Get on 'Oprah' via O
Magazine
By Joan Stewart
The Publicity Hound
The big
mistake most people make when trying go get onto "Oprah" is failing
to understand that their product, service, cause or issue isn't a
perfect match with Oprah's audience.
Day after day, I see people with
academic topics, or products for the corporate suite, or services
for niche audiences trying to compete with the gazillion other
Publicity Hounds who are pitching "Oprah."
Mistake Number Two is sending by
snail-mail books or other products they hope will catch the
producers' attention. Oprah's staff receives an astonishing 200
books per month! Do you know where all of them end up, along with
all the other packages? Either in the trash, or the staff donates
them to a worthy cause.
Oprah show inundated
Producers don't
have time to wade through the mountains of unsolicited material.
Working 12- and 14-hour days, they need to save time wherever they
can. So in many cases, they look to a reliable source they can
trust: O Magazine. If you've been featured in O, the producers know
you've already passed inspection, so to speak.
For example, Genevieve
Piturro, who founded The Pajama Program, a charity that gives new
pajamas to needy children, first appeared in O Magazine, and then on
"Oprah" in 2007. And what a
show it was.
Oprah issued a
challenge to the 300 people in the audience to buy and donate
pajamas. As a result, the audience brought in more than 32,000 PJs
for the charity. As a result of that great segment, producers at
Oprah & Friends XM radio booked Piturro for an interview on the
radio show.
Sometimes it works the other way
around. You can get onto the TV show first, and then appear in the
magazine. But because competition for the TV show is so intense,
it's often better to try to get into the magazine first.
O Magazine's 12
favorite topics
Susan Harrow, who wrote the ebook
Get into O Magazine, says editors are looking for about a dozen
types of stories and interview subjects when they sift through the
thousands of pitches, emails, books and other solicitations:
- A book that women want to
read. (Authors, pay attention.) It must be well-written, moving,
funny, dramatic, or it must deal with a topic that Oprah
believes women must know about. That's why you must do your
research and watch the show so you understand Oprah's
hot-button topics.
- Unusual gifts for pets, or a
heart-warming story about your relationship with your pet. After
the magazine featured BowWowTV, a company that makes DVDs for
dogs, Denise Loren was able to get her product into 100 retail
outlets.
- A story about how you inspired
some great shift your community.
- Out-of-the ordinary tips from
the experts on how to save money, do good for others, and live
to the fullest. After business advisor Stephen Shapiro, author
of the book Goal-Free Living: How to Have the Life You Want
NOW!, was featured in O Magazine, he got calls from
Entrepreneur, Investor's Business Daily and Family Circle.
- Breakthroughs in health,
anti-aging, dealing with health care and optimal healthful
living. When the magazine featured the Heart Center for Women at
Rush University Medical Center, patients flocked to the center,
says Dr. Annabelle Volgman.
- A service that has helped
thousands of people and that others can use when the economy is
bad.
- A product, service, cause or
issue that helps children love in a unique way.
- Suggestions on how women can
stop obsessing over what they want and, instead, start
appreciating what they have.
- How you've gotten through some
of the toughest times in your life and advice you can share on
how other women can do the same.
- A unique perspective on
relationships.
- New research on a topic that
women need to know about. (If you know about the topics Oprah
thinks are important, this is an easy one to tie into.)
- Products that women love and
are beautifully packaged. (Some of these could end up as one of
"Oprah's Favorite Things.")
Susan Harrow also points out that
Publicity Hounds with topics that pertain to architecture, living,
home decorating, art or creativity might also be able to get into O
now that the Hearst Corporation has decided to discontinue O at Home
because of declining advertising revenue. Those topics will be moved
into O magazine.
Direct comments or questions about this article, including requests
for reprint rights, to:
Joan Stewart
The Publicity Hound
3434 County KK
Port Washington, WI 53074
Phone: 262-284-7451
JStewart@PublicityHound.com
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