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In my recent interview with Buzz Media’s Elizabeth Pereira and Fritz Chaleff, we discussed the basics of these not-so-basic approaches. Read on for how to get lots of attention for your story, using these wise investments of your time and money.

Kelly: When should people consider PR in their marketing efforts?

Elizabeth: PR should be included in every marketing plan you developfrom the very beginning of a new product being launched or a policy coming out. Use it heavily in the beginning to establish a brand, then level out over time. It’s also a good tool for handling crisis down the road.

For consumer-related messages, PR really builds credibility quickly - 40-50% of your budget isn’t unreasonable.

Fritz: The traditional view is that product marketing should go with ads, not PRand that issues and position-related launches should use op-eds and PR. But I see it as actually the oppositefor example a good story on NPR will do more than, say, ads. Think of PR to launch a brand, and advertising to maintain it.

Kelly: What advice to you have for someone just learning about PR for their business or organization?

Fritz: PR is a process - it’s not a one-time hit or magic bullet. Just like networking or in social experiences, it takes time to develop trust and credibility. So just one press release in a vacuum won’t do it. This is really a cornerstone. One thing that really helps is planning - even if it’s a year outyou need to be thinking about it now.

Actually, you really need to be thinking and talking internally about it all the time. All of your employees are diplomats and ambassadors of your company. So all the internal communications need to be aligned, with policies on if or how to talk with the press, the general publictalking points are key, as is training. Protect your brand by getting everyone on the same page.

Kelly: So what’s the one thing you wish your clients would do that would make it easier for you to help them in their publicity efforts?

Elizabeth: Bring us into the planning process early on. Often, clients will sit down at the beginning of the year when they get their budget and plan, but don’t include their PR team until much later. You need to think through angles and pitches early on - and be thinking strategicallynot just about tactics.

Fritz: Then there’s the media schedule - if you want to do big pushes in February, realize that you’re competing with the Super Bowl, Grammy’s and Oscars. Even if you’re local and on a smaller scale, there’s an annual cycle that you need to take into consideration.

Elizabeth: There are things you should plan around, unless you can relate your topic to these things.

Fritz: The other thing is for clients to understand the difference between the story and how it’s pitched. We had a client who shot themselves in the foot by not allowing us to let the media ask them about a particularly hot topic - it’s got to be about what the public wants, not what you necessarily want to say.

Kelly: So what should a small company budget for PR if they want to build a regional presence?

Fritz: That’s a great questionand again, it depends on whom you’re trying to reach. You need to look at the scope of what you want to do. What’s your dream list, and then scale it back and budget realistically. Come up with smart PR dollars, and don’t waste your investment. So television interviews may not be needed, when radio will be more effective.

Kelly: Let’s talk about radio in a minute. But first, what are SMTs and VNRs…and why are they beneficial to PR campaigns?

Fritz: A Video News Release (VNR) is a pre-packaged news segment. It looks like anything you’d see on local news - with a reporter in the field, a voiceover, and it’s edited just like news. You then send that to any newsroom and they can pop it in, just like any news piece. So instead of the station having to come out and cover your story, you’re saving them the expense and time. News production has become so much more expensive and producer workload has tripledso this really makes sense because you’re making their life easier, as long as it’s a balanced piece. You can even do a specific style for a specific network.

The SMT is a Satellite Media Tour. This is doing a series of interviews in a studio, with a satellite uplink that connects to any affiliate in the country, with a reporter doing 2-3 minute interviews. You’ll hit one- to two-dozen markets in a couple of hours, which would have cost you far more in travel, lodging, downtime, etc. Smaller companies don’t tend to go this way (there’s a cost of entry starting at about $12k), but once you figure out what it can do for you on a national scope, the dollars make sense. You can also use it for local and regional markets, targeting only those audiences you want to reach.

Elizabeth: Yes, if you want to launch something within a state (for example, a new mass transit system in a region), it’s much more efficient. Local elected officials may not have time to run around to every station in their market, but will have time to go to one studio for an hour or two, and talk to eight different local or regional stations.

Kelly: Okay - back to radio. How can radio boost awareness about PR campaigns?

Elizabeth: Radio is a great option for clients with smaller budgets. It’s also good to mix in with SMTs. Radio is a different audience - they tend to be captive and in the car. There are many different types of programs that are very targeted, so it’s easier to reach a specific audience.

Radio is also a lot cheaper - costs about 50% of SMTs - and has a lot of credibilityit’s really a big up and coming tool.

Again, you need plenty of lead-time for radio, although it’s less complicated than TV. We recommend 4-6 weeks of lead-time, to help with targeting and messaging. And sometimes radio is better because it’s not a visual story.

Fritz: With radio, you can get so specific on your demographic targetso the more you know about your target audience, you can really focus how to spend your dollars.

Kelly: Do you have an opinion on the difference in effectiveness between a straight radio interview vs. an editorial-based audio news release?

Elizabeth: I prefer radio media tours better, because you can attach a person’s name to a story and interact with the anchorand connect better with the audience to build trust.

Kelly: Do you have a specific PR success story you’d like to share?

Elizabeth: We did a satellite media tour for the National Museum of the American Indian. The launch was a huge successwe had 21 interviews lined up for the Museum Director that turned into 91 airings nationwide. One place where we really helped was in targeting the radio stations - many we found were on Native American reservations.

Kelly: So how should people think about “success” - what are the metrics we should consider for PR?

Elizabeth: It really depends on what your goal is: to increase public awareness? to increase museum visits? to sell more books? So we provide statistics on airtimeand encode our broadcasts to see how long they lastand then compare that to ad dollars. Advertisement usually ends up being far more expensive that what they invested for the tour, not to mention the difference in credibility you get from PR vs. ads.

Kelly: So where can people go to learn more?

Fritz: We recommend a couple of websites:

http://www.satellitemediatour.net/
http://www.videonewsrelease.info/
http://www.radiomediatour.com/
http://www.brollproduction.com/

And if you’re in the Washington, DC area, please join Fritz and Elizabeth at PR Nation, Buzz Media’s monthly networking event. For more information visit http://www.buzzmediapr.com or http://www.prnation.org.

(c) TurningPointe Marketing, Inc. All rights reserved.

Marketing educator, Kelly O’Brien, is creator of the Create a TurningPointe! Marketing BootCamp and Advanced Marketing TeleClinic. To learn more about these step-by-step programs, get her FREE 20-page Marketing Guide and more how-to articles, visit www.TurningPointeMarketing.com

Tags: coaching, , , , , marketing, marketing implementation, marketing strategy, marketing strategy implementation

PRIEST

Matthew 25:14-30

The Parable of the Talents

14 “For the kingdom of heaven is like a man traveling to a far country, who called his own servants and delivered his goods to them. 15 And to one he gave five talents, to another two, and to another one, to each according to his own ability; and immediately he went on a journey. 16 Then he who had received the five talents went and traded with them, and made another five talents. 17 And likewise he who had received two gained two more also. 18 But he who had received one went and dug in the ground, and hid his lord’s money. 19 After a long time the lord of those servants came and settled accounts with them.

20 “So he who had received five talents came and brought five other talents, saying, ‘Lord, you delivered to me five talents; look, I have gained five more talents besides them.’ 21 His lord said to him, ‘Well done, good and faithful servant; you were faithful over a few things, I will make you ruler over many things. Enter into the joy of your lord.’ 22 He also who had received two talents came and said, ‘Lord, you delivered to me two talents; look, I have gained two more talents besides them.’ 23 His lord said to him, ‘Well done, good and faithful servant; you have been faithful over a few things, I will make you ruler over many things. Enter into the joy of your lord.’

24 “Then he who had received the one talent came and said, ‘Lord, I knew you to be a hard man, reaping where you have not sown, and gathering where you have not scattered seed. 25 And I was afraid, and went and hid your talent in the ground. Look, there you have what is yours.’

26 “But his lord answered and said to him, ‘You wicked and lazy servant, you knew that I reap where I have not sown, and gather where I have not scattered seed. 27 So you ought to have deposited my money with the bankers, and at my coming I would have received back my own with interest. 28 So take the talent from him, and give it to him who has ten talents.

29 ‘For to everyone who has, more will be given, and he will have abundance; but from him who does not have, even what he has will be taken away. 30 And cast the unprofitable servant into the outer darkness. There will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.’

PRIEST

I am not going to make this a long sermon but I want to stress some points in this story that many people do not know. A talent in this story is a measure of weight and in the times of Jesus, this was a measure of weight of between sixty and eighty pounds. If this was silver then five talents would make a person very rich. Today he would be more then a millionaire.

Well everyone wants to be a millionaire. People say that it takes money to make money, so let say I gave you one talent. Let’s say I gave you $200,000. How many of you couldn’t make some money out of that?

Don It’s good to see you in church. Tell me, you used to be a fisherman. Would two hundred thousand dollars set you up in a good trawler?

DON

I could Captain one and manage another two with that sort of money.
PRIEST

Well Jesus is making a point here. How lazy would a person be if they had two hundred thousand dollars and put it under their bed and did nothing with it.

If you have a talent, God wants you to use that talent and do good for Him and humanity. Don’t push your talents aside and go after money and waste all that money keeping up with the Jones’. You can never have a better car and a better house and a better looking garden then your neighbour’s.

If your talent is knitting, a few dollars a month can have you knitting jumpers in front of the TV and missionaries in poor countries can do a lot of good with those jumpers. What is little money here in Australia is plenty of money in Africa and China.

If you have been given a gift from God, don’t squander your life coveting your neighbour’s possessions and working to have all the best of everything, take some time and money and invest in your talent and become so good at it that it brings in a great reward for God.

If you are a good sower, sow things and let people who are poor be blessed. You never know how a poor person may come to love your God when it’s your jumper keeping them looking smart and warm during a cold winter.

If your gift is singing. Don’t worry about singing up on the lead microphone come and sing in the choir and sing as part of a team. Sing your heart out and get lessons and get better at singing. Who knows one day you might even record a few songs and people could be really blessed with what you do.

If you are good at something, don’t chase money and success with your life, invest some time and money into your talent and make it shine so that the God who gave it to you may get some credit for His wonderful gift He gave you.

There are plenty of people who don’t know God who make their talents shine without Him. Don’t bury your talent, invest it like they have.

I pray that all your readers are blessed by this passage out of a screenplay I am currently writing. I think the priest did a nice short but meaningful sermon on the talents. I pray that you would use your talents to God’s glory.

Matthew writes a few articles a week for this site and would enjoy some feedback at survivors.sanctuary@gmail.com or feedback on the site. Please take the time to read other things he has written on this site.

Tags: Christ, , , Jesus, talent

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