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"Soft" News Programs Offer Hot Opportunity For Free Publicity
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George McKenzie
georgeget-free-publicity.com
http://www.get-free-publicity.com
http://www.get-free-publicity.com
"Soft" News Programs Offer Hot Opportunity For Free Publicity
by George McKenzie
My grandmother used to say, "You can ask for anything if
you're not afraid to take no for an answer."
Grandmother wasn't talking about asking the media for free
publicity, but she could have been.
Shrinking ad revenues, and the ever-growing number of cable
stations have caused massive cuts in news operations
everywhere. And with fewer people doing more work, you can
score some big publicity coups simply by making yourself
available.
This is especially true with "soft news" or "lifestyle"
programs in small-to-medium size TV markets.
These are shows that generally appear in the mid-morning,
and focus on relationships, medical, travel, consumer, legal
and financial topics rather than murder, mayhem, and traffic
accidents (which tend to show up on evening or "hard news"
programs).
I recently picked a Tuesday morning and watched "San Antonio
Living," a one hour program airing each weekday at 10:00 AM
on my local NBC affiliate.
They did a little hard news and some weather, of course.
But the rest of the show seemed like non-stop unpaid
commercials for a number of businesses.
Here's the lineup:
10:06 Guest appearance by designer Carolina Herrera,
including models wearing some of her fashions. A full
screen graphic with Herrera's name and phone number closed
the segment. 13 minutes
10:21 Live remote with a reporter at a new store called
"TreefrogEd," which sells educational materials for
kids. Full screen graphic with name and phone number
included. 8 minutes.
10:30 An appearance by a food specialist from a local
supermarket. Live interview on the set. 7 minutes. Once
again, a full screen graphic was included at the end of the
segment.
10:40 Interview with Dr. Nancy Appleton, author of "Lick The
Sugar Habit." Dr. Appleton not only got seven minutes of
airtime, but the station promoted the book throughout the
show during teases. Dr. Appleton (wisely) managed to
mention her web site and the fact that she would be giving
away several free copies of the book at a seminar that
night.
10:51 A segment about a charity drive kickoff scheduled for
the next day at a local homebuilder's showroom. The
builder, KB Home, had a spokesperson and a banner on the
set.
10:57 A quick return to the reporter at TreefrogEd,
including another short interview with the store owner and
more shots of products sold at the store.
Again, this was a typical Tuesday morning picked at random.
People who appeared did not have to buy advertising as part
of the deal. The exposure was totally free.
You can do it too. All it takes is a decent press release
sent to the producer of the show. Stress the benefit their
audience will get by watching (avoid mentioning specific
products at this stage).
Will you get the air time you're looking for? Maybe. Maybe
not.
But as my grandmother would tell you, you'll never know
unless you ask.
George McKenzie offers free tips, techniques and tactics for
using the media to attract new customers and drive up sales
without spending cash on advertising. Visit
http://www.get-free-publicity.com/1.html
George has more than 30 years experience as an award-winning
radio and TV journalist. His work has been featured on ABC,
NBC, CBS, ESPN and CNN.
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