Sarah Lichterman |
If you were hoping this was going to be a post about the
recent announcement of Pitch Perfect 2 opening in May 2015, I am sorry to
disappoint you. As one of my favorite comedies, I would like nothing better
than to list my top five movie quotes complete with several memes. However,
this is not the appropriate avenue for that.
One of the more important roles of a public relations
professional is to determine the appropriate outlet for communication. When a
client has relevant news or a crisis situation, they come to us first to ask
what to do next. After gathering all information about the situation, our next
step is to strategize which media is most relevant to send it to, and then, we
create the perfect pitch.
In a recent PRSA meeting, we listened to a panel of local
media who discussed the best practices for pitching stories and shared stories
of the worst pitches they have received. One horror story that stood out to me
was a magazine editor that had recently received a pitch where he was blind
copied on the email. Not only was the news irrelevant to his magazine, but he
also said he would not have used it any way for the sheer fact that the PR
person had not taken the time to craft an admissible pitch for his magazine. I
was appalled to hear that some people send news that way. At Obsidian, we are
encouraged to read news often in order to understand what types of stories are pertinent
for certain publications and reporters. While each pitch that is sent out may
not be perfect, we do our best to ensure it is relevant and timely to the
outlet we are pitching.
If you want to be pitch perfect, there are a few key lessons
you should practice daily. Mark Thabit, senior vice president of marketing and
project management at Vocus, explains how to make the perfect pitch to grab a
reporter’s attention in in this article on Ragan.com. Among these are straightforward tips such as to speak like a
human being, network with media and know your reporter. The following tips are
ones I think about regularly when crafting a pitch.
Get to the point.
If you think a reporter is going to read your eight-paragraph essay talking
about a company’s new hire, you are wrong. Reporters received hundreds, if not
thousands, of emails a day. They may only read the subject line or the first
few lines of your email, so get to the point quickly and make sure the news is
intriguing. If you don’t think it’s compelling news, then a reporter is most
likely not going to either.
Answer the five Ws.
This goes along with getting to the point. From the beginning of news sharing
and storytelling, who, what, when, where and why have been the foundation of
any story. And, this will never change. Make sure your pitch includes answers
to these questions without too many details. The details can be included in an
attached news release or interview.
Offer other media.
A perfect pitch usually is not just words. With news being shared instantly
through social media and websites, media doesn’t always have the time or
resources to send a cameraman to cover your story. Use a content data sharing
system like DropBox to share large photo or video files.
Once you have crafted the perfect pitch, reread it to triple
check that you have given accurate facts, attached any supporting media and are
sending it to the correct reporter. You want to be confident in your pitch to
know that you have “crushed it.”
No comments:
Post a Comment