Looking for a 3D speaker, trainer, motivator or engine? Call 630.207.7530.

Posts tagged: Project Runway

How to Accelerate PR Performance & Measure Results

accelerate If you read Joan Stewart, The Publicity Hound’s blog or e-zine [affiliate link], you might enjoy her “Help this Hound” feature. This post is in response to a question from one of Joan’s readers, a media relations professional, who put out a call for tips on how to deal with impatient clients.

Technorati Tags: , ,,, ,, , ,

What to Ask Before You Dress to Run Your PR Race

It’s a challenge all media/public relations consultants often face: impatient clients who want major media results NOW. If you’re one of them – an impatient client or a pressured PR pro – try asking these questions I often ask prospects . . .

  1. Why do you think your story is worth telling?
  2. Who do you think should know about it?
  3. Who should tell it?
  4. Where do you expect your story to appear?
  5. What publications do your customers read?
  6. What radio and TV news shows do they rely on?
  7. What sites and blogs do they visit and read?
  8. What do you think you will get out of a major media exposure?
  9. How will you know when your PR efforts are successful?
  10. Are you willing to commit to a 3-5 year strategic marketing plan?

Set Reasonable Expectations

The key word in all of this is: expectations. Managing client expectations can be challenging, frustrating, motivating and rewarding.

We start off talking about small steps and building up. Let’s face it, sometimes your story isn’t worthy of a big hit right away. You have to achieve success on subsequent levels to attract major media attention. As Christian said when he won the avant-garde challenge on Project Runway last night, “I’m young so I don’t have much media coverage yet.” [May not be exact quote - can confirm the winning project used 45 yards of fabric and that Chris partnered on the challenge.]

It sounds like Joan’s reader is doing everything right. Sometimes shifting focus away from the glimmering limelight to substantial statistics is as, if not more, impressive and impact-full.

Go Online to Boost Rank and Visibility Simultaneously

Distributing an online news release can effortlessly boost your page rank and visibility. And, major media outlets start to take notice when you show up in their searches.

Since we transitioned away from counting clips to more of an SEO/virtual PR visibility approach, we find that our clients appreciate their different, but more immediate and measurable results.

Within 24-48 hours after their release, many of our clients land on page one of Google news for the desired search terms.

After a few web releases, many of them vault way ahead of their competition, both in terms of number of Google results and page rank. One client showed up at 4, 5 and 6 on page one for their keyword term for the first month or so after their release. Three months later, their news release shows up at 35/232,000 results – while their own site is buried many, many pages back.

Interpret Stats in New Ways Using Traditional Measures

We’ve come up with a measurement tools like this one to gauge effectiveness: reads/impressions = response rate. Using a comparison to other direct marketing methods, where anything above 1-2% is considered a success, we interpret the results for them.

When you distribute your news via PRWeb at the $360 level, you’ll see stats along with search engine terms and geographic readership. So, in addition to releasing news, you’re also testing search terms and mining readership data.

Be Courageous When Contacting the Media

As far as major media goes, it helps to know where your clients want to appear. In one case, our client’s target was the leading industry risk management monthly. I mustered all the courage I could, held my breath and called the editor to tell her what my client wanted. At the end of the call, she assigned me the story and even edited the four-page final version more in our direction. The client happily paid for the ghostwriting and their board was ecstatic. You can try this, too.

Search for Field Scouts

It’s not always [almost never?] this easy to break into bigger publications. PR agencies can make the calls and tell your clients what it takes to get in the publication so that you both know how to get in. For example, home publications often employ field scouts to preview projects. So, you need to find out who that is and contact them.

After a few phone calls and an hour meeting with a scout, one of our clients got booked for an eight page spread in a Better Homes and Gardens specialty magazine. While my client is located in Chicago, one of their newest projects is in Bermuda. The homeowner read the Better Homes and Gardens feature, saved it and called my client when they were ready to renovate their home. I don’t have to tell you – do I? – that I can’t wait to write that release!

Meredith publications’ garden scout editor is a friend who joined a writing group I started a few years ago. Every now and then we touch base and I tell her about a new garden I like. How hard is it to get in? It depends on what the editor is looking for – sometimes you get lucky.

Learn How to Get Lucky

Out of over 80 press releases I sent to the Chicago Tribune about retailers, only one made it as a major feature. When I call the editor to ask why – they said “Sometimes you get lucky.” I found the more I embroidered the release with intriguing details, the better the pick up. Some PR firms focus on the nugget of the pitch and let the reporters discover the story on their own. I’m more of a storytelling type who enjoys rubbing out the vibrancy so my client can see themselves shining and be proud of a release that portrays who they are.

Knowing the editors personally also helps. When a new client told us they hadn’t had any luck with a regional living magazine, I called the editor and said something like: I can’t believe you’d do a feature without them. Did you know – I listed all the awards and credentials. Even though the story was almost finished, the editor shuffled the article around to include our client, giving them three photos and the beginning and closing quote. Why did he do this? He trusted my opinion, not just as a PR rep, but also as a reader and marketing strategist who knew how to make this issue standout.

Take Action and Test it Out

Now that you’ve read this post, take a minute to see what stands out for you, make some notes and try at least one approach. You can also contact Barbara about speaking, writing and creative projects.

What’s your take on accelerating PR performance?

PR Takeaways | Tim Gunn: Ultimate Corporate Spokesperson

tim_gunn.jpgphoebe_and_tim_gunn.jpg 

PR Takeaways is an occasional series that usually, but not always, relates to an event or personal experience. The standard format wraps up public relations tips for entrepreneurs, organizations and small businesses. Images: Tim Gunn presenting and with one of his fanatical fans.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

“You haven’t written that post yet? You are sooooooooo lame!” comment from my 13 year old marketing advisor, two hours after meeting Tim Gunn in Lombard, Illinois 

Well, here it is three days later and yes, I’m finally getting around to writing about meeting Tim Gunn. For those of you who, like my dear husband, have absolutely no idea who Tim Gunn is or why anyone would spend three hours on a gorgeous fall afternoon sitting in a tent staked to asphalt in a shopping mall parking lot, you must not know about Project Runway 

Last fall, I wrote a few posts about the show. After a few of the PTA moms admitted to stalking my blog, not for marketing and PR ideas, but to find out what I really think about the characters, I decided to back off. And, I wasn’t completely sure I wanted to write about this experience either.

But, after telling everyone I know I met Tim Gunn [Yes, the same thing happened after I met Chloe Dao, winner of Project Runway Season Two at BlogHer], I decided to analyze the relevance to you as a PR Takeaway. By the way, Tim Gunn is now Liz Claiborne’s Chief Creative Officer and is on tour with a denim event. [Scoop: He says we’ll L-O-V-E Project Runway Season Four!] 

How to Choose and Use a Corporate Spokesperson

Who Should Be Your Corporate Spokesperson

The business owner may or may not be the best public face of the business. Associating with an expert like Tim Gunn brought Liz Claiborne out of the department stores and into the Project Runway fan club with loyal fans like the woman who brought a Tim Gunn bobble-head doll that makes daily email image appearances on behalf of a hospital’s physical therapy department. You don’t have to hire a TV show host as your spokesperson to gain credibility. A testimonial from a customer with name-brand recognition will do.

What to Look For in a Corporate Spokesperson

Ideally, this should be someone who shares your passion. Your spokesperson could be your best customer, an industry executive, a company officer or a government official. Tim Gunn is elegant, classy, humorous, witty, creative, media-savvy – and of course, fashionable.

When to Use a Corporate Spokesperson

Any time the press will be there, you’ll need someone to talk about your company. For larger events, you’ll want to line up three or four backups with different angles and opinions to give the press a selection and to show that you have more than one facet.

Why You Need a Corporate Spokesperson

Even the smallest business needs a spokesperson and a group of ambassadors who can represent your company to the public. One business owner I know likes to attend “Steak Fry” events, usually an outdoor barbeque on an asphalt parking lot in the summer. That’s okay, but what about the more formal events that put the company in front of decision-makers? Where is he? Not there. So, I suggested training several company “ambassadors” to represent the company and then sending them out so he can go to the Steak Fry and they can go to everything else.  

For the Project Runway fans who want to know what Tim Gunn is really like . . . He is honest, gracious and sincere about wanting women to own their style and their shape at the moment. In our very brief exchange, he took the time to make sure he answered our questions and that our pictures turned out okay. All that makes Tim Gunn the ultimate corporate spokesperson.  

Get Wired PR Works delivered via RSS 

Claim your Marketing Transformations guide 

Project Runway: You’re All In!

My fascination with the 9/27 episode began early when the 9/22 episode aired as a rerun.

It kept building until it hit a crescendo early Wedneday morning when Lori Lizzard – a fab underground fashionista, called to tip me off to the Project Runway portfolio on the Olympus Fashion Week site.

Lizz kept exclaiming, "It’s so obvious!" every time I asked about the final three. The Lizz did run through her Fashion Week faves, but she wouldn’t give away who was offed.

So as soon as I hung up, I checked into the site and saw Uli,Laura, Michael and Jeffrey’s influences. I couldn’t off anyone. And neither could the judges.

If you missed the show on Wednesday night, here’s the Newsday Project Runway story.

What I love about this show is watching the creative process unfold. For us, each finished work gets its embyronic imprint with a scrap of a concept so faint we can’t make out what we’re looking at. Aren’t most creative projects like that – a complex ordering of simple insights?

For a closer look at each designer’s portfolio, check out the www.newyorkmetro.com slide show. To see really huge pictures and converse with a friendly fans, click on over to Blogging Project Runway.

Read our related post, Project Runway: What Do Moms Think about Laura? And, leave your comment below to tell us what YOU think . . .

Project Runway: You’re All In!

My fascination with the 9/27 episode began early when the 9/22 episode aired as a rerun.

It kept building until it hit a crescendo early Wedneday morning when Lori Lizzard – a fab underground fashionista, called to tip me off to the Project Runway portfolio on the Olympus Fashion Week site.

Lizz kept exclaiming, "It’s so obvious!" every time I asked about the final three. The Lizz did run through her Fashion Week faves, but she wouldn’t give away who was offed.

So as soon as I hung up, I checked into the site and saw Uli,Laura, Michael and Jeffrey’s influences. I couldn’t off anyone. And neither could the judges.

If you missed the show on Wednesday night, here’s the Newsday Project Runway story.

What I love about this show is watching the creative process unfold. For us, each finished work gets its embyronic imprint with a scrap of a concept so faint we can’t make out what we’re looking at. Aren’t most creative projects like that – a complex ordering of simple insights?

For a closer look at each designer’s portfolio, check out the www.newyorkmetro.com slide show. To see really huge pictures and converse with a friendly fans, click on over to Blogging Project Runway.

Read our related post, Project Runway: What Do Moms Think about Laura? And, leave your comment below to tell us what YOU think . . .