Make it timely
As you develop story angles for the season, remember it is summer. Whether you’re talking about a summer gadget (easy) or a medical device (hard), tie your pitch to something relevant to the here and now. For example, a lot of travel goes on this time of year, so tie your company, product, or service to summer travel (airfares…heat, sun..SPF..etc.).
Work the holidays
July 4th falls on a Saturday this year, creating opportunity for a fantastically long weekend, so most will take the 6th off — including experts who might otherwise be available to appear on TV. Make your company expert (you do have an expert?) available on holiday weekends—especially the 4th of July and Labor Day—when producers have a tough time finding guests.
Think smallish
Coverage in smaller markets or in smaller-circulation publications can be just as effective in achieving business objectives. Getting coverage in key markets is easy if you take the time to understand and include a local summer angle. For example, Milwaukee has a lovely lakefront where many denizens spend their summer weekends — can you tie that to your story? Milwaukee might be a second-tier DMA, but it’s only an hour’s drive from Chicago!
Present company
If you haven’t submitted products to relevant holiday gift guides, get going! Today! Many long-lead monthlies have deadlines any day now; some have already passed, but there are plenty out there for you to crawl onto. Just make sure you have images and specs at the ready.
Agency review, friend
If you’re not getting the coverage you merit — or, if you’re not seeing clear return on your PR investment—summer is the time for the ole agency review. Identify five companies and simply ask them what they would do for you—and who would do the work—given the chance to take it on. Compare this to what you have now. Even if you stay with the old firm, it’s good to hear new thinking, particularly about angles and opportunities. Time spent researching is never a waste! Just ask the folks at RLM, and they’ll tell you: “I research, therefore I am.” (Apologies to Descartes.)
You see, dear participant, although the lean summer months are considered by many to be a barren media wasteland, with the right attitude and some out-of-the-box thinking, they can be just as fruitful as any other month. As usual, though, success is up to you. It is merely a choice – a tough choice, sure – but what about the PR business isn't tough?
If you need something MORE to do this summer, call me. I have a lot of filing for ya.
Okay, a nicer ending: Tweet me @laermer.
I read this post and your advice... "Make it timely" stood out so I used it in a pitch to local WUSA-TV CBS affiliate in Washington DC about out diet book.
ReplyDeleteHere is the 1-line of text I added ...
"A great story idea is to offer list of everyday summer foods that can help curb stress eating by boosting mood."
In 5 minutes the TV anchor wrote me back...
"I like it a lot! I am copying another member on this email... to see when we can get this scheduled on our calendar. The summer foods to boost mood angle would be great; we have a studio kitchen where we could shoot the interview and do a demo with the foods."
Talk about results! Your advice to "make it timely" made all the difference.
i agree with this - summer is the perfect time for PR and most companies miss out! I just blogged about why companies should do pr in the summer months on my blog too - http://tinyurl.com/lnurlc
ReplyDeleteGreat stuff, I like your stay smallish tactic. Many organizations are looking to be so big and powerful that they forget that sometimes the small quality accounts are what stay with you for years on end. Obviously we want to try to strive to be large and successful, but we can't trample the little people in the process.
ReplyDelete