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Added for You - Invite the Media to Tell Your Story
Employee Benefit Plans usiness to speak directly to the media outlet's audience. Think about how your unique experience on a specific case can be interesting and helpful to that audience. Look for ways the story of your success can educate or inspire others.A well-thought-out benefits package understands an employee's needs and also keeps in mind the employer's objectives. In prevailing market conditions, a competitive benefits package can serve as a nice recruitment tool and also act as an effective tool for employee retention.Basic benefit plans for employees include healthcare, retirement, holiday pay and paid vacation time. There are in-dept Myth #3 – I could never speak persuasively to the media. Of course you can. Calling on the media is no more difficult than calling on any new attorney-prospect. All it takes is preparation. Make notes before you make contact, practice what you want to say and be ready to catch a reporter's interest in the first 15 seconds. With preparation and diligence, you will overcome almost all media Pay Structure People often ask me how I managed to get a major newspaper like The New York Times to write my story. My response is, "Nineteen years of growing a successful business." You have to lay the groundwork before you can expect national media attention. The heavy hitters won't call you until your name is well known in your industry.Pay policies and programs are one of the most important human resource tools for encouraging desired employee behaviors and discouraging undesired behaviors. Therefore, they must be evaluated, not just in terms of costs, but in terms of the returns they generate – how they attract, retain, and motivate a high-quality work force. For example, if the average revenue per employee in Company A is 20 per It took me 19 years to build the kind of professional presence that would attract the interest of a national media outlet like The New York Times. But you don't have to wait that long to see your name in print. You can start right now enticing local and regional media to tell your story. Unlike advertising and many other forms of marketing, you don't pay for this type of publicity. It comes from the media free of charge, but in turn requires more effort than advertising. Media relations is also riskier than paid advertising. When you pay for an ad, the publication is committed to running your ad just as you designed it. The same is not true for media relations. There are no guarantees that just because you gave an interview the media will include a story about your company and, more importantly, that the story will say exactly what you want it to say. You have no control over who else they might interview or how they'll slant the story. Don't expect to see, much less approve, a copy of your story before it runs. However, when a positive article about your business does run in the media, you get a big pay-off. The public perceives a news story as far more credible than any advertisement. A published article or broadcast news item is accepted as a media endorsement of your company. Also, even though the story might not match your expectations exactly, you can still benefit tremendously. Vanquish 3 Myths Before beginning a media relations effort, you'll need to overcome the myths about media relations that could prevent you from creating an effective campaign. Myth #1 – The media will discover me. False. You have to help them along. You must boldly and unabashedly offer the media a relevant, valuable, fascinating story about your business. Many of the stories published or broadcast about companies come directly from the companies themselves. The media needs and appreciates story ideas, but they're not likely to come up with an idea about your company unless you give it to them. Myth #2 – The media would never be interested in me. Not necessarily. Even a small company can grab the media's interest. You can, too, by carefully developing the story of your business to speak directly to the media outlet's audience. Think about how your unique experience on a specific case can be interesting and helpful to that audience. Look for ways the story of your success can educate or inspire others. Myth #3 – I could never speak persuasively to the media. Of course you can. Calling on the media is no more difficult than calling on any new attorney-prospect. All it takes is preparation. Make notes before you make contact, practice what you want to say and be ready to catch a reporter's interest in the first 15 seconds. With preparation and diligence, you will overcome almost all media Your Marketing Message ng and many other forms of marketing, you don't pay for this type of publicity. It comes from the media free of charge, but in turn requires more effort than advertising.Your message is first among your weapons in the battle of perceptions.Your message allows you to accomplish many things. Your message can educate the masses, convert the non-believers or separate the wheat from the chaff. But not all three.Your first clue to your message comes from where in the Awareness Scale™ your target sits. (See my article titled "Target Your Market" for fur Media relations is also riskier than paid advertising. When you pay for an ad, the publication is committed to running your ad just as you designed it. The same is not true for media relations. There are no guarantees that just because you gave an interview the media will include a story about your company and, more importantly, that the story will say exactly what you want it to say. You have no control over who else they might interview or how they'll slant the story. Don't expect to see, much less approve, a copy of your story before it runs. However, when a positive article about your business does run in the media, you get a big pay-off. The public perceives a news story as far more credible than any advertisement. A published article or broadcast news item is accepted as a media endorsement of your company. Also, even though the story might not match your expectations exactly, you can still benefit tremendously. Vanquish 3 Myths Before beginning a media relations effort, you'll need to overcome the myths about media relations that could prevent you from creating an effective campaign. Myth #1 – The media will discover me. False. You have to help them along. You must boldly and unabashedly offer the media a relevant, valuable, fascinating story about your business. Many of the stories published or broadcast about companies come directly from the companies themselves. The media needs and appreciates story ideas, but they're not likely to come up with an idea about your company unless you give it to them. Myth #2 – The media would never be interested in me. Not necessarily. Even a small company can grab the media's interest. You can, too, by carefully developing the story of your business to speak directly to the media outlet's audience. Think about how your unique experience on a specific case can be interesting and helpful to that audience. Look for ways the story of your success can educate or inspire others. Myth #3 – I could never speak persuasively to the media. Of course you can. Calling on the media is no more difficult than calling on any new attorney-prospect. All it takes is preparation. Make notes before you make contact, practice what you want to say and be ready to catch a reporter's interest in the first 15 seconds. With preparation and diligence, you will overcome almost all media 8 Tips to Build Trust Between You and the Customer the story. Don't expect to see, much less approve, a copy of your story before it runs.Those who are in the business, it might be a profession, a manufacturing industry or a service industry, building trust is the utmost factor.If your consumer doesn’t have the faith in you, then you might as well shut shop now, cause eventually that’s what would happen. To market yourself and your product, you must be able to gain confidence of the people to whom you intend to sell.Buil However, when a positive article about your business does run in the media, you get a big pay-off. The public perceives a news story as far more credible than any advertisement. A published article or broadcast news item is accepted as a media endorsement of your company. Also, even though the story might not match your expectations exactly, you can still benefit tremendously. Vanquish 3 Myths Before beginning a media relations effort, you'll need to overcome the myths about media relations that could prevent you from creating an effective campaign. Myth #1 – The media will discover me. False. You have to help them along. You must boldly and unabashedly offer the media a relevant, valuable, fascinating story about your business. Many of the stories published or broadcast about companies come directly from the companies themselves. The media needs and appreciates story ideas, but they're not likely to come up with an idea about your company unless you give it to them. Myth #2 – The media would never be interested in me. Not necessarily. Even a small company can grab the media's interest. You can, too, by carefully developing the story of your business to speak directly to the media outlet's audience. Think about how your unique experience on a specific case can be interesting and helpful to that audience. Look for ways the story of your success can educate or inspire others. Myth #3 – I could never speak persuasively to the media. Of course you can. Calling on the media is no more difficult than calling on any new attorney-prospect. All it takes is preparation. Make notes before you make contact, practice what you want to say and be ready to catch a reporter's interest in the first 15 seconds. With preparation and diligence, you will overcome almost all media Postioning Your Company In Changing Markets an effective campaign.The ultimate marketing battleground is the mind. Successful marketing implants in the mind of the consumer a clear, specific identity for a certain product or service. Your goal should always be to help consumers see your product or service in its most favorable or appealing light.Positioning isn’t easy, especially in the Information Age. More information and data are being thrown at consumer Myth #1 – The media will discover me. False. You have to help them along. You must boldly and unabashedly offer the media a relevant, valuable, fascinating story about your business. Many of the stories published or broadcast about companies come directly from the companies themselves. The media needs and appreciates story ideas, but they're not likely to come up with an idea about your company unless you give it to them. Myth #2 – The media would never be interested in me. Not necessarily. Even a small company can grab the media's interest. You can, too, by carefully developing the story of your business to speak directly to the media outlet's audience. Think about how your unique experience on a specific case can be interesting and helpful to that audience. Look for ways the story of your success can educate or inspire others. Myth #3 – I could never speak persuasively to the media. Of course you can. Calling on the media is no more difficult than calling on any new attorney-prospect. All it takes is preparation. Make notes before you make contact, practice what you want to say and be ready to catch a reporter's interest in the first 15 seconds. With preparation and diligence, you will overcome almost all media Testing the Efficiency of Free Classified Ads usiness to speak directly to the media outlet's audience. Think about how your unique experience on a specific case can be interesting and helpful to that audience. Look for ways the story of your success can educate or inspire others.Without testing you will never know how good or how bad your ads performed. Before the advent of internet, advertisers used to test classified ads quality using certain techniques. However, there were no such things called free classified ads then.Free or paid, you are spending your time with classified ads and you need results from paid or free classified ads. Even in case you are getting an Myth #3 – I could never speak persuasively to the media. Of course you can. Calling on the media is no more difficult than calling on any new attorney-prospect. All it takes is preparation. Make notes before you make contact, practice what you want to say and be ready to catch a reporter's interest in the first 15 seconds. With preparation and diligence, you will overcome almost all media relations challenges.
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