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> Get Articles > Publicity > Publicity Stunts Still Earn Attention

Publicity Stunts Still Earn Attention


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Marcia Yudkin
marciayudkin.com

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


Who says publicity stunts are passé? Outrageous staged

events designed solely to show up on the evening news still

get the job done when they're clever and fun.



Stan Heimowitz, owner of Celebrity Gems in Castro Valley,

California, recently successfully dramatized in the streets

of San Francisco the fact that IntraLinux, a small software

company -- Heimowitz's client -- is challenging Microsoft,

the industry giant.



Outside the Moscone Center in San Francisco, where Microsoft

was launching its new product Windows 2000, a Bill Gates

look-alike was matched against a Penguin (IntraLinux's

mascot) in a boxing ring whose four corners were held up by

Penguinettes. The Penguin pinned Gates, naturally, while a

plane towing a banner that read "IntraLinux" flew overhead.



This creative bit of street theater made its point to

onlookers and the media alike.



Publicity stunts go back at least to the days of showman

P.T. Barnum, who announced his circus' arrival in town by

hitching an elephant to a plow beside the train tracks. This

raised such a ruckus that it's still against the law in

some states to plow a field with an elephant.



Suspense became an element in a stunt featured on the front

page of the Los Angeles Times in 1980 when the paper

challenged Bob Allen to make good on his boast that he could

be dropped into any city with $100 and 72 hours later own

several properties without paying down payments. While

readers wondered if Allen could really do it, the author of

Nothing Down indeed pulled it off.



Attention-getting can go high-brow too, as when actor Norman

George, who portrays Edgar Allen Poe in a one-man show,

persuaded the city of Boston to rename Carver Street, where

the creator of "The Raven" was born, for the poet in

connection with the 180th anniversary of Poe's birth in

1989.



The same dramatic elements come into play every year when we

have another Take Our Daughters to Work Day. The media get

to shoot colorful, charming footage of young girls in places

they don't normally visit, and then they can add a smidgeon

of controversy by quoting people who think girls don't

deserve favoritism over boys.



Publicity stunts and milder special events aren't ever a

sure thing. Your parade can get rained on and a breaking

news story elsewhere can pull the media away. When

Massachusetts retailer Rick Segel sponsored a gala contest

for the Best Hairdresser of Medford, the fur coats that bore

contestants' numbers got switched, causing prizes to be

awarded to the wrong people. Two judges walked out and

fistfights almost broke out among the hairdressers.



Despite the risks, Stan Heimowitz had such a hoot with his

IntraLinux Penguin vs. Gates bout that he floated himself as

a publicity-stunt impresario to PR and ad agencies. The

whole event cost just $3,700.00, Heimowitz says, including

the actors and costumes. Compare that to the cost of a color

magazine ad that gets two seconds of a reader's attention!



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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