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Nearly Everyone Uses It, And So What?
by Marcia Yudkin
Occasionally a prospective client comes to me very gung-ho
about getting publicity and declares that they envision coverage in every
major newspaper in the country and on every network broadcast. After all,
their logic runs, our product is something everyone uses - we have close to
150 million customers a year in the U.S. alone.
"Whoa!" I reply. "That's not enough of a reason for the media to do a story.
Nearly everyone uses a toothbrush and a wallet of one sort or another, but
how often do you see stories about either of those items in the papers or on
the nightly news? Prevalent doesn't mean interesting or timely. So let's
brainstorm about what would entice the media to consider something about
your item newsworthy."
By putting a spin on something ordinary, or identifying some unusual aspect
of something ordinary, you have a good chance of getting major media hits.
For instance:
- Create a controversy. E.g., claim that 90% of Americans use each
toothbrush far too long.
- Give an award. E.g., a prize for the world's rattiest wallet.
- Offer surprising facts about your product. E.g., how long ago people were
using toothbrushes surprising similar to today's.
- Show an unexpected clientele using your product. E.g., wallets for
toddlers or for nudists.
- Piggyback on the news. E.g., play up the connection if there's a
toothbrush scene in a new feature film or a popular sit-com.
- Do a survey. E.g., what percentage of people never leave the house for any
purpose without bringing their wallet.
- Compile a set of useful tips. E.g., ten ways you should never use a
toothbrush.
- Donate your product or a gift certificate to a good cause. E.g., a new
wallet for every high school graduate in your home town.
- Offer a freebie. E.g., a free call-in line for questions about dental
hygiene.
- Invent a new use for your product. E.g., wallets designed for efficiency
at security checkpoints.
- Tie your product to economic trends. E.g., what toothbrush sales reveal
about recessions and economic booms.
- Do something anachronistic. E.g., create wallet carriers, which a butler
can hold out for the man in the house when he comes home from work.
- Sponsor a charity event. E.g., the Toothbrush Ball.
- Do something about your environmental impact. E.g., recyclable wallets.
- Celebrate an anniversary. E.g., your 10 millionth toothbrush sold.
- Create regional variations. E.g., the Tall Texan wallet, the Seattle
Surprise, the Plains Packer.
- Get offbeat endorsements. E.g., from a punk rocker, a bartender, a
has-been politician for your toothbrushes.
- Feature employees with stories. E.g., an over-80 wallet designer,
marketing vice-presidents who are twins.
- Run an event for kids. E.g., develop a show that travels to day-care
centers on how to brush teeth.
Once you have a newsworthy angle, then the ambition to get
your story into every household in the country makes more sense!
©2005 Marcia Yudkin
Article reprinted with special permission.
Marcia Yudkin is the author of '6 Steps to Free Publicity',
'Persuading on Paper', 'Web Site Marketing Makeover' and eight other books on business communication. Sign up for her free weekly newsletter on creative marketing at www.yudkin.com/marksynd.htm
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