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Avoid
Writing The No-News Release
It
was the first day of a writing workshop for a group of agency consultants.
We finally got around to the litmus-test -- the news release. I
handed out a page filled with excerpts from all the releases they
had submitted earlier and asked for rewrites. But with news, not
hype. There's a big difference and any journalist can see it immediately.
The no-news release is full of long sentences overloaded with adjectives
saying how wonderful and marvelous something is. It reeks of benefits
about the product, company or service: 'Auction Server is a unique
real-time auction hosting software application that enables Web
users to participate in live Internet auctions through continuous
communication with other bidders and an auctioneer.' Oh yes, it
also uses words like 'enables' instead of 'lets' or 'allows'. The
one thing it lacks is news. Hard news. Breaking news. The one ingredient
that actually makes it a news release.
Some
time ago The New Yorker ran a cartoon called 'PR Hell' showing consultants
entering a cave. Over their heads were the words 'Abandon all hype
ye who enter here'. We in the industry should post it over our desks
as a reminder whenever our creative juices start heating up and
common sense goes into retreat.
This
is not to say a new release can't be creative. Of course it can.
But the creativity comes from attracting the interest of the reader
and effectively 'selling' the story. What public relations consultants
often forget when they're writing copy is that same reader. The
primary reader for a news release is not the prospect who might
be itching to buy your client's new product and it's not the client.
It's a reporter, an editor on the news desk at a paper, or a news
director at a radio or TV station. In other words, that primary
reader is a journalist.
There
is no telling how many releases come across news desks every day,
but one thing is for sure -- it's a lot more than PR consultants
realize. The 5'2" editorial secretary for a daily newspaper
once posed with a stack of news releases received by her news room
over the course of a year. The stack, piled on the floor next to
her, was exactly the same height.
Consultants
must learn that their precious clients are competing for the attention
of all those gatekeepers as we like to call them. The only way to
attract that attention is by offering the goods and by talking the
media's language when doing so.
'Interactive
industrial control manufacturing programs developed by Edwards Real-Time
Systems can be integrated with imaging dynamic access Just-In-Time
delivery to produce software development integral ground plane cost
differentials.'
This
one breaks just about every rule in the book. It's full of jargon.
The sentence -- just the one -- is too long. There are far too many
adjectives and too many confusing words bunched together. And unless
you're the production floor manager at Edwards Real-Time Systems
chances are you don't even know what it's about. As for news, well
what exactly is it?
Here's
another. 'Yesterday the Caribbean Islands' water-filled transit
shelter was launched at the corner of 5th and 49th Streets, creating
the magic of the Caribbean above and below the waves. The shelter,
which has been designed to stimulate the underwater experience of
the Caribbean, is a first. Surrounded by blue, bubbling water, the
shelter's walls also house a scuba diver and an array of multicolored
fish, made life-like with the wonders of Digital Imaging Technology
Corp.'
This
also was from a writing workshop and the consultant was proud of
her work. "I thought it wasn't bad," she said and it isn't
bad -- for a piece of marketing or advertising copy maybe -- but
not a news release.
Most
journalists, never mind deadline-hardened veterans who cut their
eye teeth covering the courts or council, can readily distinguish
a well prepared news release from a bit of bumpf. The trick is get
back to the old inverted pyramid and think like a reporter!
One
of my favorite handouts is an article by a PR practitioner who is
a former journalist. It's called 'Doing media relations like a reporter'
and one of his bullets says this: 'As a media relations person,
you job is to publicize, not market. This is a common mistake that
many PR people make, especially those with marketing backgrounds.'
So
what to do? An attention-getting headline is a good way to start,
but not such a good way if it sacrifices accuracy for the blast
factor. 'New web site geared to young investors' or 'Survey shows
production employees unhappy' might not win any awards for snappy
writing, but they will be better received than 'Kids make nutritious
snacks' or 'Miners won't work after death'.
The
lead should be just that. A lead. 'Work will start today on Micro
Support Systems' new research-and-technology center that is expected
to change the industry'. The trick is to get the reader's attention
while providing a semblance of the story. If you've done a good
job, the reader will want to continue. Also if you've done a good
job, you will target the release to the right people which means
you don't send a high-tech story to the education reporter unless,
of course, there is an angle that is of interest.
For
what not to do in a news release, here's a list of some common mistakes:
*
Too much hype and not enough news.
* The release and its individual sentences are too long.
* No spokesperson.
* Too many spokespersons.
* Not geared to the reader.