Would You Rather Be Rich or Famous? This is Not a Trick Question
by Mark Joyner
"Champagne
wishes and caviar dreams..."
Our fascination with the "Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous"
kept us riveted to the TV screen for 9 years as Robin Leach
entertained us with mouth-watering glimpses of how the rich and famous
live.
Most of us yearn for wealth and fame, and yet secretly believe that
those commodities are beyond our reach -- that they are reserved for
others, not us.
What if I told you that most of the rich and famous people in the
world became rich and famous simply because they knew how to ethically
influence the media? And what if I told you that if you could learn
their publicity secrets, wealth and fame are yours for the asking?
The truth is, there is no method more powerful or less costly for
creating fame or fortune than publicity
Publicity starts with a news release. The news release is one of the
world's best marketing tools, but is also that wretched thing that
often shatters the hopes of all who dare to seek publicity. But stick
with me and I'll show you how to get the upper hand that will put you
far ahead of all others who have tried and failed.
Most experienced business people have a story to tell about their
attempts at getting publicity -- and it always ends with the same
question: "Why do I even bother?"
The fact is that millions of dollars worth of publicity is available
to anyone who knows how to get it. One person I know who has the best
batting average at getting publicity is Paul Krupin. Paul's PR client
list consists of the largest roster of rags-to-riches people and
companies ever to be assembled in one place.
Paul reveals the sobering fact that 90% or more of the news releases
received by editors end up in the trash. According to Paul, nothing
annoys busy editors more than news releases that are poorly written.
More particularly, there are 3 mistakes -- and these are serious,
fatal errors that most people make with news releases.
1) Your news releases talk about you too much. They say me, me, me --
or my product, my product, my product.
2) Your news releases are an advertisement. They sell, sell, sell.
3) You're sending your news releases to the wrong media.
Okay, so you've made some or all of these mistakes at one time or
another. But don't worry, it's not just you. Most people fail to focus
on the needs of the editor. They don't create information that is
aimed at the editor's audience. So they fail to get the editor's
attention, and ultimately fail to get publicity.
How then can you make sure that your news release does not end up as a
statistic?
Your news release should be about one thing only -- news. If you have
a newsworthy angle, it hooks the editor into reading every word of
your news release. Make the subject of your headline sound as big and
as startling as possible. You need to make a huge impact because you
just don't know what other news releases you may be competing against
at any given time.
Your product can then ride on the strength of the news angle. Use
the soft sell approach so that your news release will not be regarded
as an advertisement.
Never tell the whole story in your news release. Instead, generate a
curiosity that must be satisfied. This is the principle of cognitive
dissonance that I teach in-depth in 1001 Killer Internet Marketing
Tactics. If you create dissonance in the mind of the editor with an
unanswered question, the editor must resolve that conflict by seeking
the answer; i.e., by calling you.
Before you send out your news releases, hand pick your target
media with surgical precision. This is crucial. Getting publicity is
not a numbers game. It's not how many copies of your news release you
can broadcast at once, but whom you send it to that matters. The most
well-crafted news release will be trash-bound if you send it to the
wrong segments of the media.
Do yourself a big favor. Do not read those mediocre how-to books on
publicity that are available everywhere. The only thing you'll learn
from them is how to get your news release thrown into the trash. My
theory is that a few decades ago, some misguided person from the
school of "Those who can, do -- those who can't, teach"
wrote a book on how to write news releases. Then someone else took the
same myths and fallacies, and wrote yet another version of the book.
Pretty soon, there
was a flood of how-to books on publicity -- all rehashing the same old
dreary methods that simply don't work.
Instead, study the PR campaigns of those who have been extremely
successful at getting publicity. Study their news releases to find
elements that you can emulate for your purposes. Find out the media
targets they sent their releases to.
It is immensely easier, faster, and less expensive to learn, model,
and achieve success by following in the footsteps of those who have
been successful than it is to learn how to succeed by trial and error.
Don't buy into publicity theory. Go with the hard facts -- those
strategies that have been proven to work.
Paul Krupin is a guy who's made all the mistakes that can possibly be
made in seeking publicity. As a result, he has amassed an entirely
unique approach to publicity, most of which is light years ahead of
all other information that you've read on the subject. Paul has
emerged as one of the leading PR and Media Consultants, and has
authored the definitive guide to achieving publicity, "Trash
Proof News Releases." |