Reporters Are Scary People…NOT!

On April 29, 2010, in Featured, Marketing, Marketing Books, Messaging, by Nettie Hartsock
A vox pop interview
Image via Wikipedia

Every once in awhile I’m amazed by how many PR people, who’ve actually never had the experience of being a journalist, write “how-to” articles focused around what you should and should not do in interviews with journalists!

I am a card carrying member of the Internet Press Guild and the Online News Association. Having been a journalist/reporter online since 1996, I can tell you that journalists are people too. They’re just like us. They’re trying to do their job well, get paid and stay alive in what has become an increasingly competitive and low pay market.

The majority of journalists write because they love to write. They want to create good stories – they’re not out to get trap you in an interview or take things out of context. I’m speaking primarily in terms of major offline and online publications, not tabloids.

Journalists are not out to get you, they are out to get the story. The story includes your personality so the best thing you can do is be yourself. Don’t be a robot, be a real person. Stop listening to PR flaks who tell you that you have to ONLY talk about your brand or in polished soundbites.

Good content comes from good conversations, real conversations where you present the full picture of your life. Good reporters create amazing stories by making authentic connections with their interviewees.

When I was a full-time dot com journalist you would be amazed at how many CXO level interviews I did where it was heartening to find out the CEO or business leader had a life outside of just their job and their title. In fact, I always tried to share a little bit about my life (stay-at-home Mom wearing journalist cape by day and night between storytime, naps and Cheerios on the floor), and what that did is help my interviewees feel comfortable to share their real lives as well.

Putting the heart first in connecting with journalists who interview you will keep you in their hearts, and more importantly their contact Rolodex, much longer than if you simply choose to not interact with them on a real human level.

Oftentimes the most interesting part of a story comes from you and the journalist realizing you have more in common than just the story. What some PR flaks consider small talk is actually gem talk. These little beautiful gems that come through connecting on a real level with one another.

As a bonus, if you become a source of bigger insight than just your brand, it will help the journalist depend on you for other stories long-term.

Reporters are generous, smart, hard-working writers and their goal is to create valuable content, help them do that by being a valuable human first, and brand spokesperson second.

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7 Ways to Kiss Your Publicist Goodbye

1. Make your site a mini-magazine issue of thought-leadership. Look at your site as though it’s a real publication for both your peers and the media to source for news. Build an editorial calendar for all your online tools including Twitter, Linkedin.com (status updates), Facebook and make sure you’re congruent in your content and your expertise.

2. Make sure you’re linking outside your blog to other news sources and stories by journalists. As a recovering technology journalist (1996-2004) I can tell you that all journalists love to have their names or links to stories, surface in Google alerts and they really love to show those to their editor as well.  You’re also giving them new sources of experts to look at when you write about stories they’ve covered and what your take is on the story.

3. Build a set of Google alerts on topics you’re most interested in and let those Google alerts give you ideas for new pieces of content on your blog, your Twitter and your Facebook pages. Don’t just stop at  posting those story links, go and comment on the stories at the sites they’re on and that will help you with building link-love to your site.

4. Don’t purposely be contrarian to the news. Be the person who lends a new angle or insight to a story.

5. Make sure you’re reading the online and offline magazines in your vertical and studying how their stories are created, who they source and where you can contribute bylines.

6. Have a website that encompasses a Web 2.0 press ready page. This includes your TwitterID, Facebook, Linkedin.com, YouTube channel and one pager about your expertise.

7. Put Google alerts on journalists’ names so you can build a clip file of what they’re covering and who they write for. More and more the online media is made up of freelance writers so don’t leave them out of the mix.

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Be A Mighty Social Media Force

On August 31, 2009, in Featured, by Nettie Hartsock

NEW YORK - APRIL 22:  The 'Earth Ball' is seen...
Image by Getty Images via Daylife
This is the true joy in life – being used for a purpose recognized by yourself as a mighty one; being thoroughly worn out before you are thrown on the scrap heap; being a force of nature instead of a feverish selfish little clod of ailments and grievances complaining that the world will not devote itself to making you happy.” ~George Bernard Shaw

As the modes of monetizing social media continue to expand, it’s very important to keep in mind that each person can be a mighty social media force for all things good.

When we just think about social media in terms of how much money it can make us, how many books it can sell, how many CDs are bought – we can lose the very important piece of how social media can change the world for better.

Here are 5 Tips for Being a Mighty Social Media Force:

1. Don’t be a back to me social media poster child. Always think of how you can mightily expand everyone’s endeavors, not just your own.

2. Focus more on how your social media can empower, instead of the increase it might bring to your bottom line. (Secret - If you do good, you will do well.)

3. Don’t be stingy – share your ideas freely.

4. Power abundant link-love – link to other folks who are brilliant and share their posts as well with your readers.

5. Be real – be the same offline as you are online. Don’t be incongruent.

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The World’s Greatest Collection of Lies – Guy Kawasaki

On July 21, 2009, in Featured, by Nettie Hartsock

This is a great collection annotated and put together by Guy, you must read it! I particularly like the one on Marketers that’s at the top of the list, “Our PR firm says it can get Walt Mossberg to review our product.” It’s not clear who is dumber: your PR firm for saying this or your marketers for believing it. Walt reviews about fifty products a year, so the odds are not good that yours will be one of them. Certainly, no PR firm can guarantee a review.”

No PR firm can ever guarantee coverage. When you are working with a PR firm either online or offline, there are no guarantees of coverage. If they are a good firm, the guarantee is that they will do everything they can to bring your product, book, CD to the awareness of the folks who hopefully will pick them up for coverage.

If you’re working with a pay-for-play PR firm, it’s different and I’m not a fan of those firms that  guarantee coverage or pickup depending on the amount you pay for each slot.

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