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> Get Articles > Publicity > Pouncing on Reporters' Leads

Pouncing on Reporters' Leads


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Marcia Yudkin
marciayudkin.com

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






You see a notice from a reporter seeking examples for an

article. You should:



(A) Ignore it.

(B) Reply immediately to say you have a good story for

him/her.

(C) Reply immediately with your complete story.

(D) Consider the request for a few days rather than acting

hastily.



For more than two years this question has been part of a

quiz at my Web site, and a majority of those taking the quiz

have guessed the answer was (B). Wrong. That means that most

people who see a reporter's query, either through a leads

service such as ProfNet or PR Leads or on a discussion list,

may miss their chance for 15 minutes of fame.



A reporter's notice might look like this:



For an article for a national business magazine, I am

seeking businesses that have turned less than a thousand

dollars in initial investment into more than a million

dollars in annual sales in less than 10 years. Respond by

this Friday to areporterreporters.net.



My quiz respondents think the thing to do is to reply

simply, "I fit your criteria. Here's how to reach me..." The

correct answer, though, is (C), replying with the complete

story. Why?



Assume that the reporter receives a flood of replies, as

usually happens. Most likely, enough of those have supplied

a full, enticing and relevant story for the reporter to

complete his or her research without contacting you.



Factor in the deadline, too, and you'll understand you can

lose your chance for the spotlight because of the delay

created by making the reporter write back, "Tell me more"

and wait for your reply.



In addition, to some reporters, the reply "I fit the bill.

Here's how to reach me..." shows a self-centered lack of

common sense and courtesy. You set up a hurdle for them to

cross rather than making it easy for them to perform their

job.



In recommending that you reply to a reporter's appeal with

your complete story, I don't mean that you have to spend an

hour typing detail after detail. Rather, provide the basic

facts that demonstrate that you are what they're looking

for, along with the fundamental who, what, when, where and

why or how of your situation. For instance:



My name is Kathy Kaminar, and I own a cotton candy company

in Missoula, Montana, with $1.5 million in annual sales. I

launched the company in 1993, when I was 17 years old, at

the Missoula State Fair, with an investment of $200 for

supplies. I now have 27 employees, mostly part-time.

Although all my sales are offline, I do have a Web site:

http://www.kathys.biz . Here's how to reach me...



The Web link provided there is excellent, because it enables

the reporter to obtain further information about your

organization and a general impression before interviewing

you. Don't send any attached files, much less a gargantuan

history of your firm, previous press clips, photos and so on

unless and until the reporter requests them.



You might still strike out following these suggestions, but

you would have upped the odds of success as high as

possible.



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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