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> Get Articles > Publicity > Award Competitions: Route to a Publicity Bonanza

Award Competitions: Route to a Publicity Bonanza


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Marcia Yudkin
marciayudkin.com

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


Inc. magazine is currently in the process of judging sites for its annual

small business Web award winners. Since I was a judge last year, I thought

I'd offer some observations on how and why to enter your Web site for

prestigious awards like this.





First, there were less than 800 entrants in six categories. If we

eliminate entrants that were clearly not ready for serious consideration

(rampant misspellings, garish color schemes, unfunctional links, no

business focus), you may have had a one in 50 chance of winning -- and

much, much higher odds in certain categories.





Second, it's essential to read the entry instructions carefully. Every

question or item asked for in the instructions is there for a reason, and

you run the risk of disqualification if you don't provide all the requested

information.





In the case of the Inc. awards, some excellent sites were removed from the

running because they did not answer the questions asked in the entry

procedure. Even after being e-mailed for more information, they still did

not address the questions. I couldn't tell whether they did this because

the answers might not have placed them in a favorable light or because they

had a cavalier attitude toward the judging and thought they could set their

own terms for the competition.





Third, for a Web site award, make sure you don't schedule a site upgrade

during the judging period. This happened in more than one instance,

believe it or not. A couple of companies that might have won were

eliminated from the running because their sites weren't available at all

during the week that the judges were viewing the finalists. Inc. bent over

backwards to give sites a second chance when judges complained they

couldn't access some finalists. Even so, this factor knocked a couple of

promising candidates out of the picture.





Fourth, take your own competence seriously. The sole proprietor category

was sorely lacking in quality entrants, and if you had entered a site that

was clear, functional, readable, decent-looking and businesslike, you could

very well have had an excellent shot to win.





According to Anne Stuart, senior writer for Inc., material about their

awards is among the most-read stuff at their Web site throughout the year,

with awesome click-throughs to the winning sites. The only cost of

entering this sort of competition for such a publicity bonanza is the

effort required to submit a considered and complete entry.





Adds Dan Janal, author of several books on publicity and founder of PR

Leads, "You will get mindshare from the judges, who are very important,

influential people who could write about your company or tell their

audiences in speeches. I know -- I've judged many contests and have found

many interesting companies as a result."





Remember this the next time you spot an announcement for an award

competition. A blue-ribbon credential -- and attention from the media and

the public -- may be closer than you would assume.



==========================



Marcia Yudkin mailto:marciayudkin.com is the author of the classic PR guide,

Six Steps to Free Publicity, and 10 other books. You can learn more about

her new special report, Powerful, Painless Online Publicity, at

http://www.yudkin.com/powerpr.htm





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