cover-
age - is a powerful form of branding.
467 Video on your web site not only increases SEO, but conveys personal-
ity & expertise.
468 W/ 1000 hrs of practice, you become an expert. You are already one.
469 Want to interest the media? Punchy press releases & direct contact w/
news desks essential.
470 We sell our personal brand every day through every choice we make --
what we say do, wear, and even how we live.
471 Weekly newspaper deadlines: day before publication.
472 What are you known for? Are you influential? How are you perceived &
what makes you authentic? Branding.
473 What do you do or sell? Features of each? What do they offer? Turn
these features into news.
44
46. 474 What do you offer that competitors don’t offer or promote? They may of-
fer it, but if they don’t promote it, claim it.
475 Give something away your competition charges for: free phone consult,
free report, free analysis.
476 Be an active participant. Listen to your community, ask questions, solicit
feedback. Be known as the brand that interacts.
477 Tools like FB are built on relationships, not sales. Don’t pitch. Use direct
communication to get to know someone, not sell them.
478 Use referrals, make connections. If a follower/friend looks for some-
thing, recommend another follower/friend. Promoting others pro-
motes you.
479 A dissatisfied customer tells 9-15 ppl about it. 13% of dissatisfied cus-
tomers will tell 20+ ppl about their problem. Spend the time to make it
right.
480 Craft messages around consumer behavior. Create the lifestyle, feeling,
experience of identifying with your brand.
481 What do you offer that is so compelling it drives people to act?
482 What matters in PR is the idea & the presentation.
483 When asked a question, pause for a silent count of 3 before answering.
You’ll appear more thoughtful and intelligent.
484 When building your personal brand, remember your passion and pur-
pose. Express it.
45
47. 485 When calling the media leave a max of 2 VM’s. After that, call until your
party picks up.
486 When doing media interviews, reflect on your words. You’re on the re-
cord now.
487 When making follow-up calls, make sure you record all media comments
on a follow-up sheet.
488 When making your pitch, don’t make it boring & stuffy. Be you.
489 When pitching by phone, speak w/enthusiasm & vigor. If you don’t
believe in your message, no one else will.
490 When pitching the media, be brief & to the point. Use a 10-second
pitch.
491 When pitching the media, make sure you have more than one story
angle.
492 When sending press releases - never put all the names in the “To” box.
BCC.
493 When the media calls, stop what you’re doing & give them your full at-
tention.
494 When using SM, you’re actively engaging in your own PR - publicly. What
you say online impacts you & your biz.
495 While building your network, find quality followers, don’t worry about
the numbers.
46
48. 496 Who what when where why how - Who is doing what; When, Where,
Why are they doing it. How? Results?
497 Who’s your target audience? local media, neighbors, community, cham-
ber, current employees & families, vendors?
498 Won any significant awards or had any major achievements? Media Angle
499 Work with the calendar for story ideas. Weight loss in January, Tax Tips
in the spring. Top 10 list maybe?
500 Write articles for trades in your industry. Make sure your articles are
educational & not simply self serving.
501 Write brand message in long paragraph. Refine to one-sentence tag
line. Prepare to deliver in under 10 seconds.
502 Write news releases in 3rd person. No opinions, use quotes.
503 Write press releases concisely, make every word count, don’t misspell &
don’t get off point. Limit to one page.
504 Write your press release headline last.
505 You are your best advocate. You are the brand.
506 Use video to allow consumers to really get to know you.
47
49. 507 Say thank you. Show appreciation for your customers. Showcase a Face-
book Fan, congratulate a Twitter follower, customer of the week on your
site.
508 Find your balance. Integrate your online campaigns with offline initia-
tives.
509 Your primary focus should always be creating content for your users, not
for page rank.
510 Know your numbers. Know traffic details, repeat visitors, retention.
Gain insights and identify opportunities.
511 Even if you are a local business, you’re competing globally. Your pres-
ence matters beyond your geographic location.
512 When pitching a blogger, research. Know what they cover, types of
products reviewed, reader interest. Only pitch if there is a good fit.
513 You are your own brand & you must always sell yourself. It’s a full time
job to become a recognizable brand.
514 You can’t sell something if it doesn’t excite you. Fall in love.
515 You have control over advertising. You have no control over PR. This is
part of the PR process.
516 You will have the highest success rate when pitching via phone first, and
then sending written info.
517 You’re a walking billboard for your biz. Everything you say & do commu-
nicates a message.
48
50. 518 Your brand reflects who you are as a company & the values & principals
that drive your biz decisions.
519 Your brand. What do you want people to think about you? Map out how
you’ll achieve these goals - make a 1-yr plan.
520 Your company’s sales & marketing budget should = at least 10% of its
revenue.
521 Your current and potential customers look to social media as conversa-
tion. Make sure you’re engaging.
522 Your FB & Twitter photos are your brand’s 1st impression.
523 Your personal brand. What are you doing to strengthen your brand?
What do you want your brand to say about you.
524 Not sure what message works? Use split testing with a URL shortener
like bit.ly or HootSuite. Track the data to know what sticks.
525 With SM you can monitor, track results and tweak in real time. Monitor
your message, track with your metrics, and tweak til you get it right.
526 Using targeted FB ads? Be prepared to change often. The more segmented
you are, the more the ads are seen. Decreases sensitivity to ad.
527 Use blog search, Social Mention, Twitter Search. Find people talking. Of-
fer your help, solutions & expertise. Relationships will be built.
528 Get ppl talking by developing valuable content. Need ideas? What do
people pull you aside at cocktail parties to ask? There’s your content.
49
51. 529 Data is your friend. It is how you determine if your efforts are working.
Use it regularly.
530 Your PR plan - define objectives & goals - specific, measurable, results-
oriented & time-bound.
531 Your PR Plan should be a document that includes PR activities for a
12-month period.
532 Your target audience has the power to communicate info about you &
your biz.
533 Your Target Media - Think about the demographics of your ideal cli-
ent. Age, gender, income, geography.
534 Your tone of voice, speed of delivery, body language, eye contact all
influence how your message is received.
535 Monitor networks. Share your expertise. Leave your prospects wanting
more.
536 Social media works best when it is a part of an integrated effort. Con-
sider how SM factors in and enhances your marketing.
537 Connect with influencers, journalists & bloggers. Providing value means
you become the source.
538 Use Google’s keyword research tool. Use for optimization of profiles, con-
tent and trends to look out for.
539 Know your target market. Your message, targets, behavior look very
different between genders, age, finances, location.
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52. 540 Create a FB landing page for your biz. Use to highlight key info, call to
action, email opt in, promotions.
541 Shareable content sometimes needs a little nudging. Use free press
release distribution, article submission, niche sites to get the message
out.
542 Gut check. Ask yourself: Who is my audience? What do they want/need?
Can I commit to provide this. If you can’t answer, SM is not for you.
543 Share photo’s. Upload, tag, share. Makes you human, shows what you
find interesting.
544 Give people a reason to opt in. Create a giveaway, promo, newsletter.
Have a clear call to action, make it easy to opt in.
545 The old adage that we do business with those we know, like and trust
hasn’t changed even if the technology has.
546 The most powerful words in social networking are “Thank you” and “How
Can I Help You.”
547 Remember, a tweet or post is forever. Ask yourself—is this how I want
to be found & remembered?
548 Create a unique landing pg from your social networks. Offer a unique
greeting, offer, FAQ’s. Gives instant connection w/o having to dig.
549 Meeting w/ a new prospect? Connect on a social network first. Find out
what they find interesting, more about what they do. Instant connection
550 Your marketing efforts shouldn’t focus on what is “new” or what is
“old”–they should focus on what works for your business.
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53. About the authors
Cyndy Hoenig:
Cyndy Hoenig is a seasoned PR Professional who rose through the ranks at
the prestigious Los Angeles PR firm Bender, Goldman & Helper, where she
served as Director of the Consumer Television Division. Her area of expertise
centers on planning and executing media relations programs that achieve
high levels of coverage.
She has managed campaigns for the Emmy Awards, Screen Actor’s Guild,
VH-1 and MTV Awards programs, as well as high-profile television programs
for NBC, CBS, FOX, Aaron Spelling, Carsey-Werner, Marc Cherry & Jamie
Wooten, Disney Channel, Columbia Pictures and Twentieth Television. She
was the personal publicist for Suzanne Somers for more than 10 years, and
has worked with Jim Carrey, Jennifer Lopez, Matthew McConaughey, Sandra
Bullock and Cybill Shepherd, among many others.
In OKC, she organized the media campaign for the Oklahoma City National
Memorial’s Anniversary, managing the over 700 media outlets which at-
tended. She also planned and managed a program for Oklahoma City’s Race
for the Cure which enhanced awareness to a level resulting in a 35% increase in participation.
Hoenig is a sustaining member of the Jr. League of OKC and a past member of the Jr. Leagues of Austin and Los
Angeles. She also serves as Communications VP for the Edmond Women’s Club. Her accolades include being named
a Ladies in the News Honoree by the Oklahoma Hospitality Club; receiving a Special Presidential Award from the
Oklahoma Heart Association; and the Phaythopen Charity Award from the Allied Arts Foundation.
Hoenig studied communications at University of Central Oklahoma and St. Edwards University in Austin, Texas. She
currently resides in Edmond, Oklahoma, near her four grown daughters and eight grandchildren.
Email Cyndy at cyndy@hlmediapartners.com, Find her on Twitter @cyndyhoenig.
Heather Lytle:
When Heather Lytle began her career in marketing, the Internet was still for
the elite and geeky, the founder of Facebook didn’t even have his driver’s
permit, and Google was simply an idea. Grassroots marketing meant hitting
the pavement, building relationships and generating a buzz. However, over
the years, though the technology has changed dramatically, the ideas have
remained the same.
For nearly a decade, Lytle’s work with a Fortune 500 company served as the
catalyst for successful corporate marketing and business development initia-
tives throughout Oklahoma and West Texas. Today, as the owner of HVM So-
lutions, Inc, ShopGadgetGirl.com and partner in H & L Media Partners, Lytle
brings her passion for business and her experience in marketing together
to help businesses raise their profile and grow their companies. Using her
extensive corporate background as well as her intimate understanding of the
needs of small business owners, Lytle offers clients a unique marketing per-
spective with a focus on new technologies. She prefers to be referred to as a
“strategist” instead of an “expert” and a “partner” instead of “consultant”.
Lytle has a Masters in Business Administration from Oklahoma Christian University and a Bachelors of Arts in Public
Relations from the University of Central Oklahoma. As a native Oklahoman committed to her community, she
serves on the Board of Keep Oklahoma Beautiful and is on the executive committee of the Go Red for Women lun-
cheon. She has been named 20 Business Leaders Under 40 by the Business Times, and 40 under 40 by OKCBiz.
Email Heather at heather@hlmediapartner.com. Find her on Twitter @hlytle.
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54. Acknowledgements
From Cyndy:
To my friend and former boss Larry Goldman -- #1 Yankee Fan, Brilliant beyond Brilliant PR
Strategist, and the man who taught me everything I know about PR.
To Donald Draper - Who taught me I could meet any goal as long as I was laughing.
To Heather Lytle - For your encouragement and undying support. And, for all the technical you
have to do on a daily basis.
To Shea Moseley - For all the typing -- and the patience.
To Marc Grossman and Karin Olsen - For your edits. I value your knowledge.
To Diane Freeny - For your constant faith, undying support, and for never giving up on me.
To Suzanne Somers - Who consistently reminded me to “never forget the lesson.”
From Heather:
To my parents who have believed in me always, encouraged me often, and supported every
risk with a smile.
To my husband, Kevin, for being my number 1 fan, his tolerance of the ever present laptop
and iPhone, and always making me smile.
To Cyndy Hoenig-genius, mentor, partner. Thank you for teaching me something new every
single day.
To my friends, even those I haven’t met yet. Thank you for helping us share our message.
For more about H&L Media Partners please visit hlmediapartners.com.
For speaking & corporate training requests, please contact Cyndy@hlmediapartners.com.
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