Friday, March 27, 2015

What is News?













A reporter I know once wrote that he was thinking of putting a sign on his desk that said: “Caution—press release crossing.”

He went on to say that “herds of road kill masquerading as news releases cross my desk every day,” but that only a few catch his attention, making him stop and take a second look.

His experience is not unique. The mainstream media get hundreds of press releases each day. A news editor I know gets over 300 e-mails a day, just by herself.

In this blizzard of press releases, how do you make sure yours gets noticed?

For me, it all boils down to one simple thing: Send news. But was is news?
  
One definition of news is the old Dog-Man Principle, which goes like this: 

When a dog bites a man, that is not news, because it happens so often. But if a man bites a dog, that is news.

In other words, news is something unusual, something that doesn’t happen all the time or every day. It’s not routine, run-of-the-mill, common-place.

Or, as Kirk Lapointe, former editor of the Vancouver Sun put it:

“Planes take off and land every day. We only cover the ones that crash.”

The definition of news I like is this:

Does it tell my readers, viewers, listeners something they don’t know about something they care about?

This is the kind of question an editor asks when he or she receives a press release. Let’s take a closer look at it.

Does it tell my readers, viewers or listeners.

For a press release to attract attention, it must have a local angle—something that connects the story to the people served by the media outlet.

Does it tell my readers something they don’t know.

The press release must contain new information—something that people don’t know. Otherwise, why report about it? What is the new thing you want to share with them?

Does it tell my readers something they don’t know about something they care about.

The first question an editor asks when getting a press release is: Who cares?

Of course, you care about it. So does your organization, the volunteers or the beneficiaries. But why should anyone else care?

And why should the editor or news director who gets your press release? They are the first ones you have to convince to care.
 
Giving the media something their readers, viewers or listeners don’t know about something they care about is the first step in keeping your press release from becoming road kill.

In future posts, I’ll look a closer at various aspects of news, such as the local angle, human angle, impact, prominence, controversy, timeliness and hard versus soft news.  

Sunday, March 15, 2015

When Looking for Communication & Marketing Solutions, Are You Quirky Enough?


Quirky is the name of new company that builds products dreamed up by amateur inventors.

Slap-dash doodlers from around the world are invited by Quirky to send ideas for overcoming common challenges and problems—no matter how strange, weird or fantastic those ideas might be.

Every week, the Quirky community votes on the best ideas. The winners are sent on to engineers, who turn them into real products.

Erik Brynjolfsson, a professor at MIT, calls this new way of coming up with solutions to real problems “combinatorial innovation.”

“There are tons of creative ideas out there," he said. "The greatest thing about digital technology is that it’s easier than ever to get lots of eyeballs looking at our biggest problems.”

What does this have to do with non-profit groups?

When we are faced with communication and marketing challenges, we usually turn to the same people and places to find answers—people just like us.

This can work, but it also can be limiting. Since we are only asking insiders, we can tend to end up with only inside answers. 

The beauty of Quirky is that solutions to problems come from different and unexpected places, giving us different and unexpected answers.

Being outsiders, they can see things in fresh, new ways—ways we might never think of.

To use a hockey analogy, by inviting different people to take shots we would not only get more shots on goal, we would get shots from unexpected shooters and surprising angles.

I recently did a version of Quirky when I invited the Executive Director of the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra to speak to a group of church communicators. 

At first glance, we have little in common. But we both face the same challenges of reaching out to new audiences with old messages. Our time together was inspiring and informative.  

Social media is a big help in this area. When faced with a communication or marketing challenge, we can use it to relay a request to thousands of people. Who knows what kind of answers we might get, and from where?

We just have to be quirky enough to ask.

Click here to read Finding the Next Edison, an article about Quirky from Atlantic Online.
  

Saturday, March 7, 2015

How to Keep Your Press Releases Out of the Spam Folder















A few years ago, Winnipeg Free Press humour columnist Doug Speirs became fed up with the barrage of pointless press releases that daily fill his inbox.

In a column titled “Could you make those news releases any less funny?”, Doug noted that “almost every day, as regular as clockwork, news releases about incredibly obscure things in incredibly obscure places are emailed to my computer by public relations companies I've never heard of.”

Why do they send this stuff to him?

“Simple,” he stated. “I'm on the top-secret, computerized list of select journalists, a group whose membership is strictly limited to people who are currently alive.”

Normally, he deletes these e-mails without reading them. “But not today. Today, I'm all over them.”

What followed was a funny column about how Doug called these companies to see why they thought Winnipeggers should be interested in their products. You can read his column here.  

Of course, these businesses didn’t actually send Doug those press releases; they hired PR companies to do it for them.

If you are doing communications for non-profit organizations, you know about these PR companies.

Not a month goes by that I don't get a couple of e-mails from them saying they can help me reach thousands of journalists.

It's true;they can reach that many journalists. The only problem is that most of them have no interest in my press releases.

I have first-hand experience this as the freelance Faith Page columnist for the Winnipeg Free Press. 

Like Doug, my name is also on that secret list of writers who are alive.

I don’t get as many junk press releases as he does, but the ones that come my way get the same treatment: I promptly delete them.

But getting your press release deleted, or just being made fun of, is better than what happened to over 300 people who sent junk press releases to Chris Anderson of Wired magazine in 2007.

In a post titled “Sorry PR People, You're Blocked,” Anderson said “I’ve had it. I get more than 300 emails a day and my problem isn't spam, it's PR people.”
“Lazy flacks send press releases to the Editor in Chief of Wired because they can't be bothered to find out who on my staff, if anyone, might actually be interested in what they're pitching.”

He posted this warning: “I only want two kinds of email: those from people I know, and those from people who have taken the time to find out what I'm interested in and composed a note meant to appeal to that. Everything else gets banned on first abuse.”
Not only that; Anderson posted the e-mail addresses of all offending people, organizations and PR firms who had sent him misdirected press releases in the previous 30 days.
“If their address gets harvested by spammers by being published here, so be it—turnabout is fair play,” he stated.
What followed was a list of over 300 e-mail addresses. 

When it comes to media relations, nothing turns off a reporter more than getting junk from people who should know better. 

If it’s worth my time to read, then it’s worth your time to find out what I write about.

It's a good media relations strategy, and a simple courtesy. It might even help you make the news. 

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

An Unskippable YouTube Ad



You know those annoying YouTube ads--the ones that pop up before you can watch your video?

Like with banner ads, which almost nobody clicks on, almost nobody watches YouTube ads all the way through, either. (94 percent skip the ads, according to one report.)

I know I don't watch them. But I did watch the new five-second ads from Geico, the U.S. auto insurance company.

Those YouTube ads usually run for about five seconds before you have the option to skip them. That's what most people do.

Why do people hit skip? Many reasons, but the most important being that advertisers fail to grab your attention in those crucial five seconds.

Cleverly, Geico found a way. Click here to see for yourself.

Equally cleverly, so did Nail Communications. You can save a puppy's life by not skipping their YouTube ad. Try it for yourself. I bet you save the puppy's life.

Those of us who work in the non-profit sector seldom have the resources needed to make or buy ads on YouTube. But the principle still holds: If you want people to read, watch or listen to your messages, you need to grab their attention early--and quick.

Just like Geico did.