Paul Stallard’s Technology PR Agency Blog

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Archive for the ‘meet the media’ Category

Meet the media – Michael Brook, editor of T3

Posted by paulstallard on November 3, 2009

Michael Brook, T3

Michael Brook, T3

After a short break, my meet the media series returns with a bang. This week my interview is with editor of T3 Magazine and lover of the Wimpy, Michael Brook. I was interested to see his point about bad PR. This is a great point and one a number of marketing managers should take note of. Just because you pay for an advert doesn’t mean you will get a top review of your product in the publication. 

Enjoy.

Name: Michael Brook
Title I work for: T3 Magazine

Paul Stallard: What is the best way to contact you?
Michael Brook: Email is always the best way – I’m away from my desk and in meeting such a huge amount of the time that it’s almost impossible to get me on the phone, which I know frustrates PRs. My Blackberry, however, is my constant companion…

PS: Do you think that most PR professionals read the titles you write for before contacting you?
MB: I think the vast majority do, particularly the ones in core areas of tech. It’s the calls that go, ‘can I speak to the gadgets and technology editor please?’ that wind me up!

PS: What is your top tip for PR professionals?
MB: This is a no-brainer, but worth mentioning because it goes the same for freelancers. There’s not substitute for face-to-face contact or at the very least a phone call rather than an email. Email a journalist 20 times and you might get 5 responses, but take a journalist out for a fancy lunch with booze thrown in and you’ve made a friend for life! The other one is know your title. Journalists are always looking for the path of least resistance, so come to them with an idea for your product that writes/shoots itself, or fits as an editorial-led, impartial piece and they’ll chew you arm off. Write it for them as well and you’re in business…

PS: How many emails / calls do you get a day?
MB: Calls – anything between 10 and 20 and it’d be more if was actually anywhere near my phone for most of the day. Emails? Probably around 150-200.

PS: Is there a future long term for hard copy publications or will online rule?
MB: Definitely. There are things that print can do that online just can’t. Not one’s really nailed how to run a proper ‘big read’ feature online. The web is great for news snippets but features will never work on a computer screen as well as they do in print and advertisers will always pay a premium to sit next to beautiful photography.

PS: What is the worst case of PR you have come across?
MB: You often find that US companies are the worst. Pulling advertising because of bad reviews and threatening to never deal with you again/never send you product. A lot of them expect that if they advertise with you, editorial will just roll over, but that’s not the way we work at T3.

PS: What is your favourite restaurant/coffee house for briefings?
MB: I’m desperate for someone to take me to a Wimpy for a briefing but no one has obliged so far. I’m not even sure there is one near Baker Street, although I’ll find out if someone’s up for taking me to one!

PS: Do you believe journalists are rude to PR professionals?
MB: I think a lot of them are. Plenty of journalists don’t understand the two-way nature of PR and use them as whipping boys/girls. I’ve never been in a situation that couldn’t be dealt with better via a polite conversation outlining your position, instead of shouting and slamming phones. Suggestion is a very powerful thing and you don’t want to make too many PR enemies in this business.

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Meet the media: Lem Bingley, Incisive Media

Posted by paulstallard on July 21, 2009

Lem Bingley

Lem Bingley

I am pleased to introduced Lem Bingley for this week’s Meet the Media interview. He is the editor in chief of the Business Technology Group at   Incisive Media. The group’s publications are: Computing, V3.co.uk   (formerly VNUnet.com), BusinessGreen.com, CRN and its web site ChannelWeb.co.uk, and The Inquirer……in other words he is a busy boy.

Lem has provided an extremely insightful look into the changes to Computing and the recent V3 re-branding. He also has some interesting views on how social media is changing modern journalism.

Paul Stallard: Have you ever done any PR work and if yes what was the experience like?
Lem Bingley: My job involves shepherding the long-term reputation of the group’s different brands, so there’s an aspect of PR to it. I’ve written a few press releases along the way, and worked with proper PR professionals on internal and external messaging.

Last year we made some major changes to Computing both online and in print, which were not without risk. Good comms was a major factor in the success of that project. We explained the changes and the motivation behind them separately to each relevant constituency: readers, advertisers, sales staff, editorial staff and of course the PR   community. A poorly communicated message could have damaged the brand, but fortunately that didn’t happen. Thankfully the project strengthened Computing, as it was intended to do.

More recently we have rebranded VNUnet.com, which is now called V3.co.uk, and again we have worked hard to ensure that the change is understood as a part of an ongoing process of improvement and investment. Fortunately V3.co.uk is a great name – certainly easier to remember and to spell than VNUnet – so it makes the messaging easier.

Those were quite high-profile efforts, but we also do quieter comms – we have just soft-launched the Asia edition of BusinessGreen.com at http://www.businessgreen.asia/

I certainly have a greater respect for PR professionals as a result of this kind of experience, and a better understanding of all the hidden paddling required for serene and swan-like progress.

PS: How has the increase of social media affected traditional journalism?
LB: Personality is becoming more important in journalism. As a reader, it is becoming easier to follow the output of a writer you chime with, and to maintain that attachment if they happen to change jobs. This will alter the way we think about brands online. Read the rest of this entry »

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Meet the media: Sean Hargrave

Posted by paulstallard on July 8, 2009

Sean Hargrave and son Daniel

Sean Hargrave and son Daniel

For my meet the media interview this week I have put Sean Hargrave the former Sunday Times Innovation editor and prolific freelancer in the hot seat. Sean explains why he has black listed one PR agency, where his favourite pub is, why care is his top tip for PR pros and his take on the online V print debate.  Sean also runs www.voxswap.com, a social media site where people can practice languages with one another. This is well worth reading.

Name and titles you work for: Sean Hargrave, former Sunday Times Innovation editor, freelancing since the end of the ’90s for The Guardian, New Media Age, SamKnows.com and various business supplements for the nationals
 
Paul Stallard: What is your pet hate of PR?
Sean Hargrave: Not knowing what their clients does is a big one. Many have no idea why their client should contribute to an article, they just say, ‘talk to Jim, he covers this’ without any clue of why Jim is qualified to comment and what interesting insight he would offer. It should be, ‘talk to Jim, he sits on x committee and he’s opposed to y or he’s the leading voice behind x’ etc..

PS: What is the best way to contact you?
SH: Email, always email. I freelance from home so it can be mad if i get a tonne of calls. I live in the sticks so mobile coverage catch be patchy.
 
PS: Do you think that most PR professionals read the titles you write for before contacting you?
SH: The good ones do but I understand not everybody can read everything. It’s best to have an idea of the title and what it covers and then concentrate on what your clients have to offer. No journalist expects all PRs to have read every article they’ve done or to read every word in every title they contribute to.
 
PS: Have you ever done any PR work and if yes what was the experience like?
SH: I do quite a bit of media training and write case studies and opinion pieces, but no PR work, as in ’selling in’ stories, because that should be a complete no-go area for journalists.

I helped a friend get an account and sat in on a meeting to propose him but i didn’t do any pr work. However, it gave me an idea of how unrealistic some clients are and how they can expect the moon and a start-up won’t disagree and then they get fired three months later with the last bill not paid because the CEO wasn’t in the FT every other day.
 
PS: What is your top tip for PR professionals?
SH: Care. That’s the main thing. Be in to the subjects your clients cover and understand the industry arguments, the movements and what’s going on and what your client’s role is in it all. A lot of PR people haven’t got a clue what their client does or why they’re interesting for journalists to talk to they just badger writers to cover someone because that’s what their job is. There’s rarely an appreciation of what’s going on and how their person is relevant to the writer. Read the rest of this entry »

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Meet the Media: Alan Cane

Posted by paulstallard on July 1, 2009

Alan Cane

Alan Cane

This week my ‘Meet the Media’ interview is with Alan Cane who has covered high-tech issues for the Financial Times since 1980. When ever I have pitched a story to him he has always asked the questions any journalist should, what is it, how does it work, and why should anyone be be concerned about it. His answers in the interview are similar to his journalistic style, straight to the point and make a lot of sense.

Paul Stallard: What is your pet hate of PR?
Alan Cane: PRs who don’t do their homework.  Suggesting , for example, that I might want to talk to a company that I’ve been covering for more than 30 years

PS: What is the best way to contact you?
AC: Email, either at home or the office.

PS: How many emails do you get a day?
AC: About 150 a day

PS: Have you ever done any PR work
AC: No, I’ve never done any and I wouldn’t  know where to start

PS: Do you think that most PR professionals read the titles you write for before contacting you?
AC: If they are professional of course they do  – but many don’t.

PS: How has the increase of social media affected traditional journalism?
AC: In my specialism, not a lot so far.  But watch this space.

PS: Is there a future long term for hard copy publications or will online rule?
AC: Yes, nothing as flexible and convenient as paper has ever been invented.   But there will be changes, probably favouring the more recognised and trusted titles.

PS: What is the worst case of PR you have come across?
AC: Nothing too terrible but I tire of PRs who try to tell me something is new and innovative but say :”Oh I’m  not  technical”  when I query their assertions – that means they haven’t understood the development or its context.

PS: Are journalists rude to PRs? 
AC: Some are and for no good reason.

PS: Is being London based an advantage for PR professionals?
AC: Not necessarily.

Previous meet the media interviews:
Bryan Glick, Computing
Adrian Brigewater
Clive Akass, PCW
Guy Clapperton
Dan Oliver, .Net
John Gripton, SkyNews.com
Alex Blyth
Christine Horton, Channel Pro
Alan Burkitt Gray, GTB
Peter Whitehead
Sally Whittle

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Meet the media: Bryan Glick, Computing

Posted by paulstallard on June 23, 2009

Source: Bryan Glick

Source: Bryan Glick

This week’s meet the media interview is with Bryan Glick. If you work in PR and don’t know who I am talking about please follow these three simple steps:
1. Get a box
2. Pack everytrhing from your desk into it
3. Leave the office now. Seriously, you don’t deserve to be a part of our industry.

Bryan has provided some insightful answers on hardcopy V online, writing with SEO in mind and the increase of social media. These are not just simple yes or no answers and I think he has provided well thought out responses. 

He has also provided the piece of advice , constantly shouted from the roof tops by the media and then promptly ignored by many. Remember that a good journalist is not interested in what your client thinks is the story – journalists are motivated by what is important to their readers.

Sound advice. Enjoy.

Paul Stallard: What is your pet hate of PR?
Bryan Glick: The all-too-frequent calls, usually from fresh-faced, eager account executives, who clearly have to tick your name off a list, are reading from a script, typically calling to check you have received an emailed press release, and seem ridiculously pleased even if you say you have no need for a follow-up.

Oh, and PRs I have never met or talked to, trying to sound as if we are best buddies over the phone. You are calling to do your job, I am answering to do mine, there’s no need to pretend otherwise if you don’t know me. Courtesy is welcome, intimacy unwarranted.

And any call asking if it is OK to send me an email. Just send it.

PS: What is the best way to contact you?
BG: Email, always. I typically receive 150+ PR emails a day, but every one will be opened and read – although clearly very few will be read in their entirety – and if there is anything that catches my interest, we will always get in touch in response.

PS: What is your top tip for PR professionals?
BG: Remember that a good journalist is not interested in what your client thinks is the story – journalists are motivated by what is important to their readers. If you pitch a story or a release based upon why it is important to a publication’s readers, it will be far more likely to receive a positive response.

Any publication, whether in print, online or both, is defined by two key things – its readership, and its editorial agenda. If you understand both of those things, and target your PR strategy accordingly, you will be far more successful.

PS: How has the increase of social media affected traditional journalism?
BG: There must be 10 dozen blogs dedicated to answering this question so it’s a bit of a challenge to come up with a short response, but here goes. In my view, the main change is in the role of the journalist. Traditionally, journalists were trained to be gatekeepers of information relevant to their readers – they have historically used their privileged position to analyse all the information / news they can find, then using their judgement decide which is the most important to impart to readers.

But today, readers have access to the vast majority of that information themselves through the web and share it through social media, increasingly bypassing traditional journalism. So, the role of the journalist must change from gatekeeper to curator; from news source to centre of debate; from purveyor of the facts to analyst or commenter.

A successful journalist in the internet era will be measured by the authority and opinion they have on their subject matter, and that will be gauged in part by the sphere of influence they have among relevant social media, as well as by the quality of what they write.

However, the one thing that will continue to make the best journalists stand out from the rest and allow them to add value amid such fragmentation and democratisation of information, is their contacts book. A top journalist with trusted access to the people that matter will still be able to set the news agenda. Social media can be a valuable tool for making and developing those contacts too.

PS: Have you had to change your writing style for online copy to incorporate SEO?
BG: No, and woe betide anyone who does – or at least, anyone who wants to maintain the distinct nature of the brand they write for. The needs of the reader must always come first. It is important for every journalist these days to understand the principles of SEO and the importance of keywords to help search engines find their stories, but that should never be the over-riding consideration.

If SEO drives the content of a story, there is an inevitable end result – every version of a story on every web site that covers it becomes identical, because they all target the same keywords. You might as well write a piece of software to regurgitate press releases and web-based news in a standard format that uses the most relevant keywords to maximise SEO – and I expect that at some point, somebody probably will do just that (if they haven’t already). There are certainly plenty of web sites that exist for just that purpose of re-writing SEO-optimised news/releases. The one area of online copy that does need to consider SEO is in headline writing and standfirsts.

Given that most online readers will judge a story and decide whether or not to click though to it based upon a headline and short summary, that aspect has to be SEO-friendly and self-evident. The use of clever, pun-filled print headlines just won’t work on Google News or an RSS reader, sadly. Sub-editors have to tell Google what the story is about in plain English. Newspaper classics such as “Gotcha” or “Up yours, Delors” will disappear in a web-only world, which is rather sad. Although “Freddie Starr ate my hamster” would no doubt still bring in the clicks.

SEO is an issue of good web site design – the Google bait should be in the supporting elements of a web page through the use of links, tags and keywords around the story.

PS: Is there a future long term for hard copy publications or will online rule?
BG: Did TV kill radio? Did video kill cinema? Has downloading killed the music industry? Oh…

There is a massive structural change taking place in the media industry and hard copy publications are being hit harder than most of them ever expected – and more than many want to admit. But the internet is not the death-knell for print – however it will be the death-knell for those who do not understand the way their audience is changing, or who do not provide a quality and constantly improving product.

Too many people forget that there is still one very good reason why the best print products will survive (especially once the recession is over) – they are very profitable. But what has to happen for any publication to survive is it must reduce its dependence on print advertising. Smart publications are diversifying their revenue streams. I’d like to think Computing is a good example – where once the majority of our income was based on print ads, now we have a healthy web site, a thriving web seminar business, and a growing events portfolio.

Publications also need to diversify their content. Despite all the agonising going on in the US newspaper industry, I don’t believe there will be a future for paid web content or online subscriptions, apart from in niche or specialist subjects. News is becoming increasingly commoditised, there will always be someone providing it for free. In print and on the web, diversity of content will be just as important as diversity of revenue – that’s one reason why so many formerly news-oriented magazines have become increasingly focused on analysis and opinion.

The big unknown at the moment is in e-book readers such as Amazon’s Kindle. There is a small but loud body of opinion that predicts this will be the iPod of newspapers, magazines and books. I’m not so sure – not for a long time, at least. It will be a factor once costs come down, but the technology needs to develop a lot more before the majority of people start downloading their daily newspapers to read on the train.

The future publishing industry will be very different, and the internet will play a dominant role, but print will still be there, even if there will not be so many print publications. The fragmentation of media will continue, there will be multiple channels, and the role of print will be less than it has been in the past, but it will still exist.

PS: What is the worst case of PR you have come across?
BG: Not so much a bad case of PR, but I was quite amused to find myself copied on an email circulated by one PR to all her female colleagues at the agency where she worked, encouraging them in some detail to take more care in maintaining the state of the office’s ladies’ toilet.

Nonetheless, it is an example of the danger of email – I can’t count the number of emails I receive with a salutation to somebody else, or in particular asking me if Computer Weekly would be interested in their press release. Please – at the very least, get the basics right.

Anyway, back to your question. Thinking back, I remember perhaps the only time a PR actually made me shout at them down the phone. He was pitching a meeting with a client, and as usual I explained I would get no value from such a meeting, but might be keen to talk to one of their customers. The PR not only questioned our editorial policy and suggested I should quote his client rather than a user of their product, but tried to blackmail me into meeting the client by threatening not to let us talk to any of that client’s customers / case studies unless I did. After some heated debate, I told him that was fine by me and said goodbye.

PS: Are there any PR agencies you have black listed because of bad practices?
BG: No, and I can’t imagine how bad they would have to be for us to go that far. Having said that, there is a very small, extremely select bunch of agencies that we know are, frankly, rubbish and while we don’t tell them that, we know from experience that we’re very unlikely to run anything they pitch to us, and if we do follow up with them, they usually manage to disappoint every time.

PS: Do you believe journalists are rude to PR professionals?
BG: I know some are – and it makes me cringe every time I hear it. I have worked with some – no names – whose telephone manner with PRs stinks (including one who is, ironically, now a PR…). If any journalists working for me are rude to PRs then I want to know about it.

Yes, there are some annoying PRs. Yes, sometimes PRs are a distraction from the day job of a journalist. And yes, there are occasions when I have had to bite my lip. But every PR is just trying to do their job, the same as every journalist, and they should be treated with suitable respect. PRs do have a valuable contribution to make and I would expect my team to have a good, professional relationship with those PRs that prove to be a useful contact. Journalism is all about having great contacts, and a good PR can be a great contact too. For the rest, even if a journalist would rather not be troubled by them, there is no excuse not to be at the very least courteous and polite.

Previous meet the media interviews:
Adrian Brigewater
Clive Akass, PCW
Guy Clapperton
Dan Oliver, .Net
John Gripton, SkyNews.com
Alex Blyth
Christine Horton, Channel Pro
Alan Burkitt Gray, GTB
Peter Whitehead
Sally Whittle

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Meet the media: Adrian Bridgwater

Posted by paulstallard on June 16, 2009

Source: Adrian Bridgewater

Source: Adrian Bridgwater

This week the journalist who has agreed to take part in my Meet the Media interview is Adrian Bridgwater, a prolific freelancer and a regular blogger on ZD Net amongst others. Please note that I have already apologised to Adrian for being a wimp, but I have blanked out the name of the journalist he named and shamed as the rudest hack he had dealt with.

Adrian brings an interesting perspective to the interviews having worked in PR for seven years and offers some strong advice. My favourite was: ‘Sell a story on its news value and not what the client wants.’

Paul Stallard: What is your pet hate of PR?
Adrian Bridgwater: People that think I cover IT in general and don’t realise that software application development is a big enough area to focus on specifically

PS: What is the best way to contact you?
AB: Always by email please.

PS: Do you think that most PR professionals read the titles you write for before contacting you?
AB: They used to be very bad at this when I worked for mostly print media, but a great many do check my online writing before contacting me which is both refreshing and gratifying at the same time. Read the rest of this entry »

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Meet the media – Clive Akass, PCW

Posted by paulstallard on June 10, 2009

pcw mag closes

Following the news at the start of the week that a piece of UK computing history had fallen by the wayside, this week’s Meet the Media interview is with Clive Akass of Personal Computer World Magazine. It was with great sadness that I heard that PCW was to close on Monday and felt that it was a scary sign of the times.

I first met Clive a good few years ago when I worked on the Autodesk account and am delighted that he has agreed to take part in this interview. He has listed some great tips for those of us in the PR industry and has some interesting ideas for the future. He has made some good points about the types of documents journalists like to receive, good photography and my favourite – man bites dog survey tips.

Name: Clive Akass
Title I work for: Personal Computer World for the next few days. As you probably know PCW is closing. I’d like to take this opportunity to thank all the PR people who have helped me over the years

Paul Stallard: What is your pet hate of PR?
Clive Akass: Vital information in a form that cannot be copied, pasted and edited. In press releases this usually comes in the form of PDFs with the text locked in one way or another. I’ve noticed recently that I have been getting more PDFs with the text freely copyable, which is great: maybe PR companies are learning.

The issue is not just that locked PDFs cause journalists more work: it is easy to make mistakes when having to retype details such as price, web addresses and specifications. It’s far better for everyone if they can be copied and edited. Even copyable PDFs can be awkward because the clipboard text comes up crudely formatted with a carriage return at the end of each line. If you don’t know what you are doing with a PDF, send in DOC format.

A particular irritation are invites in a graphics format such as a jpeg. If you must do this, always send the information in text too. Retyping text from a jpeg can be very awkward, even when working with two screens. Again, the major issue is to prevent mistakes when retyping. But it also causes a lot of unnecessary work: before big shows or in the run up to Christmas journalists often get scores of invites. We don’t have secretaries and it can be very hard to keep track.

Another pet hate is the false start: rushing out on a press day to catch an event, only to find you have to hang around for an hour before it begins. There is no point fibbing about the start time to prevent latecomers: journalists need to be there and will arrive on time if possible. If you want to set up a bit of networking time beforehand, but be clear about what you are doing; if people have the time they will come early and the rest will try to make the main event.

Finally there are the daft surveys. I know PR people love these because they can get coverage on a slack day. But remember the old journalistic adage: dog bites man, not interesting; man bites dog, good story. A survey that tells you people don’t like computer crashes is no use at all because we already know that; one that discovered that in reality people love crashes would be a big story. I’d say at least 50 percent of survey stories are dog-bites-man.

PS: Do you think that most PR professionals read the titles you write for before contacting you?
CA: Many don’t, for sure. Many also don’t appear to research the journalist as well as the publication.

PS: What is your top tip for PR professionals?
CA: There’s a few tips up there under pet hates. Also I am constantly astonished how many marketing people do not realise the advantage of pictures. I’d say that if you include a good picture with a press release you double your chances of getting coverage. Read the rest of this entry »

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Meet the Media – Guy Clapperton

Posted by paulstallard on May 12, 2009

Source: Guy Clapperton

Source: Guy Clapperton

This weeks Meet the Media interview is with a freelance journalist whom I have the upmost respect for, Guy Clapperton. To say I was delighted that Guy agreed to take part in my series of interviews would be an understatement and his answers are a brilliant example of why I started this series in the first place.

It isn’t just a platform for journalists to say what PR professionals do wrong but an opportunity to explain how to work better. The tips that Guy has listed are a must read for anyone who wants to understand the pressures of a freelance journalist. These have come from his unique position of having been at the forefront of his profession for many years and also the training courses that his company offers PR professionals/clients. Enjoy.

Name: Guy Clapperton
Titles I regularly work for: Guardian, Times, Independent, Sunday Telegraph, Sunday Express, ComputerActive specials, loads – mainly people who throw money at me!

Paul Stallard: What is your pet hate of PR?
Guy Clapperton: That would usually depend on what’s been happening to me just lately. At the moment I’ve had three people in the last week approaching me to work as a speaker or panelist at a conference – and then letting it slip that they’re expecting me to work for nothing. One of them this week accused me of being personally disrespectful when I asked her whether she was being paid for her time approaching me (and if so, why should I work for her for zippo?) She was wrong to be offended, I’d paid her the basic respect of telling her where she was going wrong and why no self-respecting freelance would work for nothing. The idea that we should really gets to me. I’m not above doing freebies of course; if it’s in a cause in which I believe, if it’s for a mate starting a business who needs a bit of content then I’ll help and have done so recently. I’ve been a Bafta juror without payment because I loved doing it and frankly I was honoured to be asked by a body like that. But using my experience and whatever skills I have to add value to something aimed at adding value to a commercial business without any benefit to me is plain crazy, and please don’t tell me about benefits of networking and exposure if you’re being paid to organise an event – you could get the same benefits but you’re being paid! Read the rest of this entry »

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Meet the media – Dan Oliver, .Net

Posted by paulstallard on April 28, 2009

Source: Dan Oliver

Source: Dan Oliver

This weeks Meet the Media interview is with Dan Oliver, editor of web design magazine, .net. Dan also writes his own personal blog, www.willwriteforfood.co.uk, which he asked me to mention so that he would update it.

One of the tips Dan provides, is about not forgetting the junior members of a publication as they are the future editors of magazines. He also makes an interesting point that he doesn’t believe that the route of bad PR is the people on the end of the phone but in fact their bosses who have advised them badly.

Paul Stallard: Have you ever done any PR work and if yes what was the experience like?
Dan Oliver: I don’t really know how this happened, but there was a time when I considered a move into PR. I was offered a job at a place up in Manchester, but eventually decided to to turn it down. I’ve got a lot of respect for people that work in PR, because I know I would really struggle to write something creative about an inkjet printer.

PS: Do you think that most PR professionals read the titles you write for before contacting you?
DO: No.

PS: How has the increase of social media affected traditional journalism?
DO: When it comes to the definition of journalism, I have a bit of a bee in my bonnet about blogging, and it’s very hard for me to talk about this subject without being accused of hubris. My honest opinion is that putting a blog on the net and writing some entertaining copy does not make you a journalist.

I trained as a journalist for three years at University, and did various work placements on newspapers for another two. In that time I learned about fact checking, staying on the right side of the law, ethics, story structure, interview technique, and many other skills that take time to learn. Read the rest of this entry »

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Meet the media – Jon Gripton, SkyNews.com

Posted by paulstallard on April 21, 2009

Source: Jon Gripton

Source: Jon Gripton

As part of my meet the media series this week I have interviewed Jon Gripton the news editor at SkyNews.com about his experiences of working with PR professionals and his tips for pitching to him successfully.

Name: Jon Gripton
Title: News Editor, SkyNews.com
 
Paul Stallard:
What is your top tip for PR professionals?
Jon Gripton: Know your stuff – but know my audience, my needs and demands too.
Be creative, be clever, be flexible.

PS: What is the one thing that PR people forget that is essential for a pitch?
JG: Pictures!

PS: How has the increase of social media affected traditional journalism?
JG: I’m not sure it has ‘affected’ it, but it has helped it.
At Sky News we like to think we constantly innovate our ways to gather news. At the moment we’re having fun and success trying new things with Twitter, Flickr, CoverItLive and Mogulus.

Social media is helping us reach people far faster than in the past: we have found eyewitnesses ready to talk and share pictures on breaking news stories around the world thanks to Facebook and Twitter – something we’d really have struggled with a couple of years ago. Plus we can ask questions of our readers.
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