Follow'Lettiquette' When Pitching the Media for Publicity |  | Visited: 2646 |
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| | by George McKenzie November 08, 2003 |
| George McKenzie |
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| George McKenzie
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Unless
you've got a brother-in-law in the business (or a sister-in-law,
of course), one of the the best ways to get the attention of a reporter,
producer, or editor is through a 'pitch letter.'
A pitch
letter is like a news release because it's an appeal for attention
or coverage. But where a news release is more likely to be distributed
en masse, pitch letters are targeted - they go to a specific person
with a specific idea.
Pitch
letters tend to be more personal in nature, so they'll probably
get more attention in the first few seconds. Nonetheless, a pitch
letter MUST follow a certain format, a certain protocol, a certain
etiquette (or 'lettequette, if you will) or it wind up in the same
waste basket as a badly-written news release.
So
how do you do it right?
First,
remember that the overall impression - the way the pitch letter
strikes the eye, the way it looks on first glance - can non-verbally
signal the difference between treasure and trash to a busy reporter,
producer or
assignment editor.
Small
print and big. blocklike paragraphs shout 'You're going to have
to search for the story here.' No one will take the time.
Here
are some other basics, suggested by Joan Stewart in her outstanding
Special Report #7, 'How to Write the Perfect Pitch Letter That Convinces
an Editor to Write About You.'
* Use company letterhead or plain white paper
* Choose
a simple font with type size of at least 10 points
* Single
space your copy with margins of one inch on each
side
* Bold/italics
are okay, but don't overdo them
* Use
bullets to list key points
* Spell
the contact's name correctly, and send it to the right address (you'd
be amazed how often this one gets messed up).
* Snail
mail your pitch letter. Email pitches are a whole separate subject
and I'll cover those in a future ezine.
Follow up by phone and BE CONSCIOUS OF DEADLINES. You'll get
blown off in an instant if you call the 'pitchee' just before a
story has to be completed or they're about to go on the air.
Finally
- and this is more advice from Joan - understand that 'No' doesn't
usually mean 'Never.' It just means 'Not now.' So don't be afraid
to pitch the same contact again at another time.
Think
of pitch 'lettiquette' in baseball terms. Follow the form above
and you'll fire your pitch the right down the middle, making it
attractive for the reporter to take a swing.
The
likely result: a free-publicity home run for you and your business.
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