PR Tips: Ideas for Press Releases
January is a great time for planning your PR throughout the year. If you need some inspiration to come up with an angle for your press releases, we’ve compiled some of the things which you might want to include throughout the year:
- Seasons - You can also tie in a press release with a holiday or special occasion. Could your business do something related to Valentines Day, Fathers Day or school holidays?
- Charity work - Do not hide your light under a bushel if your business is making a donation to charity. A press release is a great way to let people know about community service, whether you offer training or apprenticeships to students or sponsor a local sports team.
- New products - New services or products: focus on the benefits to your customers and the publication’s readers.
- Achievements - Issue a press release when you or your employees are recognised for outstanding achievements or gain qualifications. Focus the release on how the award or qualification will help customers or clients.
- Business launch - Launch of your business, or business expansion — of interest to local papers and trade and business publications. You could also mention the launch of a new or updated website.
PR: Think local
Something that wouldn’t interest the national media may interest your local paper. Develop a relationship with the reporter who covers your local area, and keep them informed about the latest developments at your business. Stories about new staff, increased employment opportunities, or when employees gain qualifications may make the business pages.
Did you know editorial coverage in a national newspaper or parenting magazine is worth thousands of pounds? http://www.parentingmagazinecontacts.co.uk/
3 Tips To Promote Your Business
Promotion is an important part of growing your business. There are many ways to achieve this and here are three top tips to help you with promoting your business.
- Recommendations are a great way to sell your product or service. Word of mouth is advertising which costs nothing yet can be more effect than paying good hard earned money for a spread in a newspaper or magazine. You know as a consumer that if someone has recommended something to you, you are more likely to buy that product than one you know nothing about. This is why making connections and forging relationships with key members of your target media is important. Having your business, product or service mentioned in the media holds a lot of weight and will drive more customers to you than paying for a large advert in the same outlet.
- You need to plan your promotion. Using this simple acronym, SMART, meaning specific, measurable, achievable, realistic and timely, will help you do this effectively. Specific means being clear about what you want to achieve from your promotion, Measurable means you should be able to measure whether you are achieving your desired goal, Achievable means can you actually do what you have planned. Realistic means are you realistically able to achieve what you have set out to do with the resources you have and Timely means you need to include a timescale within which you want to achieve these goals. By following this simple acronym, you have you promotion planned for the timescale you want to achieve it in.
- Objectives are not set in stone. Any objectives you have planned for promoting your business are not final. You are able to change these goals if things change within your business or if you achieve them before you planned to. Businesses can have ups and downs and although it is great and essential to have plans in place, you are not entirely ruled by them.
Do you know your USP’s?
Firstly, what is USP?
Well your USP is your Unique Selling Points. Your unique selling points are the points which make your business or service different or ‘unique’ from other companies and if used to promote your business or service will attract the right customers to you.
Now you may think you already know all the points which make you business different from the rest but a great way to find out what you may have missed is to ask friends and family what they think.
Also another way to pin point your USP is to get some friends to sit and listen to you talking about what your business or service for five minutes. Explain to them what you have to offer and why they should choose you above others. Ask them to make notes of the key points that stand out to them and then you can use these to help design a slogan so customers know exactly what you have to offer.
Alternatively if you can not get anyone to listen why not talk out loud and write down they key points you think make your business what it is.
So now you know what your USP’s are start using them to attract new customers by adding your new slogan to all your business stationary, including emails and website.
Top PR and marketing tips for mums with businesses
Daryl Willcox Publishing is a company which helps small businesses raise their profile in the media. In the first of a series of five weekly blogs, its founder and chairman Daryl Willcox gives his thoughts on ‘How to market your business on a shoestring’.
Find out exactly who your customer is.
The first step really is to identify your customer. This is the basis for any marketing, whether it’s on a shoestring or not, but it becomes more important if you haven’t done a great deal of marketing before.
Stop thinking about advertising, stop thinking about direct mail or anything else that you might associate with marketing. Put all of that out of your mind and think about who you are trying to reach.
The best way to do that is by looking at your existing customers and thinking about who they are. Where do they live? How old are they? What things do they do with their time? If your product or service is aimed at businesses, then how big are those companies? Are they generally smaller or larger? If you have a consumer product then you are going to look much more at lifestyle, age and sex.
Try and build up a profile of your client and try to imagine a single individual who embodies everything a typical client would be.
Thinking about who your customers are will be very helpful – not only for your marketing but also for your product development. It will give you all the initial clues for what sort of marketing activity you want to be doing.
For more in-depth advice and a series of podcasts on how to begin or improve your own PR and marketing visit www.dwpub.com/smallbusiness


