Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Publicity tips/Don't Let Video Pass You By April 29, 2008

The Publicity Hound's
Tips of the Week
Issue #396 April 29, 2008
Publisher: Joan Stewart
mailto:JStewart@PublicityHound.com
http://www.PublicityHound.com
http://www.publicityhound.net/ (Blog)
The Publicity Hound®

Circulation: 46,003

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"Tips, Tricks and Tools for Free Publicity"

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Please forward this ezine to anyone you know who needs free publicity to establish their credibility, enhance their reputation, position themselves as employers of choice, sell more products and services, or promote a favorite cause or issue.

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Authors & Experts, Don't Miss This One: 22 Revenue Streams

If you're an author, or you're thinking of writing a book, relying on the book as a major revenue stream is a huge mistake. I've seen more authors end up in the poor house because they thought a book would pay the bills.

It's the other way around. Publishing a book can drain your bank account and your sanity, unless you know how to monetize it. Steve Harrison says authors and experts must know about and choose from 22 revenue streams if they want their businesses to go "ka-ching...ka-ching..."

He'll explain them all during a free call he's hosting this Thursday, May 1. Choose from two times: either 2 p.m. Eastern or 7 p.m. Eastern. He is not recording it, so if you want the info, either listen yourself or ask somebody to listen for you and take notes. Sign up here: http://www.MillionDollarAuthorClub.com/Thursday/?10011

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In This Issue
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1. Don't Let Video Pass You By

2. Follow the Thief

3. Join the Debate: Online or Offline?

4. New NPR Program Wants Your Input

5. Promoting Trading Cards for Tweens

6. Help This Hound

7. Hound Quote of the Week

8. At My Blog...


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1. Don't Let Video Pass You By
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Stop wasting time trading links with other websites, posting the same how-to article to a gazillion article directory sites, and doing sneaky little things at your own website to try to trick the search engines.

Those strategies can actually hurt you.

Spend your time instead creating video, one of the most powerful ways to pull traffic to your website or blog. It will boost your position in the search engine rankings and, in some cases, take tons of business away from your competitors. Do it right, and they'll be so shell-shocked they'll pack up and go home.

During my 70-minute teleseminar with video expert Mike Stewart earlier this month, the 400 people who were on the line listened as Mike outlined lots of creative, powerful ways to use video in your publicity campaign, or to sell products or services.

We're not talking about full-length productions here. Just short clips of about two and a half minutes or less.

Here are our ideas on how to use video in a publicity or marketing campaign:

- -Create short videos about your products and services, upload them to your website, and include video links in your press releases.

- -Speakers, create short video snippets of your presentations and post them at your site.

- -Use videos to demonstrate how to use your product.

- -Authors, create short little videos that discuss portions of your books.

- -Take visitors on a tour of your website using a screen-capture software program like Camtasia.

- -Shoot your own video of events the media won't cover, and submit the video to local newspapers and TV stations, many of which offer consumer-generated video at their websites.

- -Use video on a one-page sales letter. If a picture is worth a thousand words, video can close the sale.

- -Generate leads and pull traffic by creating videos and posting them to YouTube and other video-sharing sites.

- -Use video at your blog, or create a video blog on a free Wordpress platform like I'm doing. (I should be ready to introduce it to you next week.)

If you missed last week's call, you can hear the replay and see the nifty video I shot myself at http://www.JoanandMikeStewart.com

Mike will show you the absolute easiest-to-use equipment you'll need to start producing video that will turn you into the type of marketing warrior that will send your competitors running home to their mommies.

P. S. Many of you who participated in the call asked if Mike and I would give you more options in terms of buying a camera, the editing software and the training tutorials so you can get comfortable shooting and editing video first, and then do the training. We have. Now you can get what you want when you want it. Go to http://www.JoanandMikeStewart.com


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2. Follow the Thief
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When Michael Costigan heard a news report on a Milwaukee radio station last week that a brazen thief had stolen a flat-panel TV from the local veterans hospital, he couldn't believe what he'd heard.

He went to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel's website where he confirmed the story.

"I was absolutely disgusted," he said.

Michael, general manager of the Waukesha Home Design Center, wasted little time getting angry. He immediately contacted the VA center and made plans to deliver and install a 52-inch LG LCD model. Total value: $3,300.

The result?

- -Michael ended up on the front page of the Journal Sentinel, complete with a photo of him in his store.

- -All the Milwaukee TV stations followed up with their own stories.

- -The Associated Press picked up the story, which ended up on the national Fox News and CNN websites.

- -His store received calls from customers and others telling him how much they appreciated what he had done.

Michael's quick thinking is a terrific example of how piggybacking onto bad news stories like this one can generate mountains of publicity.

When you hear news reports like this and you can donate something to replace what was stolen, publicity is practically yours for the asking.

By the way, this would also have been a great opportunity for a company that sells surveillance equipment. What do state laws say regarding surveillance? Are cameras small enough that thieves will barely notice them? What kinds of crimes have been solved thanks to surveillance cameras?

Jeff Zbar, the Small Business Administration's 2001 Journalist of the Year, says piggybacking onto breaking news, like Michael did here, is one of the best ways for small business owners to create publicity. He was my guest during a teleseminar on "The Fastest, Cheapest, Easiest Ways to Publicize Your Small Business." Stop calling journalists and begging them to cover you. Instead, listen to the tips Jeff gives on how to really catch the media's attention.

The recording is available as a CD or an electronic transcript that you can download and be reading as soon as your order has been approved.

Read more about what you'll learn at http://publicityhound.net/publicityforsmallbusiness


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3. Join the Debate: Online or Offline?
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Which would you rather have:

- -An appearance on "Oprah," or the most influential blogger in your industry writing about you?

- -A big story in a major consumer magazine about your new product, or a review at one of the many websites that review products?

- -A front-page story about your nonprofit in your local newspaper, which mostly local readers will read, or the same story at your newspaper's website?

They're interesting questions likely to create heated disagreement among Publicity Hounds, depending on the product, service, cause or issue you're trying to promote.

And I want you to weigh in. Go to my Squidoo lens at http://www.squidoo.com/howtogetfree_publicity

Here's the question I want you to answer: If you had to devote time and money to either online publicity or offline publicity exclusively, which would you choose? And why?

You'll be lined up next to somebody who disagrees with you, and it should turn into a healthy debate.

This Squidoo feature, by the way, is called the "Duel," and it's one of many interesting ways to present content at your lens to engage your audience and pull in traffic. Publicity Hounds, of course, will see it as one more way to publicize whatever you're promoting so you can get your message in front of other Hounds who visit.

OK, give it your best shot. Which is more valuable, and why?

Bloggers and ezine editors, pose this question to your own readers, and provide the link: http://www.squidoo.com/howtogetfree_publicity



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4. New NPR Program Wants Your Input
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Move over, "Morning Edition." You have a new rival.

It's called "The Takeaway," a chatty, less-formal, more interactive program that launched yesterday on National Public Radio stations in New York, Boston, Baltimore and several smaller cities.

Hosted by John Hockenberry and Adaora Udoji, the new show in the morning time slot will allow listeners to weigh in via the Internet on what subjects the hosts should cover next or examine in greater detail. Listeners can participate in on-air discussions.

Read the details in yesterday's wall Street Journal: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120933344564348077.html

You can learn more about the show, including the names of all the producers, at http://www.thetakeaway.org/about/ and then submit your own comments on topics such as photo Ids, Atlanta hip-hop and the rebate checks.

National Public Radio can be a gold mine for Publicity Hounds who are targeting a better-educated, more upscale audience--but only if you understand how the NPR labyrinth works and you know how to navigate it. Book publicist Lissa Warren explains how she gets dozens of her clients onto NPR shows and how you can use the same strategies she uses. She was my guest on a teleseminar called "How to Get Booked on National Public Radio."

It's available as a CD or an electronic transcript that you can download and be reading as soon as your order has been approved.

Start getting valuable tips right now on how to make NPR a powerful part of your publicity campaign: http://publicityhound.net/cdnpr/



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5. Promoting Trading Cards for 'Tweens
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This week, 11 Publicity Hounds have tips on how Shirley James of Ormond Beach, Florida can get her activity-based trading cards for 'tween girls (ages 7-12) into the marketplace.


From Carrie Eddins:

"Start blogging about, and create a list of the exact situation that you really want...Women are the most prolific bloggers online and I am sure they all want to make their girls even happier. I would start chatting about being mompreneurs, and you could even see how some of these ladies would like to invest in your cards. I think it's a truly wonderful idea and much needed!"


From Linda Lipinski:

"I had a difficult time finding any 'real' information about your company on your website. I finally found something the media did, which prompted several more clicks. But I couldn't get all of it onto the screen. I would suggest that on your website, you add an 'About Us' button. Your story should be unique and if well- written, it will be great publicity. The public loves reading about how someone came up with the idea to create a product."


From Lisa Romeo:

"Your marketing copy reads: 'Encourage them to become physically active, mentally challenged, creatively inspired, and socially responsible.'

"These are almost an exact duplicate of the goals of the Girl Scouts (and probably other similar organizations). Maybe explore tie-ins. Try to get your products placed beside Scouting items in hobby shops, sports stores, camping/outdoor stores and other places that sell Scouting gear.

"I can also see your product as a give-away at events and conferences that promote development of girls' interest in challenging careers. After-school care programs, often run by YMCAs, might be interested too."


The Publicity Hound says:

Submit your trading cards for inclusion in special sections or programs featuring products that would make great gifts for 'tweens. Newspapers, magazines, and TV and radio need products to feature. Take a test drive of The Gift List, a database of hundreds of media outlets planning this coverage, so you know whom to pitch and when. Take a test drive at http://publicityhound.net/giftlist


Read all the responses to this week's Help This Hound question at http://publicityhound.net/cardgame

Send your own Help this Hound question to: mailto:JStewart@PublicityHound.com?subject=HelpThisHound and include your city and state.


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6. Help This Hound
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Debbie Jordan Kravitz of York, Pa. Writes:

"I'm a professional organizer. I also blog weekly at http://OnlineOrganizing.com which has been going really well and leading to lots of website hits from all over the country.

"To capitalize on this broad audience, and since I can't physically organize these people, I have added virtual organizing consultation programs to my list of services. This allows me to consult with clients from any part of the country via email and phone calls regarding their problems.

"Aside from pitching this service through my blog, though, how can I market this service to my target audience (Internet-savvy, time-crunched individuals who are capable of implementing organizational instructions and strategies, but are looking for customized plans, ideas and guidance?"

The Publicity Hound says:

How about writing an article or pitching bloggers about how dangerous and harmful answering email all day long can be to somebody's personal and financial health? I'm trying really hard to break free of this addiction, which is more difficult than quitting smoking. Then suggest ways people can organize, sort and fly through several hundred email messages quickly. If readers benefit from your email advice, they'll wonder what else you know that can help them.

Hounds with other ideas for Debbie can post them to my blog at http://publicityhound.net/professionalorganizer


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7. Hound Joke of the Week
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Thanks to Publicity Hound Sophie Wajsman of Melbourne, Australia for this one:

"The noblest dog is the hot dog because it feeds the hand that bites it."

DOG JOKES & QUOTES EBOOK: 170+ G-rated dog jokes and quotes, perfect for a dog-lover, your favorite vet, or just for a few good laughs.

BONUS: Buy the ebook and you also get a compilation of the 50 best websites for dog humor.

Http://www.publicityhound.com/dogjokebook/


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8. At My Blog...
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When bloggers ask for free products, be generous http://publicityhound.net/productsforbloggers

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Where to See or Hear The Publicity Hound

April 30: Teleseminar

"How to Create a Media Plan," part of the teleseminar series "Intro to Internet Marketing" for health professionals. Perfect for doctors, nurses, spa owners, holistic health counselors, massage therapists, etc. Register at http://publicityhound.net/introinternetmarketing

PERMISSION TO REPRINT: You may reprint any items from "The Publicity Hound's Tips of the Week" in your print or electronic newsletter. But please include the following paragraph:

Reprinted from "The Publicity Hound's Tips of the Week," an ezine featuring tips, tricks and tools for generating free publicity. Subscribe at http://www.publicityhound.com/ and receive by email the handy list "89 Reasons to Send a News Release."

If you like these tips please pass them on to your friends, clients and colleagues.

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Joan Stewart
a. k.a. The Publicity Hound®
3434 County KK
Port Washington, WI 53074
U. S.A.
Phone: 262-284-7451 (Central) Fax: 262-284-1737

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