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  • Digg it UP - Media Relations - It's All About Relationships

    Hurricane Marketing
    Have you heard of Hurricane Marketing yet? Well, that is because I just made it up. But let me explain to you what it is. You see, some marketing consultants talk about; The Perfect Storm of marketing. What they are saying is that smart marketing is really a multiplicity affect of all your combined marketing efforts; everything from signage and location to word of mouth Buzz and referrals. This makes a lot of sense right?Sure it does, but let’s take this one step further and talk about the new paradigm of Hurricane Marketing; a flurry of marketing efforts and a storm surge of activity. The winds of cha
    k? There has to be a news “hook”, something that makes your story more than just your story.

    Harking back to the scenario I drew at the top of the article, if you have a fresh solution or product that you believe will have the world beating a path to your door, the way to tell the world certainly involves writing a great press release. You’ll get a lot more mileage out of that release if you send it to reporters who know you, who regard you as an expert, and who will tell your story to their readers – your market – who will then beat a path to your door.

    Becoming an expert is what you did on the path to starting your business. Being recognized as an expert by the media will give you visibility worth thousands, even millions, of advertising dollars that you don’t have to spend.

    Does this give you a new view of reading the morning paper, watching local news, reading a trade journal? Are you itching to make a list of reporte

    Career and Software Industry
    When we dream about starting our career in software industry, we think of landing up in a programming or development role. Some of us start learning programming languages like Java, JSP, EJB, .Net. VB etc and some pursue certifications like SCJP (Sun Certified Java Programmer), MCSD (Microsoft Certified Software Developer), SCJD (Sun Certified Java Developer) etc. many of us speculate about forthcoming so called “Hot Technologies” and make effort to learn the skills required for this new technology. After all this hard work and effort which consumes significant amount of time and money, we start applying for
    Your company is about to launch a new product or service that will raise the achievement bar in your industry. You want to make sure that every customer for your innovative offering hears the buzz, and acts on it by buying it – in droves. You write a press release announcing your exciting news, and fire it off to Business Wire, PR Web, several industry magazines, your local paper’s business editor, and the newsrooms of local broadcasters. You post it, with a big headline, on your company’s website. You sit back, and wait for the world to beat a path to your door.

    Some time later, you notice that your door is still on its hinges. Your hoped-for media response was underwhelming. In fact, it was non-existent. You saw the headline on the Business Wire page. You know it was near the top for several hours on PR Web. But no industry writers called, and your press release wasn’t even run in your local paper’s business pages. Why not? Where did you go wrong?

    In your business, you’ve no doubt discovered that relationships are what make customers out of prospects. The same principle is in play with media relations – it’s not what you know (or how well you write your press release), it’s who you know. And how they feel about you and your company.

    When you were developing your business plan, you put an advertising budget in under marketing, didn’t you? Here’s another question: What’s the best advertising in the world?

    Answer: free publicity.

    I can hear you – you’re saying...”OK, Casey, but how do I get free publicity?”

    You develop relationships with reporters who cover your industry, that’s how.

    Look at your local daily newspaper, and local TV news. Pick up the last copy of your industry’s trade magazine. What stories have they run in the last year about people, companies or events in your business sector? Who reported the story? Print media needs to fill the news holes in their pages – the news hole is the part of the page that isn’t paid advertising – and television news needs to have something to report between commercials. Reporters will welcome a heads-up about news on their beats that they don’t have to go out and dig up on their own.

    The approach here should NOT be to call or email the reporter and tell them all about your company. You want to be a source, but not a source of annoyance. The best way to open a dialog with a reporter is to offer yourself as an expert on your business sector – for example, if the reporter’s beat is real estate and development, and you’re a Realtor with a lot of experience in commercial development, you’d be a great source for that reporter.

    Make contact with the reporter after you’ve read or watched some of her or his recent pieces. Start a conversation – email is ideal here – with some of your observations about the piece, and about where your industry is headed. Keep it short, not a dissertation. If there’s an industry event coming up in town, ask the reporter if they’re planning on attending. If they are, make a point of seeking that reporter out and introducing yourself. Start a relationship, just as you would with a prospective customer. A caveat – be aware that journalists have ethical standards dictated by their industry and their employers. Gifts, even a free lunch, have to be reported, and in most cases refused. What you need to offer is information, good information, not bribery.

    Once you’ve established a relationship with a reporter, value it. Offer them stories, not self-serving fluff – the relationship will only pay off if it’s win/win, just like every other business relationship. Is what you have newsworthy? Is a new branch office for your company news: is it offering employment in an economically disadvantaged area, or is it just another suite of offices in an upscale office park? There has to be a news “hook”, something that makes your story more than just your story.

    Harking back to the scenario I drew at the top of the article, if you have a fresh solution or product that you believe will have the world beating a path to your door, the way to tell the world certainly involves writing a great press release. You’ll get a lot more mileage out of that release if you send it to reporters who know you, who regard you as an expert, and who will tell your story to their readers – your market – who will then beat a path to your door.

    Becoming an expert is what you did on the path to starting your business. Being recognized as an expert by the media will give you visibility worth thousands, even millions, of advertising dollars that you don’t have to spend.

    Does this give you a new view of reading the morning paper, watching local news, reading a trade journal? Are you itching to make a list of reporte

    Hiring and Retaining Good Employees
    Hiring good employees is not only important to business, it’s essential. Employees are the heart and soul of a business; they are the mechanism that makes a business run; they are the breath of life that enables a business to be something more than an idea. A business cannot run unless someone (employees, in this case) is doing the work. Any intelligent business owner should want good employees.EMPLOYERS NOT THE ONLY ONES TO FEEL THE EFFECTBad employees not only affect an employer by driving down sales, costing the company unwanted expenses due to negligence or simple lack of motivation, etc, bu
    rong?

    In your business, you’ve no doubt discovered that relationships are what make customers out of prospects. The same principle is in play with media relations – it’s not what you know (or how well you write your press release), it’s who you know. And how they feel about you and your company.

    When you were developing your business plan, you put an advertising budget in under marketing, didn’t you? Here’s another question: What’s the best advertising in the world?

    Answer: free publicity.

    I can hear you – you’re saying...”OK, Casey, but how do I get free publicity?”

    You develop relationships with reporters who cover your industry, that’s how.

    Look at your local daily newspaper, and local TV news. Pick up the last copy of your industry’s trade magazine. What stories have they run in the last year about people, companies or events in your business sector? Who reported the story? Print media needs to fill the news holes in their pages – the news hole is the part of the page that isn’t paid advertising – and television news needs to have something to report between commercials. Reporters will welcome a heads-up about news on their beats that they don’t have to go out and dig up on their own.

    The approach here should NOT be to call or email the reporter and tell them all about your company. You want to be a source, but not a source of annoyance. The best way to open a dialog with a reporter is to offer yourself as an expert on your business sector – for example, if the reporter’s beat is real estate and development, and you’re a Realtor with a lot of experience in commercial development, you’d be a great source for that reporter.

    Make contact with the reporter after you’ve read or watched some of her or his recent pieces. Start a conversation – email is ideal here – with some of your observations about the piece, and about where your industry is headed. Keep it short, not a dissertation. If there’s an industry event coming up in town, ask the reporter if they’re planning on attending. If they are, make a point of seeking that reporter out and introducing yourself. Start a relationship, just as you would with a prospective customer. A caveat – be aware that journalists have ethical standards dictated by their industry and their employers. Gifts, even a free lunch, have to be reported, and in most cases refused. What you need to offer is information, good information, not bribery.

    Once you’ve established a relationship with a reporter, value it. Offer them stories, not self-serving fluff – the relationship will only pay off if it’s win/win, just like every other business relationship. Is what you have newsworthy? Is a new branch office for your company news: is it offering employment in an economically disadvantaged area, or is it just another suite of offices in an upscale office park? There has to be a news “hook”, something that makes your story more than just your story.

    Harking back to the scenario I drew at the top of the article, if you have a fresh solution or product that you believe will have the world beating a path to your door, the way to tell the world certainly involves writing a great press release. You’ll get a lot more mileage out of that release if you send it to reporters who know you, who regard you as an expert, and who will tell your story to their readers – your market – who will then beat a path to your door.

    Becoming an expert is what you did on the path to starting your business. Being recognized as an expert by the media will give you visibility worth thousands, even millions, of advertising dollars that you don’t have to spend.

    Does this give you a new view of reading the morning paper, watching local news, reading a trade journal? Are you itching to make a list of reporte

    Electronic Document Management - The Basics - Part 1
    Document management can mean many things to many people, and can serve a variety of purposes. The intention of this article is to list the components involved in document management and to briefly describe each one. At the conclusion, there are also some important factors to help in selecting a document management system.If you've never used a document management system, then it is entirely possible that you aren't aware of how valuable these products can be. Companies and individuals who manage a diverse array of documents have found that document management systems serve to simplify their lives and m
    news holes in their pages – the news hole is the part of the page that isn’t paid advertising – and television news needs to have something to report between commercials. Reporters will welcome a heads-up about news on their beats that they don’t have to go out and dig up on their own.

    The approach here should NOT be to call or email the reporter and tell them all about your company. You want to be a source, but not a source of annoyance. The best way to open a dialog with a reporter is to offer yourself as an expert on your business sector – for example, if the reporter’s beat is real estate and development, and you’re a Realtor with a lot of experience in commercial development, you’d be a great source for that reporter.

    Make contact with the reporter after you’ve read or watched some of her or his recent pieces. Start a conversation – email is ideal here – with some of your observations about the piece, and about where your industry is headed. Keep it short, not a dissertation. If there’s an industry event coming up in town, ask the reporter if they’re planning on attending. If they are, make a point of seeking that reporter out and introducing yourself. Start a relationship, just as you would with a prospective customer. A caveat – be aware that journalists have ethical standards dictated by their industry and their employers. Gifts, even a free lunch, have to be reported, and in most cases refused. What you need to offer is information, good information, not bribery.

    Once you’ve established a relationship with a reporter, value it. Offer them stories, not self-serving fluff – the relationship will only pay off if it’s win/win, just like every other business relationship. Is what you have newsworthy? Is a new branch office for your company news: is it offering employment in an economically disadvantaged area, or is it just another suite of offices in an upscale office park? There has to be a news “hook”, something that makes your story more than just your story.

    Harking back to the scenario I drew at the top of the article, if you have a fresh solution or product that you believe will have the world beating a path to your door, the way to tell the world certainly involves writing a great press release. You’ll get a lot more mileage out of that release if you send it to reporters who know you, who regard you as an expert, and who will tell your story to their readers – your market – who will then beat a path to your door.

    Becoming an expert is what you did on the path to starting your business. Being recognized as an expert by the media will give you visibility worth thousands, even millions, of advertising dollars that you don’t have to spend.

    Does this give you a new view of reading the morning paper, watching local news, reading a trade journal? Are you itching to make a list of reporte

    Medical Billing - Hiring A Programmer
    In this installment of medical billing, we're going to look at the software company itself and cover some basic things that they should do when looking for a programmer to create the software that will eventually be sold to the public. Unlike other industries, this will require certain knowledge that most programmers don't have and will need to get in a hurry.As a programmer, if you're a good one, you're going to have a basic knowledge of how to write structured code, how to interact with databases and so on. Any decent programmer worth his salt is going to have these skills. Otherwise, you don't ev
    . Keep it short, not a dissertation. If there’s an industry event coming up in town, ask the reporter if they’re planning on attending. If they are, make a point of seeking that reporter out and introducing yourself. Start a relationship, just as you would with a prospective customer. A caveat – be aware that journalists have ethical standards dictated by their industry and their employers. Gifts, even a free lunch, have to be reported, and in most cases refused. What you need to offer is information, good information, not bribery.

    Once you’ve established a relationship with a reporter, value it. Offer them stories, not self-serving fluff – the relationship will only pay off if it’s win/win, just like every other business relationship. Is what you have newsworthy? Is a new branch office for your company news: is it offering employment in an economically disadvantaged area, or is it just another suite of offices in an upscale office park? There has to be a news “hook”, something that makes your story more than just your story.

    Harking back to the scenario I drew at the top of the article, if you have a fresh solution or product that you believe will have the world beating a path to your door, the way to tell the world certainly involves writing a great press release. You’ll get a lot more mileage out of that release if you send it to reporters who know you, who regard you as an expert, and who will tell your story to their readers – your market – who will then beat a path to your door.

    Becoming an expert is what you did on the path to starting your business. Being recognized as an expert by the media will give you visibility worth thousands, even millions, of advertising dollars that you don’t have to spend.

    Does this give you a new view of reading the morning paper, watching local news, reading a trade journal? Are you itching to make a list of reporte

    Promote Your Business by Providing Content
    Expand your definition of marketing beyond ads, direct mail and sales calls to become a content provider.Today, information is power. Gaining useful information is almost a full-time job in itself. If you can use your knowledge to help your clients and prospects gain useful knowledge, it builds a bond, establishes you as a credible resource, and creates a favorable image for you and your business. Helping to solve a problem, without getting an immediate payback, puts you in a special category—expert. When it comes time to buy a product or service, being considered a helpful expert who is generous wi
    k? There has to be a news “hook”, something that makes your story more than just your story.

    Harking back to the scenario I drew at the top of the article, if you have a fresh solution or product that you believe will have the world beating a path to your door, the way to tell the world certainly involves writing a great press release. You’ll get a lot more mileage out of that release if you send it to reporters who know you, who regard you as an expert, and who will tell your story to their readers – your market – who will then beat a path to your door.

    Becoming an expert is what you did on the path to starting your business. Being recognized as an expert by the media will give you visibility worth thousands, even millions, of advertising dollars that you don’t have to spend.

    Does this give you a new view of reading the morning paper, watching local news, reading a trade journal? Are you itching to make a list of reporters who cover your industry? Great – now go do it!

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