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Zöe;968023 said:
They identify which press to target, write newsy press releases and sell in your story to journalists. PR is not hard its just time consuming and you do have to have a good command of english as well as sound communication skills. The main benefit a PR agency will offer is having the contacts in place, the writing skills and the time to execute a workable campaign, that's why you would pay someone else to do it.
PR agencies have always confused me, i mean what do they do, that i cant?
Do they just ring around and email articles to different editors or what?
Sorry for sounding thick, but always been curious, i know what they do, what i mean is what do they PHYSICALLY do,
about reputation - the result of what you do, what you say and what others say about you.
Hearing good things about PR agencies is one thing, how it turns out for you is something else entirely.
These 'good things' - oh it all sounds great etc, but viewing the press page/results for one company cannot give any indication of how a campaign will turn out for you.
This will cost you hundreds and hundreds to do a first press thing, personally, if you're idea isn't brilliant, unique, I'd forget the media entirely, bcos the return won't be there, infact the media won't touch it - see they like uniqueness and they have the power, not you.
It takes too long to achieve results and if you think it's like coming out of the BB house, then your in for the shock of your lives. If you don't believe me, then fine, but I've done this and you'll be sitting there and waiting for over 12 months easily, while the agency will use your cash up, keeping you hooked, then without warning, you'll hear nothing from them, which signals the end of your contract hehe.
BTW, the agency we used was a top london international agency, which appeared to have a solid track record, but you won't know until you hire an agency and they start working for you. Too easy to get it wrong, so easy to make a mistake and:
Just be careful who you hire..... and never, ever hire based on what results they got for another company. You don't know how much the other company paid them for those results/time. I'm not saying we got ripped off, just that we didn't get good value for money.
- either pay too much
- hire the wrong people.
PR agencies will typically ask for money upfront eg: 3 months worth, this ain't cheap folks, and you got to keep on top of these guys, don't just trust them or leave them to it, keep checking on them. Trouble is, once you paid, you paid and you've done your cash, so you are really in the lap of the gods where the press is concerned.
This is NOT an instant results kind of thing!!
Problem is for us, that we want to get some presence not in our local area, in the nationals, and offline. Locally, yes, I agree that your own contacts, and therefore relationships, are always going to be best.
Personally, locally I am great believer in the "small town mafia", that hard core of trusted worthy people in the town, whose recommendation is equal to gold-dust.
for national cover you would be better off spending on SEO.
10 x the ROI ,PR has a habit of working for very short periods where as SEO is for every or untill the next bus comes along.
Even a trip to the Dragons den does not compare with the traffic generated by SEO.
Like newspaper adds PR can not be measured unlike SEO.IMHO.
Earl
submit the PR online, you get links and also have every chance of the PR article being featured in the Search Engines for your targeted search phrases if you do it correctly.
Sandra
I tend to agree with Earl on this. As you know I have had extensive PR over the years all of it free. Many , many full page newspaper articles and several multi page articles both in broadsheets and crap press. Many TV appearances on different programmes and different channels.
I have measured in fair detail the resulting business from the free PR and all I can say is I am very glad I was not paying for it. Yes it did drive business but not at a level of anywhere near the business that is driven from being on the web.
As Earl suggested it is also very spike driven. I think it may work better if you have the budget to drip feed day in day out for a very long period.
One thing in I have noticed is that in this wired up world, many pr efforts do get re-used over the years so you do get more than one shot but again still not enough in my opinion to justify large spend.
The one area where I would spend big on PR is if my product/service was unique and game changing to the industry. For 99.99% of us though we do not have that product or service.
Except you won't get a ton of links from PR databases nor the web in general. Links in press releases do not suddenly attract or generate 1000's of one-way links
nor do Journalists search for online press stories, unless already dealing with an agency or PR person, and are intending to do 'follow up' stories, and even then they'd just contact the agency in the first place. They are busy people, working on stories for their paper (employer) and just don't have the time to visit vast databases, where your release will be lost amongst thousands of others all with the same idea as you.
Yeah i agree for national businesses a pr agency would be benefitial, but im yet to hear of a success story from a local business.
I don't agree that money is better spent on SEO than PR. Both can be done - and if you only have the budget for one, then which to go for is dependant on your own unique situation and what your ultimate aims are.
We get shed loads of traffic from SEO. But for one of our products, no one is searching for it - so SEO doesn't make sense. That's where PR comes in. From PR we've had coverage that would have cost a medium-sized fortune if it were paid advertising and it's led to sales we'd have never for from SEO.
I've worked with 10 Yetis and Richard Glyn and Buzz Factory and highly recommend them both.
I maintain that in general PR can not hold a candle to SEO for driving long term buyers for the average online retailers.
Earl
I am in uncharted territory here, I don't want to become one of the many who have fallen foul of upsetting sirearl however I want to put across a few general observations.