Media
professionals prefer online media rooms and the Internet for
researching stories. Many publicists are still using hard copy press
kits and e-mail attachments. Online press kits are how technology is
making a publicist's job easier and more effective.
So you have a cell phone, a Palm Pilot, an automated office complete
with teleconferencing, remote-access, Web site and e-mail addresses. So
what? Just because you’re always available to the media doesn’t mean
the media has easy access to your clients. What will your high-tech
office be able to do when a reporter wants a press kit at 7 p.m. on a
Friday evening? Nothing – except hastily prepare the hard copy kit for
a costly overnight shipment.
There is a simple way to eliminate the need for keeping a large
inventory of hard copy press kits and reduce your dependency on the
shipping company guy: publish your clients’ press kits online.
Making the move from hard copies to press kits published online that
are always-accessible is essential in today’s age of e-mail. The
corporate world lives by e-mail; reporters and other media
professionals are no different. These people are busy and time is
always of the essence when they’ve got deadlines breathing down their
necks. The decision to use your client in a story instead of someone
else is contingent on whose information is easiest to get. If it takes
all night for your client’s press kit to reach their desk, you might
get bumped.
I know what you’re saying right now. “But, Drew, I e-mail my clients’
press materials to the media.” Well, that’s great, but just because
reporters use e-mail doesn’t mean they open every stranger’s message
that arrives in their inbox and it especially doesn’t mean that they
even bother opening your attachments. Why? Because it’s too risky.
First of all, everyone knows not to open an e-mail from someone you
don’t know; especially if there’s an attachment. This is e-mail safety
101. Strange e-mails with attachments usually mean one thing: virus. At
least, that’s the take of most business’s firewalls and anti-virus
protection systems. You may think you’re making waves by mass e-mailing
your media lists with attached press releases, but how many calls are
you getting back? Not many, since your important e-mail has been tossed
out with the “wasser” worm and those annoying “enlargement” e-mails.
So what’s the solution? Reject technology and start snail-mailing and
faxing again? No. Embrace technology and publish your press kits
online.
Now, an online press kit is not a Web site. Don’t be confused by the
term “online.” Though an online press kit can be displayed online and
present information like a Web site, it is really a virtual folder or
briefcase that allows you to upload and store your press materials on
the Internet. Once in your online press kit folder, these documents and
images can be distributed as links – not attachments.
When you prepare your sharp, concise e-mail pitch to the media, you
simply insert links to your clients’ press kits. When the reporter
clicks the link, the document can be opened and saved on their
computer. It opens like an attachment, but the documents themselves
live online. Instead of piling them onto your e-mail, you’re simply
providing directions (a link) to get to them. They become part of the
e-mail message, so a media outlet’s virus protection system won’t
automatically kick it out of the system.
Virtually anything can be uploaded to an online press kit: press
releases, high-resolution images, video and audio clips, graphics and
more. Plus, since you have control over your online press kits, you can
always be sure they’re up to date.
Now you’re thinking “Wow, these things sound great, but I bet they are
expensive.” Not necessarily. Though there are online press kit programs
available that cost into the thousands, they usually include extra
features you don’t really need and will probably never use. Think of
the online press kit market as the binder or folder aisle at your
favorite office supply store. Sure there are binders with all kinds of
extras, but you pass those by for what you need and the price you can
live with.
Face it – technology is only going to get better and faster. Don’t be
left in its dust trying to wave down that brown truck with your
emergency overnight press kit. By going online with your clients’ press
kits, you’re not only making them easy to access, but easy to cover by
the media. The media loves that – and so will your clients.
Drew Gerber is Co-creator of Press Kit 24/7- www.PressKit247.com -an online press kit technology. In addition to helping non-profits and
small businesses manage their own media relations through technology,
Gerber is Co-Owner of Wasabi Publicity, Inc., a PR firm representing
causes, nonprofits, and businesses that make a difference. An expert in
the art of listening and in building relationships, Gerber can be
reached at Drew@publicityresults.com.