FORWARD: Lessons From Silicon Valley Journalists
By Jeremy Pepper
Expert Author
Article Date: 2006-04-02
A couple weeks ago, I went to the Silicon Valley PRSA blockbuster lunch and took notes. From these notes, I wrote a post for the FORWARD blog, the student-run Website and blog, for students.
Some highlights from that post:
Who do you read online?Go read the rest of the post - some great advice for students, and a refresher course for those that have been in PR.
Markoff: I read ValleyWag, Digg has replaced Slashdot for me, The Register … there are too many blogs in my blogreader, too many unread stories, which says that the model is broken on too much data.
Clark: C/Net for tech news, the Register, the Inquirer - as for online, and I like that I can up the size of the font.
What are the most compelling pitches, the way you like to get pitches?
Clark: We are the last person to write on a company launch. I like cool companies with cool ideas - I feel retro that I still do stories on launches.
But, most small companies have to wrap themselves up in a larger trend. What's absolutely unique about the company? You want to be part of a larger trend, be part of a movement, so we can write about the company. You can segment the answers, see in the larger context and broadest way possible.
We wrote first about Napster and its legal issues - but we missed the sociological story. It's about the big picture, what is important as a reader, and to the reader.
Goldberg: it is pretty hard for a small company to get its voice heard, but there are a lot of ways into the paper. It is the creative pitch - it is community, personality, what the company is doing exemplifying a larger trend. Show the trend. There are ways to pitch the story. Send emails - don't fax!
Kehoe: Context, context, context. Put in a human element, add some tension. There does not need to be great conflict, but it can be a David v Goliath type-story.
Markoff: 1989 was the last time I was asked the question. Then, there was a wewsletter that came out that said I could not think of a way for small companies to get press.
I look at everything for better or ill, and email is my way to look and read everything. I respond to the things I can do something with, that are a potential story. I am not changing that, but I am looking and I do what I can do - with 100-150 emails from PR people a day, if I gave them all a fair hearing, that is all I would do during the day.
I practice triage, but I do not want you to go away.
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About the Author:
Jeremy Pepper is the CEO and founder of POP! Public Relations, a public relations firm based in Arizona, USA.
He authors the popular Musings from POP! Public Relations blog which offers Jeremy's opinions and views - on public relations, publicity and other things.
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