Archive for the ‘Public Relations’ Category

One Meeting Plus Five Editors Equals 1.6 Million Readers!

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

Much about media relations is similar to sales, and there’s nothing more persuasive and effective in building a strong journalistic relationship with a company than the traditional face-to-face meeting. In December, Goldstein Group created a four-day press tour for an automotive aftermarket manufacturer that covered both coasts, 35 editors and 28 consumer magazines. A single meeting with editors from just Diesel Power, Four Wheeler, Hot Rod, Car Craft, Popular Hot Rodding and Chevy High Performance represented more than 1.6 million readers! The coverage was priceless, with 39 pages of in-depth print article coverage – and that doesn’t even include the web coverage and blog posts.

How is Baseball’s Umpire Gaffe a Lesson in Good Public Relations?

Monday, June 7th, 2010

As did many baseball fans, I listened in stunned silence Wednesday night when umpire Jim Joyce blew a call and stole a perfect game from Detroit pitcher Armando Galarraga. A perfect game is one of the most rare and difficult achievements in sports – taking place only 20 times in the history of baseball! And Joyce’s blown call was clear to all – even to him, as he admitted later.

You can predict the reaction. After the game, there were calls for Joyce to be fired, suspended, or disciplined in some way. He became the instant personification of evil in Detroit, and the wronged pitcher Galarraga was the instant subject of pity and empathy. For a time, it was reported that Joyce was the number one topic on Twitter. To be honest, I feared for his safety.

But something happened during the next 12 hours. When I drove to work the next morning, all the talk and comments were IN SUPPORT of Joyce! People expressed sympathy for him, admiration, even respect. There was barely any mention of the pitcher-done-wrong. The newspaper story, “Respect overwhelms ump,” went on for a good 20 inches of the outpouring of support Joyce said he received after his blown call. What could possibly have happened overnight that turned public opinion from treating Joyce as villain to near-victim?

He apologized. He held an immediate press conference, and with tears in his eyes and a heartfelt apology, he admitted his error and showed such convincing horror at the consequences and significance of his gaffe, and the damage that he had done to Galarraga’s place in history, that he won the hearts and support of nearly all of baseball. He even hugged Galarraga and asked for his forgiveness.

Was there ever a more clear-cut example of the power of an apology, of the power of clear, immediate and honest communications? I’ve never seen such a 180-degree shift in public opinion occur in such a short amount of time. Simply put, we all make mistakes – people, organizations, companies. But an immediate apology not only “minimizes the news cycle,” it’s good public relations, good character, and good common sense.

Kids nowadays!

Monday, June 8th, 2009

I recently attended a national conference for the PR trade group PRSA. The industry is consumed by social media, with PR professionals quickly moving to adapt these new tools in ways that improve lead generation, customer retention and brand awareness. But here’s the best comment made at the conference: Edelman PR CEO Matt Harrington spoke about industry changes, including how valuable new graduates were to the profession. But while they had much to contribute in creativity and online savvy, the culture of this latest generation left him a little cold in one respect: “On more than one occasion, after one of our young staff members received their review, we’ve received a phone call from their parents!” The conference gasped at that one.

New Tools Improve Your Online World

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

There’s no shortage of cool tools coming out for business owners. I heard about many at a conference a few weeks ago in New Orleans, and some of the hottest included:

  • Google Voice (formerly grandcentral.com), a one-number voice mail/email service; grasshopper.com is similar.
  • Heard of live chat? That’s soooo early 2000s! Try video chat inside gmail (Google) email accounts, where you can see friends while chatting.
  • Run a timesheet-oriented business? Try www.slimtimer.com, an online tool to simplify timesheets.
  • Worried about losing your company’s institutional knowledge, or scrambling to find the same documents again and again? Store it all on a free password-protected wiki, at Googlesites, without needing to code in html.
  • Looking to create a group of like-minded people to share coffee, war stories, best practices, etc.? One may already exist, or create one on your own at www.meetup.com.
  • Create your own live video streaming show, for free of course, at www.ustream.com. (Distribute it – for free – on www.tubemogul.com.)
  • Go beyond old RSS feeds to www.feedburner.com (of course, now also owned by Google) to build your own audiences and push your content to more people.

Does anyone charge for software anymore? Enjoy.

Pitch the Web When You're Pitching TV

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

Next time you’re pitching a story for TV, think “web.” That’s the advice from Howard Fencl, a news producer at Cleveland TV station WKYC. News executives increasingly look for stories that not only have a visual play and make for a good story for the evening broadcast but for an angle that would play well on the station’s web site. Reporters finish their stories and then direct viewers to the site to learn more and get additional details not aired during the segment.

Integrating Online Video Into Your PR Program

Friday, July 18th, 2008

Last month when we took a client out on the road on a press tour, we encountered something new – an online video created when the editors interviewed us! Magazines are turning to online video as rapidly as they can think of how to use them, and PR is fertile territory. The editors simply interview visiting companies as they give a two-minute summary of their latest product, then post it on the magazine’s site alongside the news release. Here’s a sample:

http://electronicdesign.com/shows/new_products/index.cfm

In fact, at a wireless industry trade show this month, we saw the same pattern repeated – a few publications sent their editors around with simple home video cameras to capture interviews on the latest technology introduced at the show, for broadcast on their site alongside traditional text coverage of the show.

Online video is not just for webcasts anymore. Try experimenting with how to create more video content in a PR perspective. One idea will be to embed a two-minute video pitch with comparative product benefits in our news releases, alongside still photography. Customers and prospects can get a quick snapshot of the product’s core advantages to them, with links to white papers, data sheets, and more elaborate product information as a call to action. Will it work? We’ll share the results with you in the next few weeks.

Crain’s List Ranks Us High

Friday, July 18th, 2008

Congratulations to Goldstein Group, who pegged a #11 ranking on the Crain’s Cleveland Business ranking of Marketing Firms. It was nice to see Crain’s return to publishing an agency ranking. They abandoned such a list in the mid-1990s, and it’s return is welcome. The rankings were based on employee size; currently, the agency employs 16 people, making us one of the stronger mid-sized agencies in Northeast Ohio.