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Informative Articles

Five Ideas for Unique (and Cheap) Marketing
Home-based businesses generally lack the large marketing budgets of bigger companies, but a smaller budget doesn't have to stop you from engaging in clever and effective campaigns. When marketing on a budget, you need to "think outside the box"...

Online Marketing: Free-For-All Links
Online Marketing: Free-For-All Links By Aaron Turpen of Aaronz WebWorkz Free-For-All (FFA) sites, classified sites, and other similar places on the web are very common and usually over- hyped. Most exist only as an email-gathering tool. Usually...

Seven Low-cost, No-cost Marketing Ideas
For marketing to be effective--especially for small businesses and professionals--it's something you need to be able to afford, time-wise and resource-wise. You might develop the most effective plan, but if you can't implement it because it's too...

Used Email Marketing Opt In List Ideal Business Partnership
The following article covers a topic that has recently moved to center stage--at least it seems that way. If you've been thinking you need to know more about it, here's your opportunity. In any kind of business, marketing is such...

What Can A Pelican Teach You About Marketing?
What Can A Pelican Teach You About Marketing? © 2005 Barry W. Morris Magnetic Communications & Consulting™ http://BarryMorris.com Barry@BarryMorris.com It was overcast on Friday morning as I drove down to the beach after dropping my son...

 
Marketing-Minded Financial Planners, Create Your Very Own Story to Get Free Publicity

One big mistake that many marketing-minded financial planners make when contacting the media is to drop what's called an "information dump."

Sending a reporter statistics on the growth of your business (no matter how impressive) or on the success rate of your stock picks (no matter how propitious) will simply overwhelm them and will not garner publicity.

What reporters want is a story – a smaller piece of information that is likely to hold their attention and help their readers, viewers or listeners.

Help the media slice and dice your professional knowledge into bits they can use. Pre-slice and dice it for them. Because when you do, you increase our odds of getting publicity.

Why attempt such alchemy ourselves? Aren't those reporter-types the experts on doing that? Why not just “put it all out there” and let the media take it from there?

No! Because it's you, not they, who know your own stuff the best. And it's far easier for you to understand how they work than it is for them to pick out the right nuggets of pertinent information from your entire, lifelong accumulation of subject-matter expertise. (After all, today they're reporting on the tax law, tomorrow it's on to new trends in the insurance industry.)

So, your first job: create your very own story.

About the Author
Ned Steele works with people in professional services who want to build their practice and accelerate their growth. The president of Ned Steele's MediaImpact, he is the author of 102 Publicity Tips To Grow a Business or Practice. To learn more visit http://www.MediaImpact.biz or call 212-243-8383.