How to Engage Others in Lively ConversationI have found that the best way to get someone to respond positively to you is to LIKE them!Seriously! It is so easy!!! Plus, it works.I’ve recently started a new position as a professional headhunter. I’ve always done professional networking and marketing for individuals but now have joined a new firm. Most of what I’m doing now is COLD CALLING. UGH..the dreaded COLD CALL.What does it consist of? Hi! My name is Mary Gardner and I’m with GRN… who is the Director of Operations? From there I ask questions and gather information until I get the right person on the phone that might have a serious interest in my candidate that I’m marketing.The difference that I’ve seen in my first few days is that the first day I was TERRIFIED to call. I didn’t feel ready. I felt unprepared. I wasn’t clear of the procedures and I didn’t even feel comfortable with the phone. Here is what happened: the first few calls.. people almost h
here enough material here for me to
do a story?"
Your pitch letter (based on your clincher) made a claim of some
sort about you, your company or your product. You’re the
fastest, the most advanced, the hottest-selling, the most civic-
minded, etc. Now you have to back up your claim. Your
backgrounder is where this happens. Provide proof, by giving
concrete examples, third party observations, study results, etc.
to support your pitch. If you’re claiming that there’s a trend
taking place, here’s where you provide the statistics to back it
up. If you’ve claimed that you’ve won more awards that anyone
else in town, here’s where you describe them. Don’t stray from
your purpose -- to reel in the journalist by convincing him that
your claim is legit.
The backgrounder also must demonstrate that enough material
exists to support the claim - and that it will be easy for the
journalist to access this information.
The Role of Cultural Due Diligence in Business Integration EffortsDue Diligence is a phrase that has been traditionally used to reflect the analysis activities that occur during merger and acquisition activities. Recently the due diligence process has been extended to include the evaluation of business affiliation and partnership agreements.Due Diligence is generally comprised of legal due diligence and financial due diligence. At this time, research into financial assets, articles of incorporation, market share, technology, hardware and business competencies are examined.Unfortunately, for business…one plus one, does not always equal two, particularly when it comes to culture and integrating “human systems”.Statistics indicate only 15% to 25% of all mergers and various business combinations live up to expectations. 25% to 30% are reported to be outright failures, with the acquired entity being liquidated at a loss within 3 to 5 years of acquisition. The remaining 45
Considering how fundamental they are to the publicist’s trade,
it’s always amazed me how lousy almost all press kits truly are.
Your typical press kit is a bloated folder filled with puffery,
hype, irrelevant information and worse. The vast majority of
these monstrosities do little besides kill trees and clog
newsroom trash baskets.
The good news is that creating a press kit that actually works
really isn’t that hard. Let's look at the elements of a winning
press kit, and help you avoid some common pitfalls.
The Psychology of a Press Kit
There are two fundamental rules to creating a good press kit:
1. The press kit exists to make the journalist’s life easier, not
for you to present sales messages and hype. Good publicists are
journalist-centric -- that is, they think from the perspective of
the recipient, not the sender. They take the time to learn what
journalists need and then they give it to them in as simple,
straightforward and user-friendly a manner as possible.
Remember, publicity is not about you -- it’s about giving
journalists what they need to create a strong story.
2. Everything in the press kit goes to support your clincher.
Everything else gets yanked out. (A refresher: a "clincher" is
my term for the one or two line distillation of your publicity
message. It’s the publicist’s version of the Universal Selling
Proposition that marketers use to boil a product’s marketing
message down to its essence.) You lay out your clincher in the
pitch letter that gets clipped to the cover of the press kit, and
the press kit serves to flesh out and support your clincher.
That’s it. If your clincher is that you’ve brought a radical new
way of thinking to your market segment, then a backgrounder about
your "old fashioned commitment to excellence" not only doesn’t
support your clincher, it may actually contradict it.
The Elements of a Press Kit
The Cover: In my twenty years as a publicist, I have never
encountered a single journalist who told me the cover a press kit
had the slightest impact on their decision whether to run a
story. Yet, businesses still spend thousands on glossy, four
color folder covers. Don’t bother. A simple colored folder with
your business name imprinted upon it will work just fine.
Some businesses choose to get stickers printed up with their logo
and place them on blank folders, which is fine too, as long as
the stickers are neatly applied. Either way, don’t obsess over
it -- it’s what’s inside that counts.
Letterhead: The first page of each press kit element should be
on your letterhead. Some folks prefer to get special "News from
(name of company)" letterhead printed, although, again, I doubt
it really matters.
The Lead Release: If your press kit is going out in support of
an announcement, an event, a trend story or for another specific
purpose, the release that lays out the news should be the first
thing a journalist sees upon opening the folder. This "lead
release" should be positioned at the front of the right side of
the folder.
Backgrounder: This is the element of your kit that provides,
well, the background information to support your pitch. It’s
written in the fashion of a standard news feature (i.e. in third
person, objective tone). This is typically the longest element
in a press kit, often going 2 or 3 pages. As you’re crafting
this, keep something important in mind: if a journalist is
reading your backgrounder, chances are he’s already interested in
your pitch. If he wasn’t, he wouldn’t bother with it. You’ve
hooked him and the backgrounder can reel him in. To do so, you
must answer the two questions he has: "Is the claim made in the
pitch legitimate?" and "Is there enough material here for me to
do a story?"
Your pitch letter (based on your clincher) made a claim of some
sort about you, your company or your product. You’re the
fastest, the most advanced, the hottest-selling, the most civic-
minded, etc. Now you have to back up your claim. Your
backgrounder is where this happens. Provide proof, by giving
concrete examples, third party observations, study results, etc.
to support your pitch. If you’re claiming that there’s a trend
taking place, here’s where you provide the statistics to back it
up. If you’ve claimed that you’ve won more awards that anyone
else in town, here’s where you describe them. Don’t stray from
your purpose -- to reel in the journalist by convincing him that
your claim is legit.
The backgrounder also must demonstrate that enough material
exists to support the claim - and that it will be easy for the
journalist to access this information. J
Cast Off Negative Attitude in A Networking BusinessThe success of a business, as it is said, is based on the attitude of every individual handling it. In a network marketing business one of the problems that you will encounter is the negative thoughts that are inside of you. These thoughts can be a burden for you to achieve your goal. Having a business requires hard work and dedication. And casting off the negatives inside you is one of the hard things to do.There are some things that you should consider in casting off the negative thought that you have. One is to reject fear. As long as you have the fear in your heart, you can never move on in reaching your goal. As Zig Ziglar said, “Fear is a dark room where negatives are developed.” These fears can be rejected by the help of your group that can provide wise counsel to you and teach how to fight and reject that fear that is inside you. But ultimately, you should take responsibility and focus your thoughts on the positive side of lif
in as simple,
straightforward and user-friendly a manner as possible.
Remember, publicity is not about you -- it’s about giving
journalists what they need to create a strong story.
2. Everything in the press kit goes to support your clincher.
Everything else gets yanked out. (A refresher: a "clincher" is
my term for the one or two line distillation of your publicity
message. It’s the publicist’s version of the Universal Selling
Proposition that marketers use to boil a product’s marketing
message down to its essence.) You lay out your clincher in the
pitch letter that gets clipped to the cover of the press kit, and
the press kit serves to flesh out and support your clincher.
That’s it. If your clincher is that you’ve brought a radical new
way of thinking to your market segment, then a backgrounder about
your "old fashioned commitment to excellence" not only doesn’t
support your clincher, it may actually contradict it.
The Elements of a Press Kit
The Cover: In my twenty years as a publicist, I have never
encountered a single journalist who told me the cover a press kit
had the slightest impact on their decision whether to run a
story. Yet, businesses still spend thousands on glossy, four
color folder covers. Don’t bother. A simple colored folder with
your business name imprinted upon it will work just fine.
Some businesses choose to get stickers printed up with their logo
and place them on blank folders, which is fine too, as long as
the stickers are neatly applied. Either way, don’t obsess over
it -- it’s what’s inside that counts.
Letterhead: The first page of each press kit element should be
on your letterhead. Some folks prefer to get special "News from
(name of company)" letterhead printed, although, again, I doubt
it really matters.
The Lead Release: If your press kit is going out in support of
an announcement, an event, a trend story or for another specific
purpose, the release that lays out the news should be the first
thing a journalist sees upon opening the folder. This "lead
release" should be positioned at the front of the right side of
the folder.
Backgrounder: This is the element of your kit that provides,
well, the background information to support your pitch. It’s
written in the fashion of a standard news feature (i.e. in third
person, objective tone). This is typically the longest element
in a press kit, often going 2 or 3 pages. As you’re crafting
this, keep something important in mind: if a journalist is
reading your backgrounder, chances are he’s already interested in
your pitch. If he wasn’t, he wouldn’t bother with it. You’ve
hooked him and the backgrounder can reel him in. To do so, you
must answer the two questions he has: "Is the claim made in the
pitch legitimate?" and "Is there enough material here for me to
do a story?"
Your pitch letter (based on your clincher) made a claim of some
sort about you, your company or your product. You’re the
fastest, the most advanced, the hottest-selling, the most civic-
minded, etc. Now you have to back up your claim. Your
backgrounder is where this happens. Provide proof, by giving
concrete examples, third party observations, study results, etc.
to support your pitch. If you’re claiming that there’s a trend
taking place, here’s where you provide the statistics to back it
up. If you’ve claimed that you’ve won more awards that anyone
else in town, here’s where you describe them. Don’t stray from
your purpose -- to reel in the journalist by convincing him that
your claim is legit.
The backgrounder also must demonstrate that enough material
exists to support the claim - and that it will be easy for the
journalist to access this information.
New Year's RevolutionNo, that's not a typo in the title. Resolutions are easy; most of us make them at least once a year. A revolution, on the other hand, is something you may not have made since you started your business.Starting a business is actually quite revolutionary. When you began yours, there were probably many details of your life that changed. Some of those changes were intentional, others accidental; some you liked, some you didn't. Other changes you always meant to make just never happened.Is your business everything you meant it to be? Is it giving you all that you wanted? Are you satisfied, even delighted with the way your life as a business owner is turning out? If not, perhaps it's time to make a revolution. Here are some revolutionary ideas you might consider:1. Serve only those clients you care about and enjoy being with. When you work with people you don't enjoy, everything becomes a struggle. Your clients are a key part
it.
The Elements of a Press Kit
The Cover: In my twenty years as a publicist, I have never
encountered a single journalist who told me the cover a press kit
had the slightest impact on their decision whether to run a
story. Yet, businesses still spend thousands on glossy, four
color folder covers. Don’t bother. A simple colored folder with
your business name imprinted upon it will work just fine.
Some businesses choose to get stickers printed up with their logo
and place them on blank folders, which is fine too, as long as
the stickers are neatly applied. Either way, don’t obsess over
it -- it’s what’s inside that counts.
Letterhead: The first page of each press kit element should be
on your letterhead. Some folks prefer to get special "News from
(name of company)" letterhead printed, although, again, I doubt
it really matters.
The Lead Release: If your press kit is going out in support of
an announcement, an event, a trend story or for another specific
purpose, the release that lays out the news should be the first
thing a journalist sees upon opening the folder. This "lead
release" should be positioned at the front of the right side of
the folder.
Backgrounder: This is the element of your kit that provides,
well, the background information to support your pitch. It’s
written in the fashion of a standard news feature (i.e. in third
person, objective tone). This is typically the longest element
in a press kit, often going 2 or 3 pages. As you’re crafting
this, keep something important in mind: if a journalist is
reading your backgrounder, chances are he’s already interested in
your pitch. If he wasn’t, he wouldn’t bother with it. You’ve
hooked him and the backgrounder can reel him in. To do so, you
must answer the two questions he has: "Is the claim made in the
pitch legitimate?" and "Is there enough material here for me to
do a story?"
Your pitch letter (based on your clincher) made a claim of some
sort about you, your company or your product. You’re the
fastest, the most advanced, the hottest-selling, the most civic-
minded, etc. Now you have to back up your claim. Your
backgrounder is where this happens. Provide proof, by giving
concrete examples, third party observations, study results, etc.
to support your pitch. If you’re claiming that there’s a trend
taking place, here’s where you provide the statistics to back it
up. If you’ve claimed that you’ve won more awards that anyone
else in town, here’s where you describe them. Don’t stray from
your purpose -- to reel in the journalist by convincing him that
your claim is legit.
The backgrounder also must demonstrate that enough material
exists to support the claim - and that it will be easy for the
journalist to access this information.
Create a Style Guide for Your Nonprofit - Avoid Audience ConfusionThere's never enough time when you're getting communications out the door. But when two different spellings of the same word (both correct) are used in a membership drive campaign, or the way your nonprofit is described varies from letter to letter within the campaign, or your logo appears in different colors and different sizes in different places, your audiences will be confused. The answer? Style standards clearly defined and published in a style guide.The ProblemDue to the ubiquitous nature of advertising and promotion, we're all bombarded by communications. In the face of this morass, you're making it difficult for your audiences to recognize, at a glance, that your communications are all coming from your organization. Remember, we're all scanners these days.In addition, it's likely that those who do recognize that these divergent communications are from you won't think much of your organization or
of
an announcement, an event, a trend story or for another specific
purpose, the release that lays out the news should be the first
thing a journalist sees upon opening the folder. This "lead
release" should be positioned at the front of the right side of
the folder.
Backgrounder: This is the element of your kit that provides,
well, the background information to support your pitch. It’s
written in the fashion of a standard news feature (i.e. in third
person, objective tone). This is typically the longest element
in a press kit, often going 2 or 3 pages. As you’re crafting
this, keep something important in mind: if a journalist is
reading your backgrounder, chances are he’s already interested in
your pitch. If he wasn’t, he wouldn’t bother with it. You’ve
hooked him and the backgrounder can reel him in. To do so, you
must answer the two questions he has: "Is the claim made in the
pitch legitimate?" and "Is there enough material here for me to
do a story?"
Your pitch letter (based on your clincher) made a claim of some
sort about you, your company or your product. You’re the
fastest, the most advanced, the hottest-selling, the most civic-
minded, etc. Now you have to back up your claim. Your
backgrounder is where this happens. Provide proof, by giving
concrete examples, third party observations, study results, etc.
to support your pitch. If you’re claiming that there’s a trend
taking place, here’s where you provide the statistics to back it
up. If you’ve claimed that you’ve won more awards that anyone
else in town, here’s where you describe them. Don’t stray from
your purpose -- to reel in the journalist by convincing him that
your claim is legit.
The backgrounder also must demonstrate that enough material
exists to support the claim - and that it will be easy for the
journalist to access this information.
Ways to Invest MoneyYou don’t have to be a brilliant financial wizard to be successful in mutual funds investing but it does help to know someone who is in the business. I found that there is a lot to consider when dealing with this kind of investments so I really wanted to get some sound advice. The advice led me to a pretty nice portfolio that I would have never been able to create on my own.I was so financially backward when I opened my mutual funds investing portfolio that I thought that I couldn’t even balance my checkbook. Balancing my checkbook back then should have been really simple because I really didn’t have that much money. Even though my account was thin I knew that I needed to start saving.Working as a bartender can be a very lucrative business if you really put time and effort into the job. This career does have some drawbacks. The hours are awful and you earn the bulk of your money in cash. While this seems like a wonderful thing
here enough material here for me to
do a story?"
Your pitch letter (based on your clincher) made a claim of some
sort about you, your company or your product. You’re the
fastest, the most advanced, the hottest-selling, the most civic-
minded, etc. Now you have to back up your claim. Your
backgrounder is where this happens. Provide proof, by giving
concrete examples, third party observations, study results, etc.
to support your pitch. If you’re claiming that there’s a trend
taking place, here’s where you provide the statistics to back it
up. If you’ve claimed that you’ve won more awards that anyone
else in town, here’s where you describe them. Don’t stray from
your purpose -- to reel in the journalist by convincing him that
your claim is legit.
The backgrounder also must demonstrate that enough material
exists to support the claim - and that it will be easy for the
journalist to access this information. Journalists don’t have
time to do extended investigation on every piece. Provides leads
to websites, trade journals, experts and other resources to back
up your claim and help the journalist complete the story, you’ll
have a big edge.
To write a backgrounder, do some role playing. You’re a
reporter. Your editor has handed you a pitch letter and said
"write this up". In this case, of course, the pitch letter is
your own. While you’re writing it, try to forget that the piece
is, essentially, about you. Pretend you’re an objective
reporter. Track down resources, dig up stats, interview
experts. Try to see if you can create a credible piece that
proves the pitch’s claim to be valid and interesting to the
reader. If you can, you’ve got a great backgrounder. If you
can’t, it may be time to come up with a new pitch!
Bio: Only include bios of people who are relevant to the pitch.
A bio of your sales manager in a press kit designed to support a
claim of technological superiority is pointless. A bio of your
head of R&D is valid. Keep bios short (three paragraphs at the
most) and include only information relevant to the pitch. The
fact your head of R&D spent twenty years at NASA is relevant,
that she loves golf and has two cats isn’t. The point of a bio:
to show the legitimacy of those quoted in your release or being
offered for interview, and to help the reporter craft a short
description of the person when writing the piece.
Fact Sheet: The fact sheet should distill the entire press kit
into an "at a glance" document. Keep it short, use bullet points
and bold headings. For example, I might start with the heading
The Story: and include a bullet point repeating the pitch. The
next heading might be Why It’s Important: followed by some
bullet points putting the pitch into a broader industry-wide (or
perhaps even worldwide) context. Finally, I might use the
heading Why (name of my company) is at the Heart of this Vital
Story: and run some bullet points taken from the backgrounder
giving support to my claim. Put this fact sheet at the front of
the left side of the folder, just across from the lead release.
This sort of fact sheet is amazingly powerful and almost never
crafted in the fashion I just laid out. I’ve sold countless
stories because of this style of fact sheet and you can too.
Other Stuff: Filling out the kit with a company brochure and a
photo or two is reasonable, but don’t get carried away. Keep your
kit simple, stick to your clincher and think like a journalist,
not a marketer, and you’ll have crafted a first class press kit!
Duquesa Marketing, Inc. specializes in small business development and boot strapping entrepreneurs. The virtues we see in every baseball game are directly applicable to success or failure for inventors and companies. The Chicago White Sox, and one player in particular, are wonderful endorsements for the baseball/success ethos. Scott Posednik is the poster boy for every virtue essential to positive entrepreneurial achievement.
Nowadays, we see people wear rubber silicone wristbands in different colors to support their cause. Some people also buy these rubber silicone wristbands because they believe in something that is why they also want other people to believe in it. That is why most organizations use these rubber silicone wristbands to get their message across.
Sometimes it is necessary to complete a project earlier than originally planned or than your previous Gantt chart says is possible.
This is fast tracking.