12 Apr 2011

Why Beating the Drums of My Clients Stories is Based on Being Helpful to Journalists, Bloggers, and Analysts

The single most asked question I get from prospective clients is if either I, or the team I have assembled to handle an account have connections to a particular publication, media outlet, or industry analyst research firm. 

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Beating the drums of my client's stories is based being helpful to journalists, bloggers and industry analysts.  Oh - these are my Ludwig drums - circa 1967.

While it certainly would make my job easier if I could respond with an absolute vote of confidence with: "....oh sure, we personally know and work with all 300 analysts at Gartner or the 30 or so business editors at The New York Times," the realities are that while I certainly consider us well connected, it is physically impossible to have on going relationships with every journalist and analyst in the technology universe. 

Why I Work For Journalists, Bloggers, and Analysts and NOT for My Clients

The realities are this: if you have a good story and a well thought out media strategy, you don't have to be "connected."  You have to know how to effectively pitch and provide compelling stories and content. 

Even with my having a good contact in place, my job is to work for the media, bloggers and industry analysts and not for the client.  The client pays me to be helpful to this universe and deliver great story ideas - hopefully based on what my client has to offer, and the story we want to share.

I have personally sold stories in major media outlets and very industry specific trade publications to journalists I have never worked with.  And I have done many of these through pure email dialogues without ever having a real time phone conversation.  

If you have a compelling story, a body of work in place that helps you be a trusted source of content, it will not only make your PR team's job much easier, it will enable you to be discovered and found.


 

 

 

15 Jun 2010

Tonight - Our PBS Station Continues with its Blazing Gavels Auction; I'll Be Social Broadcasting - @KRLNAuction

Tonight at 6:00 PM, I'll be live, Social Broadcasting from our local PBS Station, KLRN, during the annual Blazing Gavels Auction.

While the television portion is broadcast, well, over traditional broadcast TV in our viewing area, I am hoping we can find PBS fans from around the world who would like to tune into a taste of local San Antonio, and if you see something you like and want to support a good cause, you'll bid on something.

Stay tuned.

6 Mar 2010

George F. Colony's Blog: The Counterintuitive CEO: Social Sigma -- getting customers to improve your products

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Many moons ago, it was all about Six Sigma.

Now, George Colony write about Social Sigma.  

George says that while Six Sigma is a discipline for improving products through better process, Social Sigma is about improving products through social feedback. It's about using social networks as a means for customers (and potential customers) to continually critique, analyze, and offer suggestions about your products. It's a powerful tool for continually increasing the value of what you make. 

Read his post and keep George on your radar. Even though people at Forrester like Jeremiah and Charlene have left, Forrester brings umpteen years of insights into how enterprises use technology.
9 Jul 2009

Sweet

Here in San Antonio, there are still palleta vendors that sell a famous Mexican Popsicle with real fruit and no preservatives. Cost: $1.00.

Photo

 

Shot with my iPhone camera while renting a car at Enterprise Car Rental on Blanco Rd. in San Antonio.  The vendor was just riding by and I bought a strawberry paletta from him- and it was good.

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Alan Weinkrantz