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New Product? Give It Nine Lives
By
Marcia Yudkin
[Video: Marcia
Yudkin's Internet Marketing Lifestyle]
The closeness between the words "new" and "news" provides a telling
clue to how easy it can be to get media coverage for something that's
new.
By
definition, the media are in the business of covering what's fresh,
what's unprecedented and what has just happened.
Follow
a few simple steps and publicity can make your product launch a
significant success.
First, carefully and honestly define specific markets for your product.
Media that target those markets are those you should concentrate on.
Forget
about the mass media unless even a skeptic would have to agree that
your product would matter to practically everyone.
Second, identify the primary benefit your product will bring to each
target market. String that together with the identity of the
corresponding population in a press release headline, using the formula
"New [generic product description] brings [benefit] to [target
market]."
For
instance:
New Bridal Shower Game Ends Gift-Opening Tedium, Makes
Shower a Memorable Event for Hostess, Bride and Guests
Third, reword your headline for each target market. An editor's
paramount question when screening release headlines, whether in a stack
of faxes, in an email in-box or on the Web, is "Is it relevant to my
readers?"
Naming
the readers in the headline answers that question without forcing the
editor to think. For example, while the headline above would go to
brides' magazines, the one below fits publications for wedding planners:
New Bridal Shower Game a Sure-Fire Add-on for Party Planners
Fourth, complete the releases and distribute them to the relevant
media. The narrower a niche, the more you may want to supplement
established industry distribution circuits with additional research and
one-by-one mailing, emailing or faxing.
Fifth, get to work turning your web site for the product into a magnet
for folks searching for something like what you've just released.
Brainstorm generic keywords by which people would search for your item
and include as many of them as possible on the home page and throughout
the site.
Register
your site or new product page not only with major search engines but
also with specialized industry directories and submit your link at
industry portals.
Include
customer or expert testimonials for greater credibility, and add links
to media coverage when that starts coming in.
Whenever possible, link the timing of your product release to a
holiday, the season, current events or a trade show to increase its
newsworthiness.
Most specialized magazines feature selected new products near the front
of each issue, often with a product photo. You needn't send product
samples or photos everywhere to get such coverage, as editors will call
for those if intrigued by the release.
The
more lively and reader-friendly the writing in your release, the more
likely a busy editor is to choose your item from the candidates
received.
After half a year or so has passed, your product will no longer count
as "new." By upgrading the item in a relevant way, however, you can
consider it a new edition and start the cycle over again.
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Marcia
Yudkin is the author of 6 Steps to Free Publicity (Career Press), and
10 other books. She has helped clients achieve publicity everywhere
from the Wall Street Journal to the National Enquirer, from the Today
Show to local news broadcasts.
See
her new
Teleteach for Profit Course
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