Just so you don't accuse me of making you wade through the entire article to
get these words, the first eleven words are: "Are you the person I should send
this press release to?" Story follows...
Face it: the most valuable single page in all of marketing is a press
release. A press release is a one-page typewritten sheet of paper that is sent
to editors who, if they like it, will publish it in their magazine or
newspaper. If your release is selected, the publication will typeset it, format
it in the same style as the rest of the publication, and print it as a story.
Free.
Most magazines have new product sections where press releases are
published. And newspapers - outside the first few pages of hard news - get
about 70% of their editorial content from press releases. Yours could be one of
them.
Imagine being the editor of the travel section. Ugh. You'd have to fill up
that section of a newspaper every day. It would be impossible if you had to do
all your own writing. Press releases are your lifeblood. The entertainment
section - even more so! The editor of the entertainment section lives on
stories generated from press agents. Television talk shows rely on press
releases to find interesting guests. So do radio talk shows. The media WANTS
your news stories as long as you follow a few simple rules.
I'm not going to go into the rules in depth; you can read those details in
either of my books, How To Market a Product for Under $500! or Uncommon
Marketing Techniques. But here's a quick synopsis: large header at the top
stating "FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE." Follow directly by "For More Information:" and
then a contact name and phone number. Next line, a kill date (I usually write
"No Kill Date"). Then the release headline (format: New Product Offers
Benefit), centered and in bold. Follow with the body copy in a brief, newspaper
style of writing (no adjectives) - if it looks or smells like an ad, it won't
get printed. Double space the body copy, and keep the whole release under one
page. Simple, even if you're not a press agent.
Prepare your release and a well-written cover letter (to build credibility)
along with a high-quality 5" x 7" black-and-white photo to be sent to the
editor.
Here's the old way: most people send the release, wait a week, then call the
magazine or newspaper and ask the editor if he received their release. The
editors must get really tired of hearing that. "Sure," says the editor, "I got
your release. I get everyone's release!"
The caller explains what the release was about, and then the editor usually
doesn't remember which release it was or where it's hidden amongst the 100 or so
other releases the editor received that week, the 10,000 other papers, and the
half-eaten pizza all competing for space on his desk. And the press agent winds
up sending another. Hmmm... double effort.
Here's the Jeff Dobkin trick way to send a press release: I usually don't
like to recommend phone calls in any of my campaigns, but this call is not a
"selling" call. You simply call an editor and use those 11 words you found at
the top of this article: "Are you the person I should send this press release
to?" What does this do? It sets up a "Can you help me?" relationship with the
editors. And they help you.
Editors - like teachers - are generally helpful by their very nature. If
the editor answers, "Yes, I'm the person!" that's the signal to give him a
30-second pitch of your product and the nature of your release. Tell him your
release will go right out and thank him for his time. Send it promptly.
The other four words you need to say, and you say them in the first
paragraph of the cover letter you send with your release, are "Nice speaking
with you," even if it wasn't. That reminds the editor you cared enough to call,
and that you spoke with him personally on the phone. This will assure his
personal attention to your release - and his help and some push.
What happens if the editor you speak with isn't the one you send your
release to? When you ask, "Are you the person I should send this press release
to?" and the editor says, "No, send your release to Jim Reidy, he gets all the
releases," then what do you do? You call up Jim Reidy and - knowing full well
he's the correct editor to send your release to - you say, "Are you the person I
should send my release to?" You see, this sets up a "Can you help me?"
relationship....
Editors want quality releases. They rely on press releases for news about
new products, people, companies, and current events. If they didn't like press
releases, they wouldn't be editors. It's part of the business. But they get so
many press releases, your release - and your pitch - must stand out from the
crowd. Most press agents haven't the time or the inclination to call every
editor every time a release goes into the mail. So your call and pleasant
conversation separate you from the pack. You become special.
Editors delight in talking to real people, not just press agents. If you
have a product or service to sell and can come up with a well-written press
release and a nice pitching angle, by all means give it your best shot. The
cost is just two sheets of paper, one photo, an envelope and stamp and a phone
call to get perhaps $10,000 worth of publicity. At my office, we send out 400
press releases a month, every month. Do I call the magazine editors with every
release we send? Sure. I call the magazines where we really want our press
releases to be published