This document provides an overview of online and traditional public relations strategies. It discusses influential online platforms like Google, Amazon, and social media and how to get maximum coverage on them. It also discusses traditional PR tactics like identifying press release angles, writing effective releases, and following up with journalists. The document emphasizes the importance of building relationships with journalists and giving them what they need through accessible information and quick responses. It provides tips for realistic expectations and making the most of media opportunities.
2. Propaganda 2.0 – The Plan
Background
– What we do
– Who we do it for
Online v Traditional Public Relations
– Situation Analysis
• Influential Online Platforms
– Good, Bad & Ugly
• Influential Offline Platforms
– Good, Bad & Ugly
How to Reach New Audiences
– Getting Maximum Online Coverage
– Online Media Toolkit
Reaching out to Traditional Media
– Old School PR Tactics & How To Guides
Tools of the Trade
Q&A
3. What we do
We put brands in consumer’s minds
– Online
– Offline
We give brands a voice
– Interaction with consumers
– Educate media
– Highlight the important topics
Get Brands out of the Shizzle
– Advise when things go bad
– Help plan the communication of difficult messages
4. Who we do it for
Who do we work with?
– Affiliate Sector
• MyVoucherCodes
• sunshine.co.uk
• Just-Eat.co.uk
– Wider Industry
• IKEA (Family Mobile)
• TotalJobs
• yasni
• Tweetminster
Why people choose us
– Marry online and offline media relations together
– Early adopters of online marketing and media relations
– Great track record in gaining media coverage
5. Online v Traditional Public Relations
Situation Analysis:
Consumer influences have changed
– 10 Years Ago Was:
• Parents, peers, newspapers, TV, magazine
– Now:
• Internet, Own Research Direct to Brand, Specialist Magazine
Online Influence on Consumers is always Rising
– At expense of TV
Newspapers not dead
– Still very influential, but influence is not reflected in circulation figures
• Metro Number One for Consumer Influence
6. Influential Online Platforms
Where your brand needs to be & you can influence
– Google remains number one
• Web search
• News
• Collaboration with YouTube (high ranking)
– Amazon/ Trip Advisor/ UGC Review sites
• Customer Reviews
– Comparison Sites
• Price orientated influence
• Are public losing faith in this platform?
– Twitter/Facebook/MySpace/Bebo
• Not always good influence
• Bad news travels quick
7. Online, Good, Bad & Ugly
Example of Good Online Brand Campaign
– Barack Obama
• Multi platform viral campaign
Combined YouTube, Twitter, MySpace, Facebook & Own site
Highlights
– 1600 videos on YouTube page
– First presidential candidate to buy gaming ad space
– Leveraged celebrity contacts (Sarah Silverman, encouraging Jewish community
to vote Obama)
– UGC competitions broke records
– Parody of Apple 1984 Commercial
– Site set up to address miscommunication by rivals
This can all be replicated by a brand
8. Online, Good, Bad & Ugly
Example of Bad Online Brand Campaign
– Conservative Party
• Twitter Engagement Lets Modernisation Plans Down
Commit Cardinal Twitter/FaceBook Sins
– Regurgitate Blog Post Titles
– One Way Interaction
– Don’t Reply to Questions
– Tory MP’s Don’t Interact with Each Other
9. Online, Good, Bad & Ugly
Example of Ugly Online Brand Campaign
– Skittles
• Went wrong and refuse to accept it went wrong
Skittles Demonstrated it is Out of Touch
– Expected “Yoof” market to self moderate
– Failed to remove campaign
– Internet now filled with negative Skittle comments
– Became a consumer challenge to cause maximum offence
10. How to Reach New Audiences
Getting Maximum Online Coverage
– Need to plan
• How will you encourage interaction?
• Who will manage?
• What will be your tone?
• How will you react to negativity?
No No’s
– Facebook Groups
• Done to death
• Find alternative common interest
– One way Twittering
– Link spam
– Asking Journo’s if they got your Press Release!
11. How to Reach New Audiences
Online Media Toolkit
– PR Tools
• Daryl Wilcox
– Response Source
– Source Wire
– Press Association
Case Study
– Ps3PriceCompare.co.uk
– Focussed Entirely on Press Association
– This Resulted in GLOBAL coverage with influential weblinks
12. Old School PR Tactics
Three types of PR
– Driving Sales
– Profile/Awareness
– Crisis communications
Greater impact than advertising campaign
– Trusted source of information
Much more cost effective than advertising
– Full page ad in national newspaper circa £30k
– PR is less costly, with higher potential exposure
Search Engine Optimisation
– Relevant links and traffic
– High profile media links (BBC, Sky, MSN, Metro)
13. Why the Media Needs You!
The papers need to fill space
– Need your press releases
– Tight deadlines
– No budget for big research stories
The journo’s want to hear from you
– Especially business owners over evil PR’s
– High Number of Journo’s on Twitter
Many national/regional papers today packed with press release driven
stories... Have a look at the following examples:
14. Why the Media Needs You... cont
Metro (most influential paper in UK)
1 – Refurbishment of Mr Benn (PR)
1A – Pic to support Mr Benn
2 – Keane (the band) PR stunt
Album on memory stick and not CD
3. Research driven story about dogs
4. Royal Mail survey from press release
15. Why the Media Needs You... cont
Regional London
1 – Enron appeal press release (PR)
2 – Clothing company PR Hot Tuna
3 – Debenhams PR on sales
4 – BP – Neg headline but release driven
5 – PR stunt for Great Ormond St Hosp
16. Making Yourself Accessible to The Media
Journalists Need Info Quickly
– Make information accessible
– Go over and above to help
Media Section on Website
– Press Releases
– Past Coverage
– Business USP’s/Key Facts
– Images
• Logos
• Key People Head Shots
– Media Sheet
– Contact Info
– Case Study Information
17. Identifying a Press Release Angle
Several to choose from:
– Business Milestone
• Birthday, £m turnover etc
• Key business win
• New Employees
– Good For regional especially
– Survey Driven
• 8 out of 10 cats
• Use existing customer database to email out to
• SurveyMonkey.com, affordable and reputable
– New Product Launch
– Some form of stunt
– Piggyback on current story
• Green (climate change)
• Credit Crunch
• Obesity
18. Writing a Press Release
Max 2 pages
Don’t sweat the headline – the papers do this
– Clear, can be funny, not complicated
– Needs to be noticed (maybe put part in caps)
2 sentence summary under title
– Often the only bit a journo reads and base their decision on
Opening para has the who, what, why, where, when, how info
– 2 sentence paragraph
– Contains all the key information
Second para has company name in
– Not in first para
– Change for online media
19. Writing a Press Release
Quote from you
– Talk about how pleased you are
– Maybe the problems that you company/product solves etc
Quote from 3rd
party advocate
– Someone (not your mum) to say how good your business is
– Supports what you say
Where more info can be found
– Web address
Editors Notes
– Contact info
– USP’s
Supporting Photos? Mention them
– Media has no budget for snappers
20. Issuing & Following up a Press Release
Always issue to print/broadcast media first
– Less likely to use if they see story across the web
Finding Contact Info
– Read mags/papers you want to target
– Find journo names
– Google them and you will often find email details
– Avoid editor@theregionalblah.co.uk or News@somepaper.com
Best day to send
Personalise the email to the journo
– Don’t mass send
– Don’t BCC or CC them all in
– Make the journo feel special
Paste press release into section under main body of email
– No big photos
– Don’t attach release
21. Issuing & Following up a Press Release
Dreaded follow up call!
– Plan key Points
– Find number on Google
– Ask for named journo
Never ask if they received the release
– Journo’s hate this
– Ask, “what did you think of the release I sent over”
– Or, “Is there any more information you need about the release I sent over”
If journo on holiday ask if there is someone else you could talk to about a
story
Most journo’s are too cool for school!
– Will always say they have not seen the release
– Come across as grumpy – They are just short on time
– Well known national media get upwards of 1500 emails a day
22. Issuing & Following up a Press Release
Tell them about the pictures you have
Awkward Questions?
– Ask for deadline info & call back
Try and build relationship
– Future comment opportunities
– Potentially try and meet them
– “Forward Feature” opportunities
Keep calling to follow up
– Suggest other related angles
23. Online Media Submission
Online release differs to off-line
Optimise online release headline for SEO
Move company name to para one
– Headline & first para is often all you get
Online release submission sites
– Daryl Wilcox is best for “real” news coverage
– PR Web/Pressbox etc, only good for SEO
Relevant bloggers
– Avoid the prickly ones
Use company Social Networking pages
– Twitter
Business/consumer discussion forums
24. Realistic Expectations
Media sees many new brands/products come and go
– No time to check information
Many ignore first story – to avoid being embarrassed
– Exceptions are trusted/known brand associations
Launch release has limited chance of coverage
– Good form of media introduction
Need to keep dripping stories to the press
– Monthly
– Careful not to saturate target media
If a story bombs move on and learn from it
– Don’t try to re-launch it
25. Make the Most of Media Opportunities
You Only Get One Chance with Media
Keep calling to follow up
– Suggest other related angles
Don’t be afraid to disagree
“Sex-Up” your answers
– Flowery soundbites
– Quirky replies
– Be memorable
Relax and have fun!
– Journo’s want you to do well
– Makes them look good
26. Further Reading
All information mentioned in this presentation available from:
andy@10yetis.co.uk
Thanks!
ANY QUESTIONS?