Posts Tagged ‘public relations’

PR in practice: The how of self-publishing

May 12th, 2009 | 1 Comment

Last week I wrote about the benefits of self-publishing, especially in an environment where there are fewer trade publications and everybody is shouting into the press release cacaphony.

Many organizations don’t think they have the content to publish their own e-newsletters, community sites or print publications, but there are many sources of information under their own roofs (or extended roofs).  The best sources are often your own engineers and developers, who with good editing can communicate directly and effectively as peers to your customers.

Here are some outlets for generating content:

  • Adapting existing content, especially new product releases and application stories (if these contain puffery, excise it ruthlessly).
  • Tailoring other content from the Internet and strategic partners.
  • Converting technical material and white papers into articles.
  • Presenting profiles of prominent customers and company programmers.
  • Writing editorials on themes of interest to customers and potential customers, including your vision for the marketplace, defining company positions, and relating your technology to bigger industry movements.
  • Establishing forums for exchanging information and answering questions.
  • Providing an outlet for blogs from product managers and technical staff.

This content can be aggregated and presented in many different ways.  It could take the form of monthy or bimonthy e-newsletters linked to a company web site.   It could be part of a community site or a company blog section on your web site.  The best content could be assembled in a 4-color magazine sent quarterly or twice annually to your best customers.

If you don’t think you can generate content yourself or hire an editor to do so, see if there is an existing community site that might be open for purchase.  In this arrangement, you could provide editorial autonomy and funding for the community site to its editors, while generating leads from advertising and promotions running on the site.

There are many possibilities that are cost-effective for generating sales leads and deepening an organization’s relationship with the community.  But to begin exploring them, you have to get past one evil word: “can’t.”

PR in practice: Why self-publish?

May 7th, 2009 | 1 Comment

This is the first in a series of postings on best practices and alternative approaches to public relations.

You’ve heard of citizen journalism, but what about self-publishing?  Self publishing presents a huge PR opportunity, but many companies don’t pursue it because they think it is too esoteric, difficult or expensive.  Actually, if done well with the right people and right content, it’s none of those things.  It’s a sterling opportunity to engage directly with an interested audience comprising current and potential buyers of your products or services.

There’s never been a better time to self-publish, as there are a lot of former trade press reporters, editors and/or aspiring journalists who would welcome the opportunity to be an in-house editor of your publication or community site.

Your community site, e-newsletter and/or print publication (yes, there could be a role for good old paper) must adhere to Seth Godin’s permission marketing guidelines.  Most of all, the content has to be engaging to your target audience, provoking a high pass-along rate and subscriber growth.

Consider these reasons for becoming your own publisher:

  • The steady decrease in influence of print publications and web sites devoted to niche markets and technologies.
  • Not enough reporters/editors dedicated to cover particular technology subjects.
  • Very few editors/reporters with knowledge of your technology to write intelligently about subjects that matter to your audience.
  • Publishers too ensconced in traditional approaches, both in technology and editorially.
  • Big, untapped opportunity if there are no dedicated journals or e-newsletters in your company’s discipline — you can set the agenda and capture an audience.
  • Suspicion of general marketing such as advertising, and traditional approaches to PR, such as press releases.
  • Directly reach a highly targeted market with customized content.
  • Can become the knowledge broker for the industry.
  • Move beyond vendor to information provider.
  • Provide a new channel for cross-marketing the brand.
  • Naturally build a community for your market category.
  • Disseminate news, information, features in exactly the way you want to, without having to worry about dilution or screening from editors.
  • Establish recognition for your customers and partners doing good work in your field.

Next week:  How to self-publish.