2013-09-18



There’s a daily rhythm to public relations that can help anyone in the

business be more effective in the relentless pursuit of client results.

Sure it includes the basics:

checking news feeds, reading top stories of the day, monitoring the Web

for client mentions, and responding to clients and media.

There are specific things you can do to sharpen your strategic focus,

though, so we surveyed our staff at Gregory FCA and came up with seven

daily to-dos that help them get breakthrough results for clients:

1. Run your job like a newsroom.

(From Mike Lizun, senior vice president)

Start each day reviewing breaking and trending news stories. Look for

opportunities to inject clients into the conversation. Would American

intervention in Syria spell more opportunity for a client who relies on

government contracts? Does a website outage provide an opportunity for a

software client to provide commentary? What do the latest consumer

confidence numbers mean for a financial services client? New stories

break every moment of the day. Convert your office to echo a newsroom,

constantly identifying the breaking news that provides PR opportunities.

2. Closely align media outreach with your client’s schedule.

(From Bradd Delmuto, vice president, and Alicia Buonanno, associate vice president)

Access and availability alone can often trigger media interest.

Synchronize media targeting with your client’s travel schedule, using

availability as a reason for making introductions and securing briefing

and on-air appearances.

3. Refine your story according to past media coverage.

(From Greg Matusky, president, and Jimmy Moock, vice president )

The media often tells stories and finds angles better than clients and

PR agencies. Closely track how the media is covering your client and

adopt future pitches accordingly. Reuse compelling turns of phrases and

convert past headlines into subject lines as a way to build on past

media success.

4. Stop using Cision and Vocus as crutches.

(From Greg Matusky, president )

Media databases all too often promote lazy, shotgun pitches that

alienate the media. Instead, do your own research to target reporters by

their beat and better understand their interests. The era of mass

pitching is over, and so, too, might be canned media databases, now that

everything is online.

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5. Coordinate Twitter searches with trending hashtags.

(From Jessica Attanasio, associate vice president, and Matt McLoughlin, associate vice president)

Adjust Twitter search criteria throughout the day in order to identify

trends and breaking news. Use Twitter to stay on top of breaking and

trending stories and inject clients into the conversation.

6. Have shareable content at the ready.

(From Alicia Buonanno, associate vice president, and Bradd Delmuto, vice president)

Re-work, reuse, and repurpose past content in new ways to give it fresh

life on social and digital media. Now that content is king, there’s no

such thing as a slow client news day. Keep bylined stories, commentary,

infographics, and infotoons nearby, and use them as a way to constantly

share insights with the media or directly to the masses via social

media.

7. Build a fire under your clients.

(Katie Kennedy, associate vice president)

Hit them daily with new ideas, trending stories, and opportunities to

comment on any moving story that impacts their viewpoint, business,

product, or profitability. By doing so, you train clients to realize

that news flows by the minute, and that there’s always an opportunity to

gain coverage, provide comment, or add to the conversation.

Sara Nugent is an associate editor for Gregory FCA. A version of this story originally appeared on the agency’s blog, Gregarious. 

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