I haven’t blogged about PR for a couple of months now – but I figured it would be a good idea to just give you some more information. Many people have been asking me about what to actually write to the papers about? Especially those of use who work in ‘boring’ fields of work (if such a thing exists?). Really, to answer your questions about creating press releases and so on – you need to ask yourself this:
What knowledge, information or fascinating facts do you have? What’s your business doing that’s going to be of real interest to the public?
One of my favourite PR strategies is not to hunt around for a great story, but instead to position yourself as an expert in your area. I don’t care what you do or what business you’re in, you are an expert on something! You wouldn’t be in the position of running a business in the first place if this was un-true. You know stuff that I don’t! You have knowledge or an experience that the public all want to know about, or at least a portion of them will.
Let me give you some quick examples and I think you’ll see what I mean. Let’s start with businesses that target consumers rather than other businesses. For example: If you sell or repair cars for a living you know things like;
- How to look after a car
- How to protect a car in the winter
- How to avoid getting ripped off when buying a car
- Which cars keep their value and which don’t?
- The list goes on…
Do you think all of these questions might make an interesting feature in a newspaper? Absolutely! If you’re a dentist you know how to look after your teeth, you know what parents should do to help them look after their kids’s teeth. If you’re a coach or a consultant or a therapist or you sell vitamins or you’re in any of the caring professions, then your brain is packed with information on how to improve peoples lives and the media, as I said, are sitting there trying to fill newspapers, magazines, radio, TV shows with the kind of information that you can rattle off of the top of your head! If you sell chairs you know how people should sit to ease back pain and the types of chairs they should be buying. Do you get the picture?
What about business to business? Well, if you’re a store fitter you know the best styles and colours for store owners to increase their chance of selling more products. You could go to the trade press for any particular trade that involves having a shop and come up with 5 top tips for kitting out a new store. If you sell computers or computer repair services you know how to deal with those infuriating spywares and viruses that keep cropping up on everyones computers. You could get on the radio with that, in newspapers with that, on the telly with that, on the internet with that. If you’re involved in marketing or advertising, then hopefully you know a thing or two about how to grow a business? Again great material for PR coverage.
Extreme Case Study Alert!
What about if you make *the worlds most boring industrial screw* and you have a factory of 50 people making them? How on earth do you get PR if you’re doing that? Well step outside the box. If you successfully employ 50 people you know more about how to manage people and deal with stress and conflicts at work than many business owners don’t. We could turn that into a very interesting piece either for your trade press or perhaps for the business section of one of the national or even local newspapers. What I’m getting at here is thinking outside the box is very important to find what it is that you have of interest to those end viewers, the readers, and the listeners.
Hopefully thats proved useful to you! Now, get out there and start generating some free publicity for your business right away.