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August 6, 2009

The New Rules of Marketing & P.R. – Book Review

Filed under: Advertising,Book Reviews,Marketing,Public Relations,Sales — Tags: Advertising, Book Reviews, Marketing, Public Relations, Roy, Sales, Technology — Roy @ 9:42 am
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I found this review on www.blogcritics.org – it seems like a very intriguing read… especially for those of you in the P.R. world. It’s almost been a year since its publication into paperback and it would be neat to do a ‘reality check’ into if this book actually has tapped into the changing face of marketing… so, if you’ve checked this book out or will – let us know your thoughts on what is going on in your world.

Here’s what blogcritic.org thought of The New Rules of Marketing & PR: How to Use News Releases, Blogs, Podcasting, Viral Marketing & Online Media to Reach Buyers Directly by David Meerman Scott (Oct. 2008)

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This book is definitely a must-read for those involved in the promotion and marketing of products and services. Scott does a wonderful job of covering the soup to nuts process of understanding your story, telling your story and then getting others to tell your story for you. His point is clear and hammered home, the old way of pushing your story via a general broadcast is not only expensive, but ineffective. In today’s world, where pitching a good story to the right people — focusing on the targeted few instead of the masses — is more likely to get many others talking about your story.
Focus on your buyers, not your product. How do customers relate to your product? What problem do you solve? What does Starbucks really sell?
Write in plain language, in the language of your customers. Invite them to engage in a dialogue instead of broadcasting your monologue.
I always preach similar techniques in my marketing practice. It’s not about the features of your product/service. In fact, it’s not about the product or service at all — it’s the relationship that customers have with your wares. What emotional connection — what need — does it satisfy?

If you are a fan of novels/movies then think about Cyrano de Bergerac and Roxanne. Basically, they have the same template: ugly, romantic guy vies against handsome, dumb guy for heart of beautiful girl. In the former, the hero duels with swords and in the latter he duels with tennis racquets. The point is that the template defines the emotional connection — the duel for love — and the nouns, namely the sword or the racquet are irrelevant because they are interchangeable. If we apply the principles from Meerman’s book, we’d see that it is paramount to focus on the template, not the instrument, i.e., the buyer and not the product.

The New Rules also talks about dialogue instead of monologue, engagement instead of broadcast. The Internet has made the world smaller. If I wanted to, right now, I could find someone online in another country and engage them in conversation. Even better, if I knew that they might have some interest in my product or service, by engaging them in conversation I’ve revealed that I’m a real person — I exist in the world — and that comfort can easily be translated to a stronger pitch for my wares to a potential customer or a journalist.

While reading The New Rules of Marketing and PR, think about the verbs that your customers use and the emotions that you can tap into to strengthen that connection… then get out there and do it.

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January 11, 2007

Harvard Business School Press Goes Web 2.0

Filed under: Public Relations — Todd Sattersten @ 9:24 am
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The publicity team at Harvard Business School Press is using del.icio.us to store and distribute PR hits they get for their books. It is a great use of the technology and something I have been pushing a number of publishers to do. Julie, Erin, Sue, and Michelle at HBSP get credit for doing it first.

Here are four reasons why I think every publicity department should be using del.icio.us:

  1. You could create an internal database to do the same thing. Del.icio.us is available right now, and you could start bookmarking in under five minutes.
  2. You have internal and external customers who crave this kind of information – sales, marketing, editorial, other PR groups, authors, fans of your authors, fans of your imprint. Del.icio.us is open to everyone and easy to use. We at 800ceoread have plans to stream these links onto the book pages of our ecommerce site.
  3. You can see how many others in the del.icio.us audience found the media pieces interesting. In the case of HBSP, the Washington Post’s Best Books of 2006 article was the most bookmarked with 22 people. This is not a definitive measurement in any way, but can act as indictator of geninue interest in the hits you do get.
  4. Bookmarking PR hits can be a way for you to introduce new articles to the del.icio.us community. This idea has the potential for the most user backlash. The HBSP team handles this risk well by making clear who they are and where the links are coming from. This method also has the most upside. Most of the bookmarks for HBSP publicity are the first in the system. By tagging bookmarks with appropriate words, users who are monitoring those tags via RSS will see articles that may of interest to them. This brings a secondary audience to the hits they have already gotten (Juile-call me, we should talk about this).

Kudos again to the HBSP Publicity Team. I love this!

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May 15, 2006

PR for 50 Cents

Filed under: Public Relations — Kate @ 2:57 pm
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Call it what you will, Jay Levinson said it’s “sheer genius” and I imagine that Richard Mori is probably thanking his lucky stars (or his lucky New Hampshire state highway tokens) that he got great PR.

With NH’s new E-ZPass System, Mori, owner of Mori Books in NH, decided to “redeem the [now obsolete New Hampshire highway tokens] for double the face value, or 50 cents each, for up to half the cost of any purchase.”

So what happened? Some great PR. Mori was in a brief column in Inc (where I heard of him), on TV, newspapers and radio stations all over NH. “By early April his store had received 2000 tokens work $1000 in store credit…The exposure has driven monthly revenue up 25%, led by sales of pricier rare books.”

Perhaps Jay would say it’s guerilla marketing at its best.

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February 11, 2005

Planning for the Unknown

Filed under: Public Relations — Todd Sattersten @ 9:58 am
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I got a copy of Talespin in the mail the other day. The book is subtitled “public relations disasters – inside stories & lessons learned”. It caught my interest and I took a look at this morning. The book is made up of a hundred or so stories that are two to three page in length. Each starts with the media headline, followed by the background, how the story evolved and ends with a lesson learned. The book also has an A-Z format, but I am not sure you could use it as a way to find what you are looking for. You are not going to find a recommended PR process for your business, but you are going to get some great insight through the lens of a PR pro.

Trevor at Corporate Engagement has also read the book. He has a book review and an interview with the McCusker on his site.

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October 1, 2004

PR with bloggers

Filed under: Jack Covert Selects,Marketing,Public Relations — Todd Sattersten @ 12:10 pm
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I know when have a lot of authors and publishing folks who read the blog. I want to point you to a post by Peter Davidson. In Tips for Pitching Books to Bloggers, Davidson takes John Zagula to task for his pitch of The Marketing Playbook. There are a number of bloggers who comment on his post, having also received the pitch.

I recommend reading it. Generating PR with bloggers is different. I have talked about this in the past.

In our case, John did something cool. He arranged a conversation with us. We talked about 800-CEO-READ and how what we were doing applied to some of the methodologies in the book.

BTW, we like the book. It will be one of the Jack Covert Selects in October.

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July 7, 2004

Ries with breakfast

Filed under: Public Relations — Todd Sattersten @ 1:26 pm
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Steve Rubel blogged about the BusinessWire Breakfast on 6/29/04. The topic was integrated marketing. Al Ries was one of the featured speakers. Steve says Al talked about a lot of things from his book The Fall of Advertising and The Rise of PR.

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June 7, 2004

Being Cheap and Being Famous

Filed under: Personal Finance and Investing,Public Relations — Todd Sattersten @ 10:16 am
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Fortune has two book reviews on page 50 of the current issue of Fortune (6/14/04). At the top of the page, they talk about Thomas Stanley’s newest addition Millionaire series – Millionaire Women Next Door. On the bottom of the page, they review The Importance of Being Famous: Behind the Scenes of the Celebrity-Industrial Complex by Maureen Orth.

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