Month: September 2014
How To Be a PR Expert: An AP Style Guide for Aerospace
When doing business in Japan, it is customary to present your business card formally, using two hands and facing your colleague.
In China, always present a small gift from your hometown or country.
When working with people from other countries and backgrounds, most business people are aware of different cultural norms, and we adjust our behavior accordingly.
It’s the polite and respectful thing to do.
The same holds true for PR professionals dealing with the news media. Journalists have their own norms, standards and language. They write in Associated Press (AP) Style, so good PR people do, too.
BDN Aerospace Marketing follows AP Style for all press releases out of respect to the editors and journalists we are asking to consider our news. We want them to recognize and respect us for knowing and following their guidelines. Plus, following AP Style means editors can use more of our news release verbatim and make it more likely they will pick up our stories.
Sometimes our use of AP Style creates questions and confusion with our clients. They notice details that are inconsistent with typical business writing, things like having some job titles in lowercase and others in uppercase, or writing datelines in a way that isn’t consistent with U.S. Post Office nomenclature.
Want to know if 3-D is hyphenated or if aviator can be used to describe a man or woman? The AP Stylebook has the answer. At more than 500 pages, it may make a non-journalist’s head spin, but anyone involved in PR should buy a book, study, and refer to it often.
The AP Stylebook is constantly evolving, but remains the definitive resource for writers. It’s a great way to maintain professionalism and a standard style in your organization, and is a good quick reference for basic rules of grammar, punctuation and usage.
It’s available in print, online or via an app for smartphones: www.apstylebook.com
Order yours today, and don’t send out another release until you know the difference between a date line and a dateline. It’s the polite and respectful thing to do.
For a comprehensive “Go-To Guide to AP Style for Aerospace,” download BDN’s exclusive PR Toolkit. You’ll also find insider tips, checklists, infographics, and so much more! Everything you need for better media coverage is just a click away.
Ask an Editor: 10 Secrets to PR Success
By Matt Thurber, Senior Editor, AIN Publications
You’ve got news! But how do you get the word out?
Although there are fewer print magazines now serving the aviation market, a seemingly infinite number of online products are hungry for content, and all of these publications–whether print or Web or e-newsletters or blogs or Facebook posts or Tweets–need constant care and feeding. It’s enough to drive a company’s public relations department crazy.
As a publisher on all of the above outlets–and more–AIN Publications knows what it’s like to be on the receiving end of the onslaught of press releases, announcements, and updates from companies inside and outside the industry segments that we cover. While we can’t speak for our competitors in the publishing business, perhaps some insight into how the process works at AIN might help your company in its public relations efforts. This will also help your company avoid common errors that cause us to click the delete button as soon as your press release hits our inboxes.
Incidentally, we know that many companies can’t afford a full-time public relations (PR) person and that the job often gets handed off to the marketing department, but marketing is not PR, and vice versa. There are plenty of independent professional PR agents available who not only know the aviation market but also are very familiar with the publishers that serve this market. If at all possible, hire a pro; the results will be well worthwhile and this will also free up your valuable time to develop new products, sell like crazy, and serve your customers.
- Know your audience. Do some research to learn what publications your target market reads. When you get the inevitable call from a publication’s salesperson, make them work by asking for a detailed breakdown of the readership. Study the publications, print and online, to get a feel for what they cover and who they serve.
- Do not blanket email non-pertinent publishers. Nothing wastes more of our time then weeding through non-pertinent press releases. We receive releases about subjects that have nothing to do with our primary coverage areas. Whoever is sending these is wasting your money and also annoying potential partners in getting your company’s news out to readers.
- Get to know the editors. We’re human. We like to talk to people and learn about what’s going on. Don’t be afraid to look us up on the magazine masthead, call us, and ask about what we find interesting, what we’re working on now, and if we have any future projects that might need information that your company can provide. However…
- Don’t inundate the editors. We receive tons of press releases, announcements, invitations, etc., every day. Rest assured that we probably have received it. Feel free to check with a followup email to see if we did receive the original. However, if your release is not pertinent to our audience or if we are not able to use the information in your release, we might not respond. We just don’t have time to respond to every query.
- Please don’t ask to review the article prior to publication. AIN is a news organization, and like a major metropolitan newspaper we don’t share our product before it is published (although other publishers may allow this). Here’s a tip: we often place stories online before they appear in print, so keep an eye out and you might be the first to see the story with your company mentioned. And this leads to…
- Use your own clipping service. We’re sorry, but we don’t have time to alert you when an article that includes news about your company appears in one of our publications. By the time the article appears, we’re already working on the next 10 to 20 and more stories we each write every month.
- Please alerts us to any mistakes. As mentioned, we are human and we do occasionally make errors. The sooner you let us know, the sooner we can add a correction in the next print issue or e-newsletter and correct the story online.
- Help us get it right. If you are worried about the accuracy of quotes during an interview with your company’s executives, feel free to ask that the interview be recorded. Or record it yourself and provide a transcript to the writer. A company did this for me once, and it made my job much easier. Keep in mind that in many states, permission is required from at least one party in order to record a conversation.
- Know the publisher’s needs. Here’s another insider tip: AIN publishes print magazines at many air shows and conferences all over the world. Our need for content ramps up considerably well before each show, and this is an opportune time to get your story published. You can view AIN’s show schedule and a lot more at AINonline.com, then click on the “Advertise” link then “Media Kit.” The earlier you work with us for show coverage, the better your chances of getting in the magazine and online.
- Do something newsworthy. This is what it’s all about. No doubt your news is super-important, and of course it is to your company. What gets on the front page must be newsworthy, of wide import to our industry, and compelling. This doesn’t mean there isn’t room for your news somewhere else in the monthly AIN, our e-newsletters, at a show or online. Be realistic with your expectations, work with us, and we’ll do our best to get the word out.
For more tips on PR, download BDN’s PR Tool Kit here!
Less Is More: The Importance Of a Quality Press Release
This is something we hear from prospective clients fairly regularly, and generally, it is the worst possible thing they could be doing.
After 25+ years involved in aerospace marketing, much of it spent supporting media relations efforts, this statement makes me cringe. Because, with a few exceptions, doing more press releases is a bad idea.
The desire to do more press releases is really just a desire for a quick fix that will get clients noticed and acknowledged by the news media – to receive editorial coverage of some kind. And if you just want to see your news release recycled on an online news site, this approach will work for you.
But getting meaningful, credible coverage cannot be accomplished by blanketing editors with news releases. Like the little boy who cried wolf, they will become immune to your efforts and may not notice you when you have something that would actually be of interest.
Instead, I suggest striving for fewer, higher quality press releases full of relevant information, along with high-quality, high-resolution photos. At the same time, build relationships with the editors who cover your industry. Don’t waste their time with nonnews (“We Have a New Website!) or daily missives about your newest STC.
Demonstrate that you value their time and respect their work and shift gears from more press releases to more meaningful information, and the coverage will take care of itself.
Learn the best practices behind the most successful Aerospace & Defense PR in BDN’s new PR Toolkit, coming soon.