"How 
                to Write Press Releases that Get Published"
              by Paul J. Krupin 
              Do you want to know the secret of writing a news release that 
                will get published? Here it is:  
              My secret for publicity success, developed from rigorous self 
                assessment, after having sent out over a million faxed news releases 
                on behalf of over 2,000 clients:  
              "Tell me a story, give me a local news angle, touch my heart 
                (make me laugh or cry), hit me in my pocketbook, make my stomach 
                turn over, or grab my gonads."  
              Do this as many times as possible in a one page news release 
                in 30 seconds or less and you will succeed in getting publicity. 
               
              A few years ago I spoke at the National Public Relations Society 
                meetings in Omaha. I found out that most publicists at most big 
                PR firms don't have a real clue about how to write a news release 
                to get news coverage. They write corporate fluff.  
              Rarely do you see them create something that makes an editor 
                drop what he’s doing and pick up the phone and call. And 
                yet this is what you want an editor to do.  
              Few people who write a news release really think about what they 
                want the editor to do after they receive and read a news release. 
               
              I’ve been sending out news releases for people for almost 
                22 years, and most of the people who come to me initially write 
                detailed book reviews or commercial news and web site announcements, 
                not short ideas for articles intended to attract editors’ 
                attention and get a dialog going that results in a feature story 
                published.  
              I often have to tell them to start over or shift gears.  
              A lot has to do with the content and quality of the book, product 
                service or web site, but let's just assume that you've written 
                the be-all, end-all of whatever subject in your field. This is 
                the ultimate sensation. The only thing anyone will ever need or 
                want. You're all charged up and revved up to go. Now what...  
              A Publicity Plan!  
              Yes! A Publicity Plan.  
              First, establish your goals for the release. Write them down. 
                Memorize them. Sleep on it. Wake up and think about them some 
                more.  
              Remember you have to integrate your marketing with your PR and 
                keep it all within your budget. So identify what you have available 
                and write down how much you want to spend -- and on what -- and 
                when -- and with whom.  
              Let's assume your goal is getting the word out about your product. 
                It could be an initial announcement. It could be part of a year-long 
                monthly campaign to a well targeted media list (again and again 
                to get name recognition).  
              Look at your schedule and see that this week your task is at 
                hand.  
              You want to get an article published in as many places as possible, 
                to feed sales, acquire name recognition, drive web traffic, all 
                of the above, or whatever. These are common goals.  
              Now it’s time to be more specific. Narrow your options 
                and tighten the true alternatives you wish to seriously consider. 
                Think strategically. Narrow the goals and keep it as simple as 
                can be.  
              Whatever your specific publicity goals, you need to be mindful 
                of the types of news releases that can be written: · Print 
                releases for feature stories · Op-Eds Tips articles  
              Event announcements  
              Radio and TV interview releases  
              Product or services releases  
              Query letters  
              Internet News Releases  
              E-mail news releases  
              All these can produce publicity success. But writing each type 
                of release entails arraying different information into a different 
                format and style of presentation. Each release has a different 
                purpose and asks the editor or producer to take a different action. 
                And doing any of these well in order to succeed is a daunting 
                challenge.  
              Every year I complete a qualitative review of our custom news 
                distribution and the relative success people have been having 
                in getting published as a result of sending fax and e-mail news 
                releases. We analyze this data to see what works and what doesn’t 
                work. We ask our clients what got published and where, and how 
                much publicity or success they experienced as a result. While 
                this is by no means statistically definitive, it is nonetheless 
                useful.  
              We've seen one page releases sent to targeted media lists result 
                in successful publicity (defined loosely as having resulted in 
                either wide national publicity, a significant number > 35, 
                top national interviews or bookings, or profit) for book authors, 
                publishing companies, product firms, and government agencies, 
                whose one-page news releases took one of the following approaches. 
               
              So no matter what type of news release you write, you will increase 
                your chances of success if it incorporates one or more of the 
                following. Here's what appears to be working the best: · 
                human interest angles -- particularly with heartwarming anecdotal 
                stories that reveal deep emotion or feelings with bright, colorful 
                word pictures, and enriched sensory experience · interpersonal 
                relationships on difficult or controversial issues -- focus on 
                love, sex, money, communications between men and women, parents 
                and children, companies, and employees, government and individuals, 
               
              tips articles advice and tactics excerpted from books, ten commandments, 
                ten tips, etc.  
              unusual events -- unique personal accomplishments, unusual creative 
                ideas  
              humor and wisdom, fun and tragedy  
              really new and unique products or books Internet innovations 
                and developments  
              politically and socially important editorial tie - in articles 
                 
                holiday and event tie in articles  
              At least in my humble opinion, for those of you writing news 
                releases or seeking publicity, your chances of success are likely 
                to be increased if you follow one of these formats.  
              Even when you do, you will maximize your success if you give 
                the editor a "local news angle". Localizing news releases 
                maximizes the publication of your release in weekly and daily 
                newspapers. The easiest publicity to get is the announcement of 
                a local event with a distinct local human interest angle. You 
                don’t have to do the editors work for him, but the idea 
                that the news release can be easily adapted to appeal to local 
                needs must be very clear.  
              Sometimes getting national publicity is harder, especially in 
                mainstream publications. You need to have a news angle that has 
                some interest at a national level. You also will compete against 
                everyone else vying for attention in the nation, and you have 
                to distinguish why your release is worth publishing over others. 
                 
                 
                You can make your job easier and be more successful by breaking 
                 
                your national media lists into geographically distinct areas and 
                localizing the release.  
              You can create custom media lists on the Internet at the Internet 
                to Media Fax: Click Here.  
              Even once you've identified you target media, settled on a type 
                of news release, it all comes down to writing the actual release. 
                Assuming you are aiming at print (radio/tv releases are a different 
                animal) -- here's my advice.  
              Bottom line -- find out what works specifically in the media 
                you want to be in and use my special simple technique for publicity 
                and news release success.  
              The Identify, Imitate and Innovate Technique  
              Go to a newsstand, and pick up the latest issues of every relevant 
                magazine or publication you can find. The ones you want to be 
                in. Spend at least . Then dissect each magazine for book articles. 
                Use yellow stickies, or cut these out and make a scrapbook. Study 
                the publications closely and see how they write book articles 
                and reviews. Make a list of the headlines. Study the style, length, 
                focus, content, word choice.  
              Then start writing by imitating the articles you see. Remember 
                most of the small articles (which are the easiest to get published 
                are one page 200 words.  
              Then Innovate it. Re-write it fifteen times. Make it Short and 
                Snappy. Vary the character of your news release to the media you 
                are aiming at.  
              You've written the end all of all books in the field. Or you’ve 
                created the best product in the world. This is the ultimate sensation. 
                The only book or product anyone will ever need. Get enthused. 
                Now tell people why you are enthused in 150 to 200 words.  
              Read it out loud as if you were live on the air -- see if it 
                sounds good.  
              By the way, good short articles in newspapers and magazines are 
                often read on radio stations and on talk shows every day, especially 
                on morning radio talk shows. This has happened to me. Listen closely 
                when it happens. Remember what the radio announcer is doing. He's 
                reading a paper or magazine on the air. Wow -- a force multiplier 
                effect. Like being seen on Oprah and getting asked to do an interview 
                with People magazine (This happened to my client Courtney Garton. 
                You can see the 7/27/98 edition of People magazine). It also happened 
                to my client Ms. Karen Derrico, author of Unforgettable Mutts. 
                She did an interview on a small radio station in New York City, 
                and was heard by William Safire, who then wrote about the Million 
                Mutt March on Mother’s day in Washington DC in his column 
                in the New York Times.  
              A news release has to sing to you before you send it to me, if 
                I am to make you the best possible custom targeted media list 
                I possibly can.  
              Best way I know to make it right is to follow in the footsteps 
                of the successful before you.  
               
              Paul J. Krupin (author of the best selling ebook "Trash 
                Proof News Releases") is an acknowledged authority on 
                PR and Media, with over 2,000 top-notch clients. In his book Paul 
                Krupin reveals the secrets on how you can get the publicity you 
                deserve so that your product or business will benefit tremendously 
                from the media exposure. 
              
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