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Atricle Dump - Three Ways to Invest Time + Money In PR
Employee Burn Out Prevention an also use it for local and regional markets, targeting only those audiences you want to reach.Employees who are motivated are the assets, even secret to the success of successful companies. However, these employees aren't robot nor machines. They can feel pressure, be overwhelmed, or even worse, be burned-out. Recognizing and preventing symptoms of burn-out will save your company and your employees from self-destruction. Organizational psychologist David Javitch, PhD, names the most common signs of burn-out. According to him, the most telltale signs of burn-out include a decline in productivity. It is most noticeable when a highly productive employee starts turning in mediocre work. Lateness, leaving on the dot, leaving work early, prolonged breaks, and increasing absences are the most common actions of burned-out employees. He also named the simplest means to prevent it such as employee scheduling, employee training, employee rights, employee performance, employee time, employee incentives, and regular evaluation.Employee scheduling Rotating employee's schedule may re Elizabeth: Yes, if you want to launch something within a state (for example, a new mass transit system in a region), it’s much more efficient. Local elected officials may not have time to run around to every station in their market, but will have time to go to one studio for an hour or two, and talk to eight different local or regional stations. Kelly: Okay – back to radio. How can radio boost awareness about PR campaigns? Elizabeth: Radio is a great option for clients with smaller budgets. It’s also good to mix in with SMTs. Radio is a different audience – they tend to be captive and in the car. There are many different types of programs that are very targeted, so it’s easier to reach a specific audience. Radio is also a lot cheaper – costs about 50% of SMTs – and has a lot of credibility…it’s really a big up and coming tool. Again, you need plenty of lead-time for radio, although it’s less complicated than TV. We recommend 4-6 weeks of lead-time, to help with targeting and messaging. And sometimes radio is better because it’s not a visual story. Frit Top Five Ways To Market Your Business On The Internet In my recent interview with Buzz Media’s Elizabeth Pereira and Fritz Chaleff, we discussed the basics of these not-so-basic approaches. Read on for how to get lots of attention for your story, using these wise investments of your time and money.Marketing your online business can be a huge part of your budget especially when you're first starting out. Finding ways to get your name in front of your customer that doesn't cost a fortune will help you draw sales while you're working on getting ranked in the search engines.Below are the top five ways to market your business on the internet. The ideas listed are not only inexpensive but are highly effective as well. However, before you even consider using one of these strategies, there are two things you must first do.The first is to write a formal marketing plan. If you're getting close to opening your business, a marketing plan should already be done as part of your company's business plan. However, it's true that many who start online businesses fail to write a business plan. If this is the case, just be sure to at least get your marketing plan formalized before you start doing business. Getting your marketing plan thought through and documented is the minimum you shou Kelly: When should people consider PR in their marketing efforts? Elizabeth: PR should be included in every marketing plan you develop…from the very beginning of a new product being launched or a policy coming out. Use it heavily in the beginning to establish a brand, then level out over time. It’s also a good tool for handling crisis down the road. For consumer-related messages, PR really builds credibility quickly – 40-50% of your budget isn’t unreasonable. Fritz: The traditional view is that product marketing should go with ads, not PR…and that issues and position-related launches should use op-eds and PR. But I see it as actually the opposite…for example a good story on NPR will do more than, say, ads. Think of PR to launch a brand, and advertising to maintain it. Kelly: What advice to you have for someone just learning about PR for their business or organization? Fritz: PR is a process – it’s not a one-time hit or magic bullet. Just like networking or in social experiences, it takes time to develop trust and credibility. So just one press release in a vacuum won’t do it. This is really a cornerstone. One thing that really helps is planning – even if it’s a year out…you need to be thinking about it now. Actually, you really need to be thinking and talking internally about it all the time. All of your employees are diplomats and ambassadors of your company. So all the internal communications need to be aligned, with policies on if or how to talk with the press, the general public…talking points are key, as is training. Protect your brand by getting everyone on the same page. Kelly: So what’s the one thing you wish your clients would do that would make it easier for you to help them in their publicity efforts? Elizabeth: Bring us into the planning process early on. Often, clients will sit down at the beginning of the year when they get their budget and plan, but don’t include their PR team until much later. You need to think through angles and pitches early on – and be thinking strategically…not just about tactics. Fritz: Then there’s the media schedule – if you want to do big pushes in February, realize that you’re competing with the Super Bowl, Grammy’s and Oscars. Even if you’re local and on a smaller scale, there’s an annual cycle that you need to take into consideration. Elizabeth: There are things you should plan around, unless you can relate your topic to these things. Fritz: The other thing is for clients to understand the difference between the story and how it’s pitched. We had a client who shot themselves in the foot by not allowing us to let the media ask them about a particularly hot topic – it’s got to be about what the public wants, not what you necessarily want to say. Kelly: So what should a small company budget for PR if they want to build a regional presence? Fritz: That’s a great question…and again, it depends on whom you’re trying to reach. You need to look at the scope of what you want to do. What’s your dream list, and then scale it back and budget realistically. Come up with smart PR dollars, and don’t waste your investment. So television interviews may not be needed, when radio will be more effective. Kelly: Let’s talk about radio in a minute. But first, what are SMTs and VNRs...and why are they beneficial to PR campaigns? Fritz: A Video News Release (VNR) is a pre-packaged news segment. It looks like anything you’d see on local news – with a reporter in the field, a voiceover, and it’s edited just like news. You then send that to any newsroom and they can pop it in, just like any news piece. So instead of the station having to come out and cover your story, you’re saving them the expense and time. News production has become so much more expensive and producer workload has tripled…so this really makes sense because you’re making their life easier, as long as it’s a balanced piece. You can even do a specific style for a specific network. The SMT is a Satellite Media Tour. This is doing a series of interviews in a studio, with a satellite uplink that connects to any affiliate in the country, with a reporter doing 2-3 minute interviews. You’ll hit one- to two-dozen markets in a couple of hours, which would have cost you far more in travel, lodging, downtime, etc. Smaller companies don’t tend to go this way (there’s a cost of entry starting at about $12k), but once you figure out what it can do for you on a national scope, the dollars make sense. You can also use it for local and regional markets, targeting only those audiences you want to reach. Elizabeth: Yes, if you want to launch something within a state (for example, a new mass transit system in a region), it’s much more efficient. Local elected officials may not have time to run around to every station in their market, but will have time to go to one studio for an hour or two, and talk to eight different local or regional stations. Kelly: Okay – back to radio. How can radio boost awareness about PR campaigns? Elizabeth: Radio is a great option for clients with smaller budgets. It’s also good to mix in with SMTs. Radio is a different audience – they tend to be captive and in the car. There are many different types of programs that are very targeted, so it’s easier to reach a specific audience. Radio is also a lot cheaper – costs about 50% of SMTs – and has a lot of credibility…it’s really a big up and coming tool. Again, you need plenty of lead-time for radio, although it’s less complicated than TV. We recommend 4-6 weeks of lead-time, to help with targeting and messaging. And sometimes radio is better because it’s not a visual story. Fritz Blinking - Control It Or Show Your Worst e-time hit or magic bullet. Just like networking or in social experiences, it takes time to develop trust and credibility. So just one press release in a vacuum won’t do it. This is really a cornerstone. One thing that really helps is planning – even if it’s a year out…you need to be thinking about it now.Ever become suddenly aware of your eyes blinking?When your eyes are blinking more than 30x per minute – you are under excessive ‘stress’. Of course you are not ‘counting’ blinks-per-minute – but you instinctive know when it is out-of-sync.When you notice other people blinking – a lot of eye-lashes flickering – they often are lying through their …!Normal is 15 to 30 blinks per minute, and it is directly linked to our ‘emotions’. Excessive blinking interferes with your ‘concentration’ – reducing it up to 25%.Blinking is one of those things like blood pressure, heartbeat, and breathing that are ‘invisible’ to us. When you become aware of your own or another’s blinking – something serious is up. Pay attention.Weird FactsMental patients go into blinking overdrive when the subject under discussion causes them anxiety or tenseness.Most folks blink around 20 closures per second when they are relaxed. Each blink lasts just one-quarter of a second.< Actually, you really need to be thinking and talking internally about it all the time. All of your employees are diplomats and ambassadors of your company. So all the internal communications need to be aligned, with policies on if or how to talk with the press, the general public…talking points are key, as is training. Protect your brand by getting everyone on the same page. Kelly: So what’s the one thing you wish your clients would do that would make it easier for you to help them in their publicity efforts? Elizabeth: Bring us into the planning process early on. Often, clients will sit down at the beginning of the year when they get their budget and plan, but don’t include their PR team until much later. You need to think through angles and pitches early on – and be thinking strategically…not just about tactics. Fritz: Then there’s the media schedule – if you want to do big pushes in February, realize that you’re competing with the Super Bowl, Grammy’s and Oscars. Even if you’re local and on a smaller scale, there’s an annual cycle that you need to take into consideration. Elizabeth: There are things you should plan around, unless you can relate your topic to these things. Fritz: The other thing is for clients to understand the difference between the story and how it’s pitched. We had a client who shot themselves in the foot by not allowing us to let the media ask them about a particularly hot topic – it’s got to be about what the public wants, not what you necessarily want to say. Kelly: So what should a small company budget for PR if they want to build a regional presence? Fritz: That’s a great question…and again, it depends on whom you’re trying to reach. You need to look at the scope of what you want to do. What’s your dream list, and then scale it back and budget realistically. Come up with smart PR dollars, and don’t waste your investment. So television interviews may not be needed, when radio will be more effective. Kelly: Let’s talk about radio in a minute. But first, what are SMTs and VNRs...and why are they beneficial to PR campaigns? Fritz: A Video News Release (VNR) is a pre-packaged news segment. It looks like anything you’d see on local news – with a reporter in the field, a voiceover, and it’s edited just like news. You then send that to any newsroom and they can pop it in, just like any news piece. So instead of the station having to come out and cover your story, you’re saving them the expense and time. News production has become so much more expensive and producer workload has tripled…so this really makes sense because you’re making their life easier, as long as it’s a balanced piece. You can even do a specific style for a specific network. The SMT is a Satellite Media Tour. This is doing a series of interviews in a studio, with a satellite uplink that connects to any affiliate in the country, with a reporter doing 2-3 minute interviews. You’ll hit one- to two-dozen markets in a couple of hours, which would have cost you far more in travel, lodging, downtime, etc. Smaller companies don’t tend to go this way (there’s a cost of entry starting at about $12k), but once you figure out what it can do for you on a national scope, the dollars make sense. You can also use it for local and regional markets, targeting only those audiences you want to reach. Elizabeth: Yes, if you want to launch something within a state (for example, a new mass transit system in a region), it’s much more efficient. Local elected officials may not have time to run around to every station in their market, but will have time to go to one studio for an hour or two, and talk to eight different local or regional stations. Kelly: Okay – back to radio. How can radio boost awareness about PR campaigns? Elizabeth: Radio is a great option for clients with smaller budgets. It’s also good to mix in with SMTs. Radio is a different audience – they tend to be captive and in the car. There are many different types of programs that are very targeted, so it’s easier to reach a specific audience. Radio is also a lot cheaper – costs about 50% of SMTs – and has a lot of credibility…it’s really a big up and coming tool. Again, you need plenty of lead-time for radio, although it’s less complicated than TV. We recommend 4-6 weeks of lead-time, to help with targeting and messaging. And sometimes radio is better because it’s not a visual story. Frit More is More Than Enough you want to do big pushes in February, realize that you’re competing with the Super Bowl, Grammy’s and Oscars. Even if you’re local and on a smaller scale, there’s an annual cycle that you need to take into consideration.During the holiday season, and in business generally, we can hear the pursuit of more: more money, more customers, more profits, more food, more clothing, more friends, more time, more more.When is more, enough? Do you have enough air to breathe and food to eat? Enough space to live in and business to keep you busy for a while?If you are reading this now, you’ve surely got enough in your life to give yourself an occasional rest, a break, a moment out of the persistent quest for more…a chance to really enjoy what you already have, which most of the time is quite enough.This is not a call to discard ambition or quell your quest for greater goals. Rather, this is an invitation to enjoy a moment of relaxation where you are, calm in all that is, comfortable in all you have, and grateful for the chance just to be here.That’s enough.YOU MAY USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR FREE NEWSLETTER OR YOUR WEB SITE as long as you include this complete statement:Copyrigh Elizabeth: There are things you should plan around, unless you can relate your topic to these things. Fritz: The other thing is for clients to understand the difference between the story and how it’s pitched. We had a client who shot themselves in the foot by not allowing us to let the media ask them about a particularly hot topic – it’s got to be about what the public wants, not what you necessarily want to say. Kelly: So what should a small company budget for PR if they want to build a regional presence? Fritz: That’s a great question…and again, it depends on whom you’re trying to reach. You need to look at the scope of what you want to do. What’s your dream list, and then scale it back and budget realistically. Come up with smart PR dollars, and don’t waste your investment. So television interviews may not be needed, when radio will be more effective. Kelly: Let’s talk about radio in a minute. But first, what are SMTs and VNRs...and why are they beneficial to PR campaigns? Fritz: A Video News Release (VNR) is a pre-packaged news segment. It looks like anything you’d see on local news – with a reporter in the field, a voiceover, and it’s edited just like news. You then send that to any newsroom and they can pop it in, just like any news piece. So instead of the station having to come out and cover your story, you’re saving them the expense and time. News production has become so much more expensive and producer workload has tripled…so this really makes sense because you’re making their life easier, as long as it’s a balanced piece. You can even do a specific style for a specific network. The SMT is a Satellite Media Tour. This is doing a series of interviews in a studio, with a satellite uplink that connects to any affiliate in the country, with a reporter doing 2-3 minute interviews. You’ll hit one- to two-dozen markets in a couple of hours, which would have cost you far more in travel, lodging, downtime, etc. Smaller companies don’t tend to go this way (there’s a cost of entry starting at about $12k), but once you figure out what it can do for you on a national scope, the dollars make sense. You can also use it for local and regional markets, targeting only those audiences you want to reach. Elizabeth: Yes, if you want to launch something within a state (for example, a new mass transit system in a region), it’s much more efficient. Local elected officials may not have time to run around to every station in their market, but will have time to go to one studio for an hour or two, and talk to eight different local or regional stations. Kelly: Okay – back to radio. How can radio boost awareness about PR campaigns? Elizabeth: Radio is a great option for clients with smaller budgets. It’s also good to mix in with SMTs. Radio is a different audience – they tend to be captive and in the car. There are many different types of programs that are very targeted, so it’s easier to reach a specific audience. Radio is also a lot cheaper – costs about 50% of SMTs – and has a lot of credibility…it’s really a big up and coming tool. Again, you need plenty of lead-time for radio, although it’s less complicated than TV. We recommend 4-6 weeks of lead-time, to help with targeting and messaging. And sometimes radio is better because it’s not a visual story. Frit Successful Job Search: 10 Steps To Quickly Acquire Your Dream Job And Put More Money In Your Pocket d why are they beneficial to PR campaigns?Do you want to continue your costly, time-consuming and exhausting struggle in a frustrating job search using weak, ineffective tools that are getting you nowhere? The job market today is fiercely competitive with few high-paying or desirable jobs available. With repeated downsizings, companies have learned to survive with less.Mediocrity has no place in your job search process. To be a player among the huge number of job seekers, you need an edge, a unique compelling advantage.To be successful, you must differentiate yourself from the crowd. You must use search strategies that put you head and shoulders above your competition. You must possess knowledge and skill in your area of expertise, and know how to demonstrate that to the world. You may be the best candidate for a position, but someone better skilled at interviewing gets the offer.Here are the strategies you need to use to run a successful job search:1. Determine your best-suited careerYou n Fritz: A Video News Release (VNR) is a pre-packaged news segment. It looks like anything you’d see on local news – with a reporter in the field, a voiceover, and it’s edited just like news. You then send that to any newsroom and they can pop it in, just like any news piece. So instead of the station having to come out and cover your story, you’re saving them the expense and time. News production has become so much more expensive and producer workload has tripled…so this really makes sense because you’re making their life easier, as long as it’s a balanced piece. You can even do a specific style for a specific network. The SMT is a Satellite Media Tour. This is doing a series of interviews in a studio, with a satellite uplink that connects to any affiliate in the country, with a reporter doing 2-3 minute interviews. You’ll hit one- to two-dozen markets in a couple of hours, which would have cost you far more in travel, lodging, downtime, etc. Smaller companies don’t tend to go this way (there’s a cost of entry starting at about $12k), but once you figure out what it can do for you on a national scope, the dollars make sense. You can also use it for local and regional markets, targeting only those audiences you want to reach. Elizabeth: Yes, if you want to launch something within a state (for example, a new mass transit system in a region), it’s much more efficient. Local elected officials may not have time to run around to every station in their market, but will have time to go to one studio for an hour or two, and talk to eight different local or regional stations. Kelly: Okay – back to radio. How can radio boost awareness about PR campaigns? Elizabeth: Radio is a great option for clients with smaller budgets. It’s also good to mix in with SMTs. Radio is a different audience – they tend to be captive and in the car. There are many different types of programs that are very targeted, so it’s easier to reach a specific audience. Radio is also a lot cheaper – costs about 50% of SMTs – and has a lot of credibility…it’s really a big up and coming tool. Again, you need plenty of lead-time for radio, although it’s less complicated than TV. We recommend 4-6 weeks of lead-time, to help with targeting and messaging. And sometimes radio is better because it’s not a visual story. Frit Help! My Boomers Are Retiring! an also use it for local and regional markets, targeting only those audiences you want to reach.Next time you've got a bunch of senior managers in a room together, ask those who are eligible to retire within five years to leave the room. Then figure out how you're going to replace them.That's an exercise I've done with senior management in a client company. A full third of the senior people in that room were eligible to take their pension and go within five years.This is not just a problem in the executive suite. Check out the senior people in sales. Check out the team leaders for key craft functions, the people who usually came up through union apprentice programs.There are several definitions of the Baby Boom and they all vary a little. But you're safe if you assume that it's people born between 1946 and 1964. In America, that's about 79 million people.The oldest boomers hit sixty in 2006. In 2011 they'll start hitting sixty-five.I call their exit "The Boomer Brain Drain." It's not likely that they'll all retire when they can and they certa Elizabeth: Yes, if you want to launch something within a state (for example, a new mass transit system in a region), it’s much more efficient. Local elected officials may not have time to run around to every station in their market, but will have time to go to one studio for an hour or two, and talk to eight different local or regional stations. Kelly: Okay – back to radio. How can radio boost awareness about PR campaigns? Elizabeth: Radio is a great option for clients with smaller budgets. It’s also good to mix in with SMTs. Radio is a different audience – they tend to be captive and in the car. There are many different types of programs that are very targeted, so it’s easier to reach a specific audience. Radio is also a lot cheaper – costs about 50% of SMTs – and has a lot of credibility…it’s really a big up and coming tool. Again, you need plenty of lead-time for radio, although it’s less complicated than TV. We recommend 4-6 weeks of lead-time, to help with targeting and messaging. And sometimes radio is better because it’s not a visual story. Fritz: With radio, you can get so specific on your demographic target…so the more you know about your target audience, you can really focus how to spend your dollars. Kelly: Do you have an opinion on the difference in effectiveness between a straight radio interview vs. an editorial-based audio news release? Elizabeth: I prefer radio media tours better, because you can attach a person’s name to a story and interact with the anchor…and connect better with the audience to build trust. Kelly: Do you have a specific PR success story you'd like to share? Elizabeth: We did a satellite media tour for the National Museum of the American Indian. The launch was a huge success…we had 21 interviews lined up for the Museum Director that turned into 91 airings nationwide. One place where we really helped was in targeting the radio stations – many we found were on Native American reservations. Kelly: So how should people think about “success” – what are the metrics we should consider for PR? Elizabeth: It really depends on what your goal is: to increase public awareness? to increase museum visits? to sell more books? So we provide statistics on airtime…and encode our broadcasts to see how long they last…and then compare that to ad dollars. Advertisement usually ends up being far more expensive that what they invested for the tour, not to mention the difference in credibility you get from PR vs. ads. Kelly: So where can people go to learn more? Fritz: We recommend a couple of websites: http://www.satellitemediatour.net/ And if you’re in the Washington, DC area, please join Fritz and Elizabeth at PR Nation, Buzz Media’s monthly networking event. For more information visit http://www.buzzmediapr.com or http://www.prnation.org.
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