Why Press Releases Fail And What You Can Do About It
BATTLECALL GUEST
EXPERT: Ameen Kamadia, MortgageMagic.info
The following article is from Paul Krupin. I
have used Paul's service in the past, and it is something you should check out
if you are using press releases to boost your business.
Why News Releases Fail -- The Most Common
Reasons & What to Do About It
By Paul J. Krupin
Sorry about my otaku with this issue (otaku = more than a hobby, a
little less than an obsession).
Many of you may know me, since I run Imediafax, the Internet to
Media Fax Service. I send out over a million news releases a year for people via
fax and email. You probably think that I've got news releases failing on me day
in and day out.
Actually, I don't. The news releases I write and send out for
people do quite well. My clients are quite happy with me because they are
successful with their outreach efforts.
It's the draft news releases that people send to me that are my
problem.
Fixing the problems I see in the news releases people send me
takes forever. It is also very painful.
I've seen a lot of news release failure over the years, and I now
know what the key problems look like and how to fix them.
My plight as a publicist is that I spend a lot of time educating
my clients trying to get them to understand the psychology of dealing with the
media.
The rubber meets the road in the news release because this single
sheet of paper is the key nexus for all communications with the media. The
importance of the copy on a news release cannot be overstated. It has to be free
of negative issues or factors that will reduce or eliminate media interest and
response. One fatal error and it's all over.
So identifying the problems and revising the news releases is
crucial. I spend a tremendous amount of time and effort trying to avoid sending
out news releases with problems still in them.
The issue is that when people send me news releases, it often
takes a long, long time to identify and communicate the problems, and then more
time again to explain and negotiate all the word changes with the clients, and
more time still to finalize the news release and have it ready and approved for
transmittal.
Honestly it can be very painful for all involved. I'm quite
brutal on my clients, since their success is all that matters. I don't pull any
punches. My comment process can bruise a lot of highly inflated egos of some
otherwise very accomplished people, on the way to a problem free news release
that maximizes the chances of success when finally sent. Lots of people think
they can write a news release. Very few of them can do it very well.
They simply haven't followed the media response to enough news
releases to learn the errors that are made when they write news releases. They
haven't yet learned what the mistakes are, so there is no learning from
continuous improvement.
This is where the blood, sweat and tears of the copywriting
business is truly found. It gets even tougher when another professional
publicist wrote the news release for the client. Now the client is getting
opposing advice from two professionals. One says "Make it Hot" and the other
says "Cool it". What's a publicist to do?
So my motivations for doing this article are really quite selfish.
I want to spend less time doing this. My life will be significantly improved if
my clients send me news releases that take less time and energy to fix. Very
simply, for each and every news release that comes in and doesn't have these
problems, I'll free myself to spend more time doing things that are more
profitable for my clients and me.
The issues listed here have all been identified as reasons for
the failure of a news release. This is based on over 20 years of experience in
dealing with the aftermath the actual number and quality of responses
generated from the transmittal of a news release.
So here are the most common reasons why news releases fail:
1. You wrote an advertisement. It's not a news release at all. It
sells product. It fails to offer solid news of real tangible interest,
value-added information, education or entertainment.
2. You wrote for a minority, not for a majority of people in the
audience. You simply won't compete with other news releases that clearly are
written for a larger demographic of the media audience.
3. You are the center of attention, not the media audience. You
focus on your business and your marketing, instead of things the editor and his
or her audience will be interested in.
4. You forgot to put the five W's up front. (WHO, WHAT, WHERE,
WHEN and WHY THE AUDIENCE WILL BE INTERESTED). You didn't clearly and succinctly
tell the media why the audience would be interested in this.
5. You are too wordy and text dense. You focused on details and
minutia, instead of the most important ideas, issues, factors, facts, and news
angles. You fail to address the real significant impacts your story has on
people.
6. You place too much information on one page the one page
news release has a font size so small an editor needs a magnifying glass to read
it.
7. You included corporate logos and other non-persuasive low value
added graphics that distract the editor from your key message. You may have also
used an unusual fancy font or a file format that turns to gobbledygook when it
goes through a fax machine.
8. You wrote a personally biased article for the media to publish,
instead of pitching the idea to the media and the objective reasons why the mdia
audience will be interested.
9. You wrote about features and facts, and forgot to explain what
it means to real people. Tell a story about real people. Add in real life human
interest.
10. You wrote about how your news ties in to someone else's fame
and glory. Forget it. Never stand in the shadow of someone else. Make your own
light. Tell your own story.
11. Your news release responds to something that just happened.
You're too late. You're behind the eight ball. Forget it. Get out in front of
the news.
12. You included too much hype, self-laudatory praise, pithy
quotes, useless testimonials, jargon or gobbledygook. Get rid of it.
13. You may have also identified prior media coverage, which
indicates it's no longer a new issue. Get rid of it. Let each news release stand
on it's own two feet.
14. You tried to impress and be clever or innovative but you come
off naïve, less than expert, biased, flippant, arrogant, or crazy. Tone it down.
Get straight.
15. You made vague and unsubstantiated claims, or wild and
outrageous claims, or you included a statement that simply rubs the media the
wrong way. Get rid of them.
16. You are trying to be different, just for the sake of it, but
you come off eccentric. Forget it. Don't create a false or inflated image. Be
yourself.
17. You wrote a rant and rave, worthy of a letter to the editor,
instead of a problem solving tips article, worthy of a feature story. Decide
what you want, put your best effort into it.
18. You are simply not credible. It could be your ideas are simply
not well thought out, or that you have offered old well-worn material, or that
you are too extreme or controversial, or not qualified. You may not be expert
enough, or sufficiently qualified, to make the statements, compared to others in
your field. You need to present information that qualifies you properly and
adequately.
19. You provided poor contact information. You need to identify
the best single point of contact and the correct phone number so interested
media can reach you and get the best possible attention and response from you to
meet their needs. One key person, one phone, no fax, one email address, and one
URL (with no long string addresses).
20. You did not include a clear media call for action. You didn't
tell the media what you want them to do with your news release. You need to tell
them what you are asking for or suggesting or offering. Then you need to offer
the media incentives value-added reasons to do so, like free review copies, free
test samples, interview questions and answers, media kits with story angles and
stats and data, relevant photographs, etc.
21. You did not incorporate and integrate a primary response
mechanism. You need to include a value-added reason, which motivates the editor
to publish or mention your contact information, which will generate calls,
traffic, interviews, or requests for more information. This usually means
something unique and of special value to the audience, that the editor feels
good about mentioning. Use an offer for a free problem solving report.
22. You sent the release to the wrong media. Target the media that
your clients read, watch and listen to when they are in the right mood, that is,
receptive to hearing about your news, and willing to take action when they get
your message. Work with your publicist to target the right media.
23. You rely on a single fax or an email to produce an avalanche
of media calls. You conduct no follow up. Get real. Follow up properly and you
can triple or quadruple your media response rate. Better still, you can ask the
editors "what can I give you to support a feature story and meet your
needs".
Finally, the biggest reason for news release failure is one of
attitude. How do you define success or failure? It's called unrealistic
expectations.
Get real. You won't get rich off one news release. You're chances
of getting famous are just about as slim.
You might be able to break even.
Look at your investment and compare it to what you need to break
even on your investment. If you need to sell 100 books to cover the costs of a
$500 outreach effort, you need ten articles because each article only produces
ten sales. So that's your break even goal. More books per article, means less
articles will satisfy your needs.
You may simply have to be realistic and understand that while you
are wildly interested in the topic, it may not have the broad general public
interest that you have for the subject. If you wrote an article that has local
interest and you expect national media to pay attention, think again.
If you want to be on the Oprah Winfrey Show, then you'd better
pray because chances of doing it off one news release are very slim, near zero
in fact. Get real. If she calls, then congratulations are in order. But don't
count on it.
If you wrote an advertisement and wanted a feature story and
interviews, don't be surprised if the only media to call is the advertising
manager offering you a package deal. You get what you ask for. What you offer is
often times what you will get.
Even if you do get publicity, it may not come out exactly the way
you want it. More often than not, the bigger the media, the less likely they are
to run contact information.
Often times, the quality may be there while the numbers are
not.
One or two quality media responses may be what you want or need.
If you get that, it's a success.
One article in USA Today may out perform ten articles in small
dailies and weeklies in the mid-west.
On the other hand, it may not. The small high quality articles may
outperform the small mention in the big media.
Similarly, one quality 30-minute interview on a well-liked talk
show on a radio station in the middle of nowhere out in the mid-west, will
likely outsell a five-minute interview on an Arbitron rated radio station in the
middle of the morning talk show in a major metropolitan area. You can't tell the
listening quality of the audience.
So when you write a news release please review it against these
criteria to see if you've made any of these errors. Then fix each and every one
of them yourself, and when you are done, feel free to send me your final draft.
I'll be happy to take a look at it.
So listen to your publicist. Heed these warnings and reduce the
risks of failure. Fail to pay attention to these issues, proceed at your own
risk.
Paul J. Krupin is the author of the book
"Trash Proof News Releases" and creator of IMEDIAFAX - The Internet to Media
Fax Service. Ameen Kamadia, "The Millionaire Loan
Officer" is a mortgage consultant, coach and trainer. For dozens of free
articles on mortgage marketing and cheap marketing ideas visit:
http://www.mortgagebrokertraining.com/mortgagemagic.htm
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