Archive for September, 2007

How long does a press release live?

Monday, September 24th, 2007

While flicking through a magazine this morning looking for a promised client credit, I found unexpected coverage for a different client. It was from a press release we sent out in June (and this was the October edition of the magazine).

It just goes to prove that well written press releases with a great story can have a long life. The magazine had clearly been saving this one up for a weddings feature they were working on.

Thanks to the internet, your press releases can also live on as pages on your website. Not only will they be of interest to people who visit the site, but they can attract new traffic in the first place. Search engines like sites that are adding new relevant content. And that’s what press releases are.

The self-perpetuating PR crisis

Monday, September 17th, 2007

My wife and I went to York at the weekend for a little treat, and as we walked into town from the train station were greeted with the longest queue we have ever seen coming from Northern Rock.

No shockers there with its current problems.

Lending aside, the biggest problem Northern Rock currently has is a self-perpetuating PR crisis.

The first few people panicing and queuing to take their money out made others panic and join the queue. And that then makes more people panic.

We’re probably at the point now where people who were unmoved on Friday will be worried this morning by reports that £2 BILLION has been taken out already. I know if I had money in Northern Rock I’d probably be thinking very hard about it today.

While I was taking photos of the queue in York (hey, you don’t see this stuff every day) a retired man stopped to tell us he’s seen the same thing happen in Derby in the 70s or 80s, when a building society got into trouble. There were pictures of people taking wheelbarrows of cash out, which of course attracted more people to do the same.

Northern Rock seems to be doing the best it can – making it easier for customers to get their money out by opening longer. It’s hard to see what else it could do to stop the panic.

UPDATE: Monday 17th September at 6pm: And with one move, the government kills the PR crisis. Good move. Lets hope it works.

Having a plan for when it all goes wrong

Wednesday, September 5th, 2007

You can’t get much worse negative publicity than having your product pictured on the front page of The Sun, with a headline screaming it will kill people.

But that’s what the makers of Crocs woke up to this morning.

It’s an unusual story which shows two things: it’s a bit of a quiet news day, and Crocs are the must-have fashion items of the moment (why else would they get front page status?).

If a story like that hit your business, would you be ready to react? It’s virtually impossibly to anticipate every single angle that could be thrown at you, but you can plan for general themes.

Ensure you have brainstormed possibilities, have rough plans ready, have made it easy for journalists to speak to your key staff 24 hours a day, and your business is locked down to prevent leaks.

In this internet age where anyone can visit your business’s website, you also need to have a reaction for your customers as well as the media (as of 1pm today there’s nothing on the Crocs website).

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