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> Get Articles > Communication Skills > Phone Pitches Can Pay Off

Phone Pitches Can Pay Off


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Marcia Yudkin
marciayudkin.com

Creative Ways
http://www.yudkin.com/marketing.htm


More than a decade ago, Colorado consultant Debra Benton

gave her career a lasting boost in less than one minute. She

called a famous columnist and told him in one sentence what

she did: teach executives how to have charisma. The

columnist took her number and called her back a week later

for an interview.



The day his article appeared, she received calls from Time

and Newsweek as well as from several executives who turned

into clients. Time ran its own story on her, which led to

writeups in Barron's, Financial Weekly, The New York Times,

"CBS This Morning" and "Good Morning America." Much of her

business -- and her ability to charge thousands of dollars a

day for her services -- indirectly stems from that phone

call to that columnist.



What can you learn from this?



First, she used a concise, intriguing characterization of

herself. This takes most people much more than one minute to

formulate. Unless you have an unusual job title, such as

Florida State Official Handwriting Analyst, your job title

won't perform this function. Instead you need to delve below

"stockbroker," "specialty shoe wholesaler" or "sports

trainer" to put into words the results that you produce for

some group of people. The shoe wholesaler might say, "I help

men spend a whole day on their feet in comfort."



You'll know you've done it right when people lean forward

after you reel off your sentence and ask you, "How do you do

that?"



Second, Benton did the research necessary to reach someone

who would probably respond well to her pitch. Although her

research consisted simply of taking note of the personality

and interests of the columnist, whom she regularly read

anyway, you may need a few trips to the library or the

Internet to find the right media person to call. Consider

the audience you hope to reach and what publications they

read or what programs they watch or listen to. Or consult an

up-to-date media directory in the reference department of

almost any public library.



Third, when you call, respect the other person's time.

Because media people face unforgiving, absolute deadlines,

PR pros usually start off something like this: "Hello, this

is ____. Are you on deadline or do you have a moment now?"

Tell them only as much as is necessary to pique their

interest. Don't take it personally if they appear brusque,

and never argue with someone who's given you a "no." Simply

go on to another person on your list.



Fourth, practice what you'll say when they want a full-

length interview. Decide on three major points you want to

get across and get a friend who's a Barbara Walters wannabee

to feed you relevant and off-the-wall questions. Debra

Benton got terrific results from the columnist partly

because she anticipated what he might ask and prepared

compelling examples and convincing replies.



Phone pitches shouldn't replace targeted distribution of

news releases, only supplement them in those rare cases

where you sense a perfect match between a media outlet and

your own specialization.



Marcia Yudkin marciayudkin.com is the author of the

classic guide to comprehensive PR, "6 Steps to Free

Publicity," now for sale in an updated edition at Amazon.com

and in bookstores everywhere. She also spills the secrets

on advanced tactics for today's publicity seekers in

"Powerful, Painless Online Publicity," available from

www.yudkin.com/powerpr.htm .





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