Rabu, 16 Juli 2008

Make Sure Your Media Room Rocks

If a reporter was writing a story about you and your company and she visited your website, could she find anything useful and interesting about you to use in her story? And could she find it quickly? Or would she immediately abandon your site and look for one of your competitors to write about?

Make it Easy for the Reporter
Every website today should have a "Media Room" (also known as an online press room) with everything a reporter needs to write a story quickly. Not only should you include information about your company history, the management team and owners, your products and services, and so on, but today you should also provide links to industry trade groups, information about industry trends, and maybe even a list of your competitors.

Why would you include your competitors, you ask?

Because just like you, a reporter is very busy and often overwhelmed. If you were the reporter and you visited a website that handed you the perfect story and all the sources to write an objective article about widgets (which just happened to be something your publication's readers, and more importantly your boss, would love to read), wouldn't you be thrilled? Of course you would. And so would I.

Besides, every time a prospect searches for your competitors' products and services, your website will come up in the search, too. Maybe the prospect will click on your website link instead of your competitor's.

The Top 20
So let's consider what you should include in your new website Media Room. Here's a list to get you started; each of these would be a separate "sublink" within your Media Room:

Owners and management team bios (one short and one long bio for each person)

Photos: downloadable, scalable, in 300 dpi (suitable for print publications) and 72 dpi (for online outlets), named/labeled, one for each member of the management team and any products you promote

Company description and history, including dates, facts and sales figures (or percentage of growth by year)

A list of products or services and brief descriptions of each one

Customer demographics

List and description of any awards you or your company have won

List of story ideas with 4 to 6 talking points for each one

Audio and video clips with sound bytes about important issues

List of media experience for key company players

Issues and opinions page, including position papers, articles you have written, White Papers, links to industry resources for both sides of the opinions (all opening in a new browser window, of course)

Statements or quotes by key personnel regarding your business philosophy, hot industry topics, or comments about community issues.

Industry trends and news

Calendar of relevant trade shows and industry events

List of your key competitors and links to outside sites that may contain opposing or even negative views (opening in new browser windows, of course!)

Company and product news (with all your releases listed/summarized and linking to the full story)

In the News section (links to actual published articles, opening in new browser windows)

Contact information for key company players: day, night, cell phone, pager, fax, email (make it easy for the reporter to get in touch with you!)

Email alert service to notify reporters of news

Forms for reporters to order videos, photos, samples

Ability to search the site for information, keywords, topics, etc.




And don't forget to put an obvious link to your Media Room, right on your home page ... and every page. Don't worry if you can't do all of this immediately. Just keep chipping away at it, and soon you'll have a terrific Media Room. Then watch how your publicity grows.

By Lois Carter


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