Easy Steps to Turn PR Into a Profit Driver

Mar 5, 2018 | 0 comments

When I say PR, what’s the first thing you think of?

Is it significant companies trying to cover their butts like BP after the Gulf oil spill? Is it brands doing crazy things like jumps from space to get attention? Is it spin doctors trying to hustle the masses?

These are aspects of PR, but they are not the heart and soul of PR. Most business owners and entrepreneurs can’t afford huge publicity stunts, and they certainly don’t want to be on the defensive end of a scandal.

I’d venture to say that most entrepreneurs treat PR as the business component they know they’re supposed to have but that they hope never to use.

In reality, PR, when properly understood and executed, is a great way to land free coverage for your products and services online, in newspapers and magazines, or on radio and TV.

Most likely, however, you’re doing it all wrong-if you’re doing it at all.

At one point in my career, I built and led a team that generated more than 5,200 media hits for one company over a six-year period. That coverage included mentions on The Oprah Winfrey Show, Dr. Phil, The Big Idea with Donny Deutsch, CNN, CNBC, and in Fortune, the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, and virtually every other major newspaper and business periodical in the United States.

I achieved these results by understanding one secret about PR that most companies and leaders don’t know: PR isn’t marketing, it’s sales.

PR is sales, not marketing!

Marketing and communications are very different from PR, but people often substitute one for the other.

For instance, just Google, “Best PR campaigns,” and see what pops up. What you’ll find are hundreds of hits for marketing campaigns that caught the media’s attention. These are big budget campaigns that are orchestrated by big-cost agencies.

Rarely will you find an actual PR campaign that involved free coverage from mainstream media based on a real media pitch.

The way that I have been approaching PR throughout my career is like sales role – and you need to treat it like a sales role. Typically, marketing or communications people are not wired the same way as salespeople are. It takes a salesperson to make true PR work.

Selling the media!

How do media outlets make money?
How does a newspaper or magazine make money?

They make money by selling advertising.

What helps the magazine, newspaper, or television show sell advertising? Having lots of readers and viewers.

And how do media outlets get lots of readers and viewers? By having quality content that engages their audience.

That’s where you come in.

Securing free PR means talking about your ideas with content producers for magazines, websites, and television programs. Why would they want to listen? Simple: because great content means it’s easier to sell ads, and ad sales mean profit.

The price is right!

Since PR is a sales function, if you’re in PR, you’re in the business of selling ideas to media outlets. Selling anything is tough, but the advantage you have is that you are selling these ideas at no charge. The media outlets like things that are free, especially when it could lead to a profit on their end.

In other words, the price is right for you and your PR. This one fact should make getting free PR for your organization one of the easiest sales tasks to do-provided you have something to talk about.

When you give the media free content, you’re not only gaining exposure for your business but also making it possible for them to make their publications or stations better. You’re helping them make money, and you’re helping their staff look good too.

Everybody wins when you treat PR like sales.

The COO Alliance is here to help with these, and many other, challenges facing COOs today. For more information, apply now.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Written By Cameron Herold

Written By Cameron Herold

Cameron Herold is known around the world as THE CEO WHISPERER. He is the mastermind behind hundreds of company's exponential growth. Cameron's built a dynamic consultancy: his current clients include a "Big 4" wireless carrier and a monarchy. What do his clients say they like most about him? He isn't a theory guy they like that Cameron speaks only from experience. He earned his reputation as the CEO Whisperer by guiding his clients to double their profit and double their revenue in just three years or less. Cameron is a top-rated international speaker and has been paid to speak in 26 countries. He is also the top-rated lecturer at EO/MIT's Entrepreneurial Masters Program and a powerful and effective speaker at Chief Executive Officer and Chief Operating Officer leadership events around the world.

Please Fill The Form Below To Apply: