Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas - How to Tap in to the Holiday Publicity Bonanza |  | Visited: 1945 |
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| | by Bill Stoller August 22, 2003 |
| Bill Stoller |
About
the Author:
Bill
Stoller, the "Publicity Insider", has spent
two decades as one of America's top publicists. Now, through his
website, eZine and subscription newsletter, Free Publicity: The
Newsletter for PR-Hungry Businesses http://www.PublicityInsider.com/freepub.asp
, he's sharing -- for the very first time -- his secrets of scoring
big publicity. For free articles, killer publicity tips and much,
much more, visit Bill's exclusive new site: http://www.publicityInsider.com |
| Bill Stoller
has written 2 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Bill Stoller... |
If your product or service can be given as a gift, a publicity windfall
awaits at the end of the year - but you need to start working in
June. Each December, media outlets cover the newest, the hottest
and the most unusual Holiday gifts. The reporters assigned to develop
these pieces typically depend on two sources of information:
1.
Phone interviews with local store owners
2.
Press materials that have been sent by publicity seekers.
Let's
deal with Point 1. Here's a cool trick: In early November,
write a letter to stores and major websites that carry your product.
Remind them that they may be hearing from journalists soon about
hot gift ideas, and request that they consider mentioning your product
when that happens. Point out a few reasons why your product is the
newest, coolest, best or whatever. Ask the vendor to drop you an
e-mail or give you a call if a story results that mentions your
product.
Now,
on to old-fashioned publicity. When to contact the media depends
on the publication or program's lead time (how far in advance
of publication or airing the material is developed). Magazines like
Woman's Day have a lead time up to six months, so get materials
to them now. Newspapers have a lead time as short as a week for
feature material, so send materials in November. In between are
wire services, medium-lead magazines, "in-flight" magazines
and others. To learn the lead time of a particular media outlet,
call the editorial department. If that doesn't work, try the
advertising department.
What
you send should be kept simple -- a press release about your product/service,
a pitch letter explaining why it's such a great gift idea,
and, if applicable, a disk with color product photos. See our articles
"How to Write a Great Pitch Letter" http://www.publicityinsider.com/pitch.asp
and "How to Write a Great Press Release" http://www.publicityinsider.com/release.asp
for more details.
As
you craft the materials, think about where your product/service
fits. Based on its nature, cost, rarity or usefulness, it may work
with a variety of typical Christmas Gift stories such as: Great
Stocking Stuffer Ideas, Gifts for Teenagers, Gifts for the Person
Who Has It All, Gifts for Executives, Gifts that Relax, etc. By
suggesting a category for your product, rather than simply stating
"Here's a product that would make a nice holiday gift",
you're making yourself stand out -- and maybe even giving
the journalist an idea for a story angle that he or she wouldn't
have thought about otherwise. Either way, your chances of getting
coverage are greatly improved.
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