1 / 11

News Release / Press Release Primer

News Release / Press Release Primer. Bob Griffin New England Institute of Art Summarized from Notes from A Master Class *. News Release / Press Release Primer.

marion
Download Presentation

News Release / Press Release Primer

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. News Release / Press Release Primer Bob Griffin New England Institute of Art Summarized from Notes from A Master Class *

  2. News Release / Press Release Primer • The news release (press release) is probably the single most important form of communication between an organization and the media, and, therefore, between the organization and the public. • News releases account for 70% of all communication between PR and editors. • A busy editor may receive from 25 to 50 news releases a day!

  3. News Release / Press Release Primer • Editors generally cite three reasons why they don’t use a news release: • Not interesting; too complicated; boring • Too long; need to re-write; don’t have time • Too commercially oriented; too much like an advertisement

  4. News Release / Press Release Primer To achieve success: • Recognize WHAT is news • Use the proper format • Write effectively Simply stated, news is anything that interests the public.

  5. News Release / Press Release Primer • Basically, almost anything can be news to someone, somewhere. Your job is to determine which news goes where. • Know your target audience; know their reading matter, too.

  6. Since the audience varies and the concept of news varies, it is important to realize that some people and things are ALWAYS news: Progress - Software release Names (celebrity of any kind) Anna Nicole; Paris Hilton Conflict and controversy - Microsoft Lawsuit Disasters - 12/26 Tsunami A significant event “Shuttle Explosion” Novelty - Microsoft Wallet Current Events -Y2K The Future -Almost nothing will guarantee press coverage as well as the future News Guidelines

  7. News Release Format • Your job is to help the editor; give him what he wants is the best possible, ready-to-use format. • Here’s a checklist to get it right the first time: • Who the release is from • Contact name and telephone number • The release date (For release on: ______; For Immediate Release) • Date the release is being mailed • What the story is about: Headline, subhead and two sentence grabber; inverted pyramid

  8. Some mechanical details • Use 8 1/2 by 11 paper only • Double space • Maintain wide margins, left, right and bottom • Use only one side of paper • Leave 1 1/2 to 2 inches between letter head and headline (gives editor room to instruct typesetter) • Use “MORE” bottom of page if more than one page • Use # # # # or * * * * to show end

  9. About the writing. . . • Ask yourself these questions? • What am I trying to communicate? • Why is it news? • Does it make a difference? • Who cares? • What do they care about? • Why do they care? • What is relationship between reader and writer? • Is it timely? • Relevant to the audience? • Significant? • Interesting?

  10. About the writing . . . • Your writing should be clear, concise, interesting, accurate, simple and readable. • The gist of the story should be in the first two sentences. • Which means that the first two sentences should answer the key questions: • What is happening? • Or, is about to happen? • Who is involved? • When is it taking place? • How did it occur? • Where? • Why is it happening?

  11. Unprofessionalism - spelling, grammar, improper format, no contact info, date, titles…. No news - attempt at free advertising Editorializing No “local” angle Lack of enthusiasm Incompleteness - (don’t force the editor to have to call) Complicated writing No photos Unsuitability - the wrong story for the wrong publication A checklist of No-No’s

More Related