Is Your Approach to Media Relations Helping or Hurting Your Cause?

Oh my goodness. Did I ever have an eye-opening experience last week. Maine Public Relations Council hosted a media panel discussion for its members featuring three local award-winning journalists. Topics for discussion included best practices for pitching and storytelling. I love to share a good story and wanted to hear what these media reps consider best practices. So, I was off to learn a thing or two.

Call me naïve if you will, but I was not prepared to hear the first panelist indicate that she had NEVER in her career received a pitch from a public relations professional that made her say, “I’m glad that pr person called me.”frustration-62253_640

I was also not prepared to hear another panelist share her pet peeve:  perky twenty-one-year olds calling to ask if she’s received their press releases. I’m certainly not a twenty-one-year old, and I am definitely not perky. So, why would this pet peeve get stuck in my craw and make my blood boil just a bit? Well, think about it. What’s the image that appears in your mind when you hear or read perky twenty-one-year old? For me, it’s a not-so-bright young woman. It’s also a not-so-helpful phrase that shuts down conversation.

Therein lies the surprise learning for me: the level of frustration that both of these women expressed about their interaction with public relations professionals. Day after day this editor’s inbox is filled with press releases that don’t speak to her readers. If that’s not bad enough, the phone call follow-up is the next item on the pr person’s checklist. No surprise here, the editor has deleted the press release and lets the phone call go to voicemail.

To my communications colleagues, it’s now our job to help mend these strained relationships. Each one of us should be looked at as a valuable resource to, rather than a painful thorn in the side of, journalists. Here are a few actions we can take that just might prove helpful:

  • If you’re new to the public relations field, find a mentor.
  • If you’re an experienced public relations professional, lend a hand to those entering the field.
  • Answer two questions before sending your press release: So what? Who cares?
    If no one outside the walls of your company cares, chances are it’s not news. Send an email of praise to your co-workers and call it day.
  • Send newsworthy press releases to the right people, at the right time. EVERY press release is not appropriate for EVERY media outlet. Yes, this means doing some time-consuming homework; your reputation is worth this investment of time.
  • When following up with a journalist after sending a release:
    Don’t simply ask: Did you get my release?
    Ask the question you really want answered: Is this a story you’re interested in covering for your publication/news show/etc.?
    If the answer is yes, ask what other information you can provide and how you can be of assistance.
    If the answer is no, ask why not? Is it timing, or is the topic not relevant to your audience? That’s how we learn.

And, please, let me not hear the phrase perky, twenty-one-year old again.

Is Your Approach to Media Relations Helping or Hurting Your Cause? was last modified: January 22nd, 2014 by Deb Nelson

For the Love of Simba

A lion and a pug walked into a coffee shop… and I got to learn about their fun, wacky, cross-country road trip. Here’s the story:

As Simba relaxed at Crema, one woman remarked, “Seeing that lion is the best thing that’s happened to me today.”
As Simba relaxed at Crema, one woman remarked, “Seeing that lion is the best thing that’s happened to me today.”

Crema, a Portland, Maine coffee shop, was my satellite office yesterday. It met all of my requirements: fun atmosphere, good coffee, wifi, air conditioning. How could my Crema experience possibly get any better? Enter a giant stuffed lion, carried by its proud owner wearing a pug-adorned t-shirt. (Note to readers: I have a mild pug obsession.) I watched the lion, his owner and two companions approach the pastry case. Unable to control myself, I walked over to find out what was up with this group.

Will Mitchell explained to me that me he and Simba, along with two friends, travelled from the west coast’s Washington to the east coast’s Portland. He handed me a business card and asked me to check out Simba’s website. Of course, I put my work aside to do a little surfing. Sure enough, I learned that Mitchell loves Lion King and has a Lion King collection that includes the five-foot lion. No need to worry that Simba is missing her clan – there’s room for more than one cat on this trip.

Mitchell and friends have documented this coast-to-coast road trip by posting photos online: Simba moose hunting in Montana; visiting Mount Rushmore; fishing in the waters of Portland, Maine; and many more stops along the way. Vegas promises to be a highlight of the return trip! Somehow I suspect that what happens in Vegas will be shared with all of us. I know I’ll be watching for the photo; it promises to tell a good story.

 

For the Love of Simba was last modified: July 18th, 2013 by Deb Nelson