Generate Your Own Publicity
Who said you have to be a public relations expert to generate visibility for
your small business? Gaining positive mentions or press coverage is nothing
more than providing the right information to the right person at the right
time.
Start by identifying what's newsworthy - interesting or unique - about your
business. Then determine where you'd gain the most advantage by having people
read or hear about your company. Maybe it's not important for your business to
have people read about it in the local newspaper, but it's very important to
gain a mention in an industry trade or association publication. Determine who
your ultimate audience is and then identify the publications or other
communications vehicle that reach that audience.
Granted, this will take some work, but in the end it can be highly worthwhile.
News coverage is viewed by the public as more credible than advertising and is
definitely less expensive, even if you're paying an expert to assist you.
Create a list or database of the publications that are important to your
business. Then identify the person or persons at those publications who seem
to
write the most articles about your business or industry. This could be the
small business reporter at the local daily or business weekly or a specialty
reporter at a trade publication. Next, inform them about what's happening at
your company and keep them informed on a regular basis.
These communications can be in a number of forms, but it helps to find out
what
works best for the reporter or editor. It's probably not the telephone,
however. Most will prefer some form of short, factual written piece though it
doesn't need to be a formal news release. A well-written letter will work
fine. Inform the reporter or editor about what's happening at your company -
new hires, significant new business, changes in direction, partnerships. Use
the Business Press Release template in the Small
Business Pack for Microsoft Office to formulate your press releases easily
and in a consistent format.
Use the form of communications that the reporter prefers, but most likely
it'll
be e-mail, fax, a letter or a news release. Provide the facts and a phone
number for follow-up. That's all there is to it. You'll be amazed by how a
regular routine of communicating news about your company to the right people
in
the right form can pay off in increased credibility and additional business.