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> Get Articles > News Releases and Public Relations > You Too Can Create Newsworthy Research

You Too Can Create Newsworthy Research


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Marcia Yudkin
marciayudkin.com

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




Take a close look at the front section of specialized

magazines, and you'll often find little articles

highlighting results of some study or poll conducted by some

private company or other. Research data is also often cited

by general-interest publications like USA Today and network

newscasts. You don't need a Fortune 500 sized budget to

undertake a newsworthy study, or to receive coverage for it,

either to your industry or the general public.



The scope and rigor of a study or poll are usually not the

criteria governing whether or not it's considered worthy of

attention. Rather, reporters and editors judge the

newsworthiness of research according to its pertinence for

their audience, its novelty and its surprise quotient. If

the study results seem likely to provoke a "Wow!" or

"Interesting!" in the audience, then they have a good shot

at earning media coverage.



Working backward, then, to how you would design a research

question or poll with a promising potential for ink and air

time, here are some guidelines.



* The answer to the question is not obvious and not already

known.



* Those interviewed would want to know how others answered

the question.



* It pertains to a topic that is either perennially or

currently of interest to a particular audience or the

general public.



* It's probably a qualitative question rather than

answerable with "yes" or "no."



* The answers will subtly promote you, the sponsor of the

research, without seeming overly self-serving.



For instance, if you're a moving company, asking "What

quality would you rank as #1 in importance when you're

looking for a moving company?" would not be as compelling as

"When you're moving, what household item are you most

concerned about getting lost or damaged?" If you're a chain

of Italian restaurants, a good question would be "Which

Italian dish gives you the greatest feeling of nostalgia?" A

management consultant might profitably ask executives, "What

mistakes do you see your vendors making in today's down

economy?"



As for how many people you need to query for your study, it

might be less than you think. One hundred, give or take a

few, may be perceived as plenty, especially if the

population you are asking is a relatively exclusive one.

When Internet stocks were booming, a newsletter publisher

got featured on CNN and CNBC with his findings about how

little stockbrokers knew about the Net. He interviewed 103

brokers for his study. Usability guru Jakob Nielsen got wide

coverage for a study of 20 journalists' inability to find

company information at corporate Web sites.



When you have your questionnaire or interview results, spend

the effort necessary to make your data sound catchy. The

newsletter publisher headlined his press release, "Want

Advice on Which Internet Stocks to Invest In? 'You're Better

Off Asking Your Teenager Than Your Broker,' says MBA

Professor's Survey." Jakob Nielsen announced his findings

equally effectively with the attention-getting headline,

"Corporate Websites Get a 'D' in PR."



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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