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15 Magic Words to Make Sure Your Press Release Gets Published
By Jeffrey Dobkin | Published  07/11/2006 | Free Publicity | Rating:
Jeffrey Dobkin

Jeffrey Dobkin is an innovator and an entrepreneur, but it's his writing style that has made him famous. Over 2,000,000 people read his information-rich, explicit How-To articles on marketing and direct marketing.

Mr. Dobkin's articles on marketing and direct marketing appear in over 60 magazines and business newspapers. Local magazines and newspapers include The Business Ledger, Advertising in the Delaware Valley (ADV), Small Business News, and The Philadelphia Direct Marketing Association (PDMA) News; national magazines, journals and newspapers include Small Business Computing, Direct Marketing Magazine, Inside Direct Mail, Business to Business Marketer, DM News, ASBA Today (American Small Business Association), The National Business Association News, The Savant (SCORE Newsletter), Business Today, Publishers Marketing Association, Managing Small Business, Mail Order Monthly, Money Makers Monthly, Money and Profits, Wealth Builders, The Network Trainer, International Insider's News, Network Marketing Connection, The Great American Advertiser, Savannah Business Journal, The Sacramento Business Ledger, The Business Journal of San Jose, The Business Journal of Santa Rosa, Dream Merchant, Inventors' Digest, Nexus Magazine, Home Venture, Home Business Magazine, Home Business Connection, Agency Sales Magazine, Indiana Journal of Commerce and Industry, Business Strategies of Eastern Ohio, The Newsletter on Newsletters, Business Gazette of Elkhart IN, SouthTrust Bank Today's Business, Sanwa Bank Business Resource, First Commercial Bank About Small Business, First Tennessee Business Review, Information Entrepreneur, Office Systems, Health Insurance Underwriter, The Mortgage Press, The Highlander Newsletter to name just a few.

Jeffrey Dobkin is the author of two books on marketing. The first book published in 1996, updated in 1998 and again in 2001, is a 400-page, 81/2" x 11", 21/2 lb. resource tool titled How To Market a Product for Under $500. It demonstrates how an entrepreneur or small business owner can single-handedly bring a product to the attention of a national marketplace in under 6 months, for under $500. ISBN 0-9642879-2-7. $29.95.

His second book, Uncommon Marketing Techniques, was published in 1998. It's 270 pages of tips and tactics of successful marketing and direct marketing methods. Written in his own information-rich style, this explicit how-to book contains over 33 of Mr. Dobkin's most requested articles on small business marketing. ISBN 0-9642879-3-5. $17.95. Both books are available in major bookstores nationwide.

 

View all articles by Jeffrey Dobkin
15 Magic Words to Make Sure Your Press Release Gets Published
Most magazines have new product sections where press releases are published.  And newspapers - outside the first few pages of hard news - get about 70% of their editorial content from press releases.  Yours could be one of them.

 Imagine being the editor of the travel section.  Ugh. You'd have to fill up that section of a newspaper every day. It would be impossible if you had to do all your own writing.  Press releases are your lifeblood.  The entertainment section - even more so!  The editor of the entertainment section lives on stories generated from press agents.  Television talk shows rely on press releases to find interesting guests.  So do radio talk shows.  The media WANTS your news stories as long as you follow a few simple rules.

 I'm not going to go into the rules in depth; you can read those details in either of my books, How To Market a Product for Under $500! or Uncommon Marketing Techniques.  But here's a quick synopsis: large header at the top stating "FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE."  Follow directly by "For More Information:" and then a contact name and phone number. Next line, a kill date (I usually write "No Kill Date").  Then the release headline (format: New Product Offers Benefit), centered and in bold.  Follow with the body copy in a brief, newspaper style of writing (no adjectives) - if it looks or smells like an ad, it won't get printed.  Double space the body copy, and keep the whole release under one page.  Simple, even if you're not a press agent.

 Prepare your release and a well-written cover letter (to build credibility) along with a high-quality 5" x 7" black-and-white photo to be sent to the editor.

 Here's the old way: most people send the release, wait a week, then call the magazine or newspaper and ask the editor if he received their release. The editors must get really tired of hearing that.  "Sure," says the editor, "I got your release.  I get everyone's release!"

 The caller explains what the release was about, and then the editor usually doesn't remember which release it was or where it's hidden amongst the 100 or so other releases the editor received that week, the 10,000 other papers, and the half-eaten pizza all competing for space on his desk.  And the press agent winds up sending another.  Hmmm... double effort.

  Here's the Jeff Dobkin trick way to send a press release: I usually don't like to recommend phone calls in any of my campaigns, but this call is not a "selling" call.  You simply call an editor and use those 11 words you found at the top of this article: "Are you the person I should send this press release to?"  What does this do?  It sets up a "Can you help me?" relationship with the editors.  And they help you.

 Editors - like teachers - are generally helpful by their very nature.  If the editor answers, "Yes, I'm the person!" that's the signal to give him a 30-second pitch of your product and the nature of your release.  Tell him your release will go right out and thank him for his time. Send it promptly.

 The other four words you need to say, and you say them in the first paragraph of the cover letter you send with your release, are "Nice speaking with you," even if it wasn't.  That reminds the editor you cared enough to call, and that you spoke with him personally on the phone.  This will assure his personal attention to your release - and his help and some push.

 What happens if the editor you speak with isn't the one you send your release to?  When you ask, "Are you the person I should send this press release to?" and the editor says, "No, send your release to Jim Reidy, he gets all the releases," then what do you do?  You call up Jim Reidy and - knowing full well he's the correct editor to send your release to - you say, "Are you the person I should send my release to?"  You see, this sets up a "Can you help me?" relationship....

 Editors want quality releases.  They rely on press releases for news about new products, people, companies, and current events.  If they didn't like press releases, they wouldn't be editors.  It's part of the business.  But they get so many press releases, your release - and your pitch - must stand out from the crowd.  Most press agents haven't the time or the inclination to call every editor every time a release goes into the mail.  So your call and pleasant conversation separate you from the pack.  You become special.

 Editors delight in talking to real people, not just press agents.  If you have a product or service to sell and can come up with a well-written press release and a nice pitching angle, by all means give it your best shot.  The cost is just two sheets of paper, one photo, an envelope and stamp and a phone call to get perhaps $10,000 worth of publicity. At my office, we send out 400 press releases a month, every month.  Do I call the magazine editors with every release we send?  Sure. I call the magazines where we really want our press releases to be published





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