HOW TO GET AHEAD BY USING THE
MEDIA TO PUBLICIZE YOUR SERVICE, PRODUCT, ORGANIZATION, OR IDEA
by
Dr. Kevin Nunley
A little media exposure may be all you
need to take your product or service to the next level. How
often have you seen someone get a little exposure on TV or in
the newspapers and see a BIG boost in sales as a result?
It happens everyday. Luck? Sometimes.
But more often than not, the business succeeded because its
leader knew how to use the media. We live in a huge mass
society. Even if you shake 100 hands a day, you could only meet
a tiny fraction of those people in your working lifetime. The
only way to reach the masses, or even the majority of your
target customers, is to use the media.
A recent business bulletin board
session featured one entrepreneur complaining that advertising
was too expensive and none of her many press releases to the
media had ever netted any coverage.
Another contributor guessed that only
one in every 20 press releases is ever used and the whole
process might be futile. Finally, a third entrepreneur pointed
out that maybe the failing press releases hadn't been
newsworthy.
BINGO!
In order to get your product, service,
organization, or idea into the media, you have to talk the media
manager's language. You must hit what I call the Media Manager
Hot Buttons.
First, target your message to the
medium that is most interested in your type of story. Television
goes for a mass audience. Radio seeks a very tightly focused
demographically-skewed crowd.
Magazines touch a specialized regional
or national readership. Your local paper goes for a very local
angle. Media is ultra-fractionalized these days and each outlet
tries to stake out its own little corner of the audience. Think
about which media outlet in your community addresses your target
customers.
There are several topics that media
managers almost always go for. If you can think of a way to
combine your message with one of these topics--you're in.
1. Is your story trendy?
At any
given time there are certain topics that the media seems to be
beating to death. It may be reduction of crime, or new schools,
or the city's sorry streets. Find some way to connect your
message to the media's latest trend.
2. Does your message fit with one of
America's cherish beliefs? Story lines such as "the little
guy takes on corruption" or "formerly poor single mom takes on
the business world and succeeds" or "one guy gets fed up and
cleans up his neighborhood" are stories the media always jumps
for. Even if you're selling gum, there is probably some way for
you to connect your business with one of the many stories that
fit into the cherished belief mold.
3. Does your message tie into a
topic of mass interest? Media frequently does surveys to
find out the community's top five concerns. The results are
almost always the same. Crime, kids, schools, roads, employment.
The media always covers topics like these.
4. Can you relate your message to
some community scandal? The media loves to cover
things that get people worked up. Corruption, dishonesty,
cover-ups, illicit sex (their favorite), racism, bully-ism, and
any other -ism you think of. Perhaps you can position yourself
as a good guy taking on an "-ism."
5. Is your message a reporter's pet
subject? Under this category absolutely anything has a
chance of getting in the media (and it often accounts for some
of the strange stuff you see in the media). Get to know media
folks whenever possible. Radio DJs are especially approachable.
Stop by the studio of your favorite station with a box of donuts
and start a friendship. Your favors will be returned on the
air.
The bottom line is this: think
like the media, shape your message to fit their likes. Do that
and your message has a good chance of being used. Above all,
don't let up. While one media manager may not have the slightest
interest in your idea, another will welcome you with open arms.
The media needs piles of fresh stories everyday.
Hang in there and make sure your
product, service, organization or idea is one of those
stories.
Kevin Nunley provides marketing advice
and copy writing for businesses and organizations. Read all his
money-saving marketing tips at
http://DrNunley.com/ Reach him
at
kevin@drnunley.com
or (801)253-4536. |