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Archive for pr for small business

How Social Media = Online PR

By Elena · Comments (2)
Thursday, March 4th, 2010
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In a recent post I talked about the difference between offline and online PR for small businesses. Just to take it a step further, I think of Social Media as Online PR because at the end of the day, social media is a means of establishing your brand and getting buzz for your business.

In creating a PR campaign, you need to determine your key messages and your key audiences, you need to prepare a way to communicate your message (writing a press release, media pitch or media kit), you need to pitch the media and then track what the media is saying about your company.

It’s the same with Social Media Read More→

Comments (2)
Categories : Social Media
Tags : getting publicity, offline pr, online pr, pr campaign, pr for small business, Social Media, social networks

How to Get Testimonials for Your Business

By admin · Comments (4)
Sunday, November 15th, 2009
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Testimonials for your businessAs I was going through some blogs and websites for entrepreneurs and small businesses, the ones that had the most impact used testimonials on their site. Why? It gives me, who may be a new reader on their site, proof of how good their service or product is.  It shows readers how much other people have tried and tested their product/service and how satisfied they were. So, to get a testimonial that will boost your business, here are some quick tips.

  1. Make it easy for them to say YES by guiding them on what you want highlighted in the testimonial. Most people don’t like to write so ask just 3 – 5 questions on how did your product work for them? How were you to work with? What did they like? What could you do better (this is also great research for you in terms of product development) – ask whatever question will serve your needs best. From the answers, craft a testimonial and ask them to approve it. Read More→
Comments (4)
Categories : What Is PR and How Do You Get It
Tags : do your own pr, elena verlee, entrepreneur moms, get pr, getting pr, getting publicity, how to do pr, mompreneur, Online marketing, online pr, pr for small business, pr in your pajamas, public relations

What is PR? A Simple Definition of PR

By admin · Comments (1)
Tuesday, April 28th, 2009
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They say it’s always good to start from the beginning…

On Twitter today, @unmarketing asked the question, What’s a good definition of PR?

If I give you the textbook definition or what PR people say to each other, I’ll just confuse you. Which is probably why when I ask most entrepreneurs about startup PR, they give me a blank look. They know it’s important, but can’t really explain why. Many don’t use this secret weapon in building their business because there’s always been an aura of mystery around getting PR.

I think this is a simple definition of PR:

PR builds awareness and credibility for your company, product or service – which is critical for entrepreneurs and small businesses.

Awareness is built by sharing company news or information through your key influencers (let’s say reporters and bloggers), in order to reach customers, potential employees, joint venture partners, investors and anyone else who needs to know about you.

Credibility is built when the reporter or blogger writes about you in the paper, magazine or blog because they are an objective third-party reviewing and hopefully, singing your praises.

The resulting action is that people go to your website or store to evaluate the information for themselves, and perhaps join your company, pitch you on a potential partnership, invest as a stakeholder or buy your product or service. The resulting actions would depend on what your PR messages are, and how it’s delivered.

I hope that helps in lifting the PR mystery!

Anyone else care to share their thoughts on what PR is?

Comments (1)
Categories : What Is PR and How Do You Get It
Tags : elena verlee, getting pr, how to do pr, pr for small business, twitter, what is pr

What To Do When You Piss People Off (aka as Getting Bad PR)

By admin · Comments (6)
Thursday, March 26th, 2009
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handlingbadprNo matter what business you’re in, eventually you’ll piss someone off.

I’m not talking getting bad PR or a major crisis management campaign like laying off 500 people, or having a product recall where you have a gazillion journalists and customers to deal with. I’m talking about preserving your reputation with the more common one-off “your product or service is not good enough” emails or blog comments, your social media network saying your personality leaves much to be desired, or in another scenario, you jump to the next curve and are 10x better than the status quo and well, it tends to rile people up.

It’s always best to plan ahead, but let’s get real…most of the time, we don’t have the time, and are caught reacting to bad PR.

When this happens, what should you do?

1. Act Quickly – use the internet and your social network to find out what’s being said about you. Today (yes today), set up Google Alerts so that emails come to you whenever you or your company is mentioned on the net. On Twitter for example, you can use Tweetdeck to search tweets you may have missed (don’t just search your @name, search company name and possible abbreviations too) and although I’m just getting on Facebook, I’m sure there’s that function too. On vacation? Make sure someone is monitoring your customer service email account.

2. Assess the Situation – with small businesses the most common complaint is that your product or service did not deliver as promised. Find out what went wrong – remember that your customer WANTS you to succeed. They believed in you enough to buy your product in the first place so don’t be defensive and use the opportunity to let them help you make it better. They are not the enemy. Said something inappropriate? Take your hat in hand and apologize quickly before a firestorm starts.

3. Admit the Truth – the worst thing to do, is to do nothing. That just signifies guilt. So, in your communications whether to customers, your network or to the press, you need to get the truth out, and the truth can mean:
a. The story isn’t true
b. The story stretches the truth
c. The story is true (and therefore you are working to solve the problem)

Take your stance and start talking. And for goodness sake’s don’t be whiny.

4. Make Amends – I saw a sign the other day that says it takes 6 months to win a new client, and 60 seconds to lose them. A little goes a long way in taking action and making amends. New product substitute? A little extra service? A free upgrade? A full refund and apology? Often, your customer is happy with less than you think. What you are comfortable offering also depends on the severity of the situation (refer back to point #3).

And finally, on jumping the curve on a product or service and creating a group of naysayers, here are other thoughts to ponder from the experts:

Silicon Valley venture capitalist and former Apple evangelist Guy Kawasaki has said in The Art of Innovation that you need to be willing to polarize people. When you create a product or service that some people love, don’t be surprised when others hate it. Your goal is to catalyze passion- pro or anti. The only result that should offend you or scare you is lack of interest.

Innovation guru Robert Scoble in a recent article on Facebook says that sometimes, a true leader doesn’t listen to what anyone thinks – even the customer. A leader does what he or she thinks is best for his business.

And for my mompreneur readers, check out how Heather Armstrong, a famous blogger mom at Dooce handles some hate (jealousy?) mail.

What do you have in place for handling bad PR? Would love your thoughts.

For more tips on how to do PR or if would like to explore doing PR yourself, you can check out my ebook for entrepreneurs, moms and small businesses.

PRNewbies

“Elena, I loved it!…YOUR BOOK WAS THE BEST AND THE MOST VALUABLE LESSON I HAVE LEARNED SINCE I STARTED MY BUSINESS.”

Natallia Antanovich
Organic by Nature
(Editor’s Note: Those capital letters, written by Natallia. More testimonials are here)

Comments (6)
Categories : What Is PR and How Do You Get It
Tags : bad pr, elena verlee, entrepreneur moms, getting pr, how to do pr, mompreneur, pr for small business, public relations for small business

What is the Difference Between PR and Advertising

By admin · Comments (4)
Monday, March 23rd, 2009
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I had a meeting recently with a fairly savvy entrepreneur on ‘how to do PR’ and during the conversation I realized that they had no idea what PR was all about.

You cannot ‘buy’ PR in a newspaper or magazine. You cannot have the reporter say exactly what you want them to say. That is advertising. Both PR and advertising are important in the marketing of your business, depending on what stage your business is at.

The difference between PR and advertising is that PR builds awareness of your product or service which is critical for startups and entrepreneurs, and advertising supports the brand when it gets known.

With PR you get:

• Free Placement
• Less, or no control- a journalist can write what they want no matter how you position your story
• A story that runs only once or twice (exceptions are when a newswire picks up the story)
• Credibility because it’s viewed as a third-party endorsement
• No guarantees and it can be time-consuming

With Advertising you get:

• Paid Placement
• Complete creative control
• Your ads will run as often as you’re willing to pay
• Savvy consumers know it’s an ad, and tend to be skeptical
• A guaranteed date the ad will run and it’s easy if you have money to spend

PR builds credibility, Advertising builds visibility. What’s cool about getting PR is because it’s written by a journalist, there’s instant credibility and other people become more interested. If you’re a small business, it can turn you from a nobody into a somebody who can compete against a bigger business.

For a small business owners, entrepreneurs or moms just starting out, just know that a thousand dollars is not a very big ad budget – it might afford you a small ad in your local newspapers or magazines for example. But the same money spent on PR if you get hits in several newspapers or magazines, can mean the equivalent of 5 to 10 times the advertising cost in those publications.

PR can be time-consuming and with no guarantees, but well worth the effort. If you’ve been successful with your PR, please share with us what you did and what it’s brought to your business.

For more tips on how to do PR or if would like to explore doing PR yourself, you can check out my ebook for entrepreneurs, moms and small businesses.

PRNewbies

“Elena, I loved it!…YOUR BOOK WAS THE BEST AND THE MOST VALUABLE LESSON I HAVE LEARNED SINCE I STARTED MY BUSINESS.”

Natallia Antanovich
Organic by Nature
(Editor’s Note: Those capital letters, written by Natallia. More testimonials here)

Comments (4)
Categories : What Is PR and How Do You Get It
Tags : entrepreneur moms, getting pr, pr for small business, pr in your pajamas, pr vs advertising

60+ Free Press Release Distribution Sites

By admin · Comments (88)
Wednesday, February 25th, 2009
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I’ll be honest in that I have very little experience in using free sites. My PR agency for high-tech clients has always used a paid service. However, that costs upwards of $500 per release, and now that I am helping entrepreneurs and small businesses get PR, I am asked this question all the time:

“Where can I post a press release for free?”

Before I give you the answer (hint: there are a lot of sites), another question that should be answered is, “is it worth it?”

Well, it depends. If you post on just a few of the better sites, you will likely get picked up by the search engines like Google and Yahoo, and will rank even better if you know how to optimize your release with keywords.

Personally, I prefer to put together a customized media list and send press releases to individual reporters, especially the ones in the local city or niche we are targeting. If your press release is newsworthy, then putting it on a wire service is a great add-on that can bring you more attention from media, customers, potential employees and partners you would otherwise not be able to reach.

If you want to try out a free news release service, I’ve heard good things about:

www.PR.com
www.PRLog.com
www.pressrelease365.com (this one looks like they will charge you $24.95 but all new registrations get a $25 credit so really, it’s free)

Then, there is another school of thought that if you have the time and energy, you can post on as many sites as possible and get more sustained traffic and visibility to your site. If you’re so inclined, here is a list of over 60 free press release distribution sites, compiled by Press Release Point and they will even post to all those sites for you…for a modest fee. It kind of defeats the purpose of using free sites but for a few dollars, it could be worth saving your valuable time.

Note: I am not endorsing these sites, nor have I used most them. I am merely sharing this information in case you find it useful.

If you need help with what to do with this list, or are stuck on next steps, my ebook PR in Your Pajamas has practical tips to make use of the information in this chart. Check it out!

PRNewbies

“Elena, I loved it!…YOUR BOOK WAS THE BEST AND THE MOST VALUABLE LESSON I HAVE LEARNED SINCE I STARTED MY BUSINESS.”

Natallia Antanovich
Organic by Nature
(Editor’s Note: Those capital letters, written by Natallia. More testimonials here)

Comments (88)
Categories : Press Releases
Tags : Add new tag, getting pr, pr for small business, press release

When and How to Work with a PR Consultant

By admin · Comments (1)
Monday, February 16th, 2009
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working with a pr consultant
With my businesses, I’ve seen huge growth spurts when I let go of my perfectionist and controlling side and delegate. I focus on my natural gifts – the tasks I can spend all day doing and still be energized afterwards and also make money at. Getting PR, joint ventures, business development and creating winning teams and products are my strengths. Accounting, website maintenance, administrative and repetitive tasks are necessary, time consuming and do not contribute to revenues coming in, so I delegate those.

It’s hard at first, to find the balance between profitability and hiring someone to help you. What I’ve found is the initial dip in profits eventually corrects itself as my team becomes more efficient and I can truly focus on what I love to do and work on the business, instead of in the business. At the end of the day, you are working on a business that needs to be profitable in order to survive. Right?

You may consider outsourcing PR to a consultant or agency if you provide products or services that are difficult to differentiate in the marketplace.

Professional publicists can help you with key messaging that will resonate with your target customers and media. PR professionals can also help you with more advanced publicity techniques and pulling together more comprehensive media lists and editorial calendars.

You would be staggered by the sheer opportunity that exists out there. Last year when we pulled from our database the media that are doing “holiday gift guides”, we came up with more than 300 opportunities! There’s no scarcity of places that you could promote your company.

If you do choose to work with a consultant (PR firms/agencies tend to cost twice as much, but have more resources than individual consultants), here are some things you’ll need to consider:

Goals. The positioning of your company in its market is essential. Determine how you want to be perceived.

Expectations. Assessing the newsworthiness or perception of your company’s products, services and other announcements is key. Be realistic.

Budget. Levels of communication programs vary. Costs vary too. Establishing a budget will keep you on track and allow you to wisely appropriate funds in the right projects.

Expertise. Familiarity with your specific industry is a plus, as it reduces a learning curve. However, experienced communications professionals can often hit the ground running.

References/Reliability. Past and present clients provide a proven track record and allow you to get to know working ethics and style. Make sure to check references.

Long-term vs. Project Basis. From your own goals, determine what you’ll require. Working on a per project basis allows you to complete existing projects, carry-out specific programs and helps companies with limited budgets. A long-term partnership can give you the advantage of having the same person strategically plan and execute your entire PR program for consistency and easier management.

Also remember that PR programs typically take a few months to gain momentum because media publishing schedules are often a few months ahead. So if you want to get into Oprah’s December issue, sometimes you may have to think about Christmas in July!

As with any outside consultant, you need to feel comfortable with them and their expertise – otherwise you won’t get your money’s worth. There are many companies out there that would love your business…find one you like!

Comments (1)
Categories : What Is PR and How Do You Get It
Tags : Add new tag, mompreneur, planning pr, pr for small business

4 Types of Headlines That Will Get Media Attention

By admin · Comments (3)
Saturday, January 24th, 2009
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Great Headlines Can Help Get PR for Your Business

When you’re writing press releases or pitches to help get your existing, or new business PR, always start with the headline first. It helps keep you focused on the ONE point you may want to get across and then content should flow from there. 

Reporters are so busy, receiving hundreds of emails, voicemails and requests for their time that a headline has to grab attention in order for you to get PR. The first thing they see is the headline – so the 10 seconds it takes to glance at the headline is the deciding factor whether they will read your pitch further or throw it in the trash.

I’ll tackle other types of headlines in future posts, but in the meantime, here are four headline ideas for pitching a reporter on your business:

1. News Headline – to be effective, this actually has to be news! Examples are when you first launched your company or new product, awards for your company, and major company milestones.

  • MonthlySocks.com offers North America its first socks-by-mail subscription service
  • Babyclothing company launches spring clothing line only in the color green
  • Elena Verlee awarded World Entrepreneur of the Year Award (hey, I can dream can’t I?)

2. How to Headline – the basic premise of this type of headline is that you are going to teach someone how to do something. You can make it even more appealing by using a structure such as “How to (Do this task) That (will give you this benefit).

  • How to Get Your Kids to Read One Grade Level Higher
  • How to Choose A Baby Carrier That Reduces Back and Shoulder Strain
  • How Be a Thought Leader in a Crowded Marketplace

3. Question Headline – for this to work, it must be a question that the reporter’s audience (and therefore your target market) would really like to see answered.

  • Would you (or your readers) like to get $1,000 worth of bike products for free?
  • Do employers really know what moms are looking for in the workplace? (this is the result of a survey, which can be an effective PR tactic especially for start up businesses in a crowded marketplace)
  • What are the top 5 business models for online businesses?

The last example combines a question and my favorite type of headline…

4. List Headline – who doesn’t love a top 10 list? This type of headline lists a number of reasons, ways or secrets where you make a specific promise to the reporter of what to expect if they read on. It also has the promise of communicating information that comes in bite-sized chunks.

  • Top 20 Products that Soothe a Screaming, High-Needs or Colicky Baby
  • The 10 Must-Do “Date-Nights” for Families
  • 8 Lessons from a Life Coach

Another example of course, is the title of this post…

Remember, as with anything, if you do nothing…you get nothing. So take a few minutes now (yes, now) and brainstorm the types of headlines above that you can tailor to your business. Send a pitch today!

Since I am new to blogging, I’d sure appreciate a comment to let me know if you found this useful. Or, let me know what topic you would like me to address for you in a future post.

If you need help on writing a pitch, or are stuck on next steps in getting PR, check out my products and resources page here.

PRNewbies

“Elena, I loved it!…YOUR BOOK WAS THE BEST AND THE MOST VALUABLE LESSON I HAVE LEARNED SINCE I STARTED MY BUSINESS.”

Natallia Antanovich
Organic by Nature
(Editor’s Note: Those capital letters, written by Natallia. More testimonials here)

Comments (3)
Categories : What Is PR and How Do You Get It
Tags : getting pr, headlines, how to do pr, mompreneur, planning pr, pr for small business

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