Testimonials and Letters to the Editor
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by Marcia Yudkin November 05, 2003
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| Marcia Yudkin |
About
the Author:
Marcia
Yudkin <marcia@yudkin.com>
is the author of the classic guide to comprehensive PR, "6
Steps to Free Publicity," now for sale in an updated edition
at Amazon.com and in bookstores everywhere. She also spills the
secrets on advanced tactics for today's publicity seekers in "Powerful,
Painless Online Publicity," available from www.yudkin.com/powerpr.htm.
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| Marcia Yudkin
has written 18 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Marcia Yudkin... |
Of
all the marvelous opportunities offered by the Internet to get publicity
without paying for it, two of the least- used methods are writing
testimonials for companies, books and Web sites and penning letters
to the editor.
Every
time you're happy with a service performed for you or a product
you've purchased, instead of simply saying "Thank you"
or keeping your contentment to yourself, consider writing a blurb
expressing why you were satisfied, pleased or ecstatic and emailing
it to the company responsible. End your message of praise, "And
feel free to quote me on this," and very often the recipient
will do exactly that. So long as you follow two additional guidelines,
when your testimonial gets added to a well-trafficked Web site,
you can count on it generating click-throughs to your site.
First,
within the body of your praise, mention what you do or what your
company is up to. For example, "Your whooziwhatsit performed
like a dream when we used it during our new all-female production
of 'Hamlet'" or "For anyone like us who helps recruit
college presidents and other educational leaders, your service couldn't
be more valuable." Second, include your site's URL when you
sign off. Use the full "http://www" format, and anyone
becoming curious about you from your comments can easily hop over
and visit you, even if the site using your words didn't install
a formal hyperlink.
The
same tips apply when you read a book that you liked in your professional
field of interest. Even if you bought it at a real-world bookstore,
you can submit comments about the book at amazon.com, barnesandnoble.com
and elsewhere. In your review, find occasion to state how the book
was valuable to you in your line of work, namely such and such.
For example, "I read this book when our company, WashWorks,
was launching our portable washing machine. It warned us away from
so many pitfalls of new product introduction that TravelWasher became
an immediate success. Thank you!" Add a few more points that
you appreciated in the book so this doesn't sound like bald self-promotion.
When
you read an article about or for your industry that hits home, do
the same. Write a letter to the editor agreeing or disagreeing with
the piece or adding some perspective the writer didn't mention.
Such letters must be timely - submitted within a week, usually,
of the original distribution of the article. They must also be concise
- 100-200 words is ideal. As previously explained for testimonials,
they should also contain a substantive and interesting reference
to what you do.
Some
publications select just a few letters for their print edition and
publish more at their Web site, while others receive so little feedback
that they use just about everything. When you're responding to an
article in a high- circulation print magazine or a Web site read
by many movers and shakers in your industry, your letter gets distribution
to recipients you might not have had access to otherwise. |