By Aaron
Wittersheim
Public relations is how a business conveys information to the
public to build good will, credibility, name recognition and
prestige. PR activities include:
Press releases, articles and newsletters;
Company-sponsored events and activities;
Speaking engagements and interviews, and
Trade shows and conventions.
Web site PR is all about news, and top companies rely on
the Web to spread it. As newspapers shrink in size and circulation,
on-line news outlets multiply. Though often overlooked, Web
site PR is surprisingly easy, affordable and effective, as
long as you follow a few simple rules.
The first step is to make sure your company Web site is media-friendly.
Journalists begin research by cruising a target company’s
site. They look for PR contacts, basic company facts, corporate
position statements, financial information and images to download
for the story. With that in mind, a powerhouse PR site will
have:
Easy navigation;
Clear, concise and jargon-free content;
Current news and archived press releases;
A “Media Room” with photos of key executives,
personal contact information and newsworthy charts and graphics;
Financial data, and
A consistent and compelling overall message.
Follow these guidelines and all visitors - not just journalists
- will develop a clear and favorable impression of your company.
After giving your site a PR tune-up, tell the world what
you are all about. Companies can submit news stories directly
to on-line wire services, where industry news sites, blogs
and message boards regularly pick them up. Stories on “hot”
topics can rapidly circulate among blogs, providing the company
with highly effective - and free - viral marketing. If direct
submission is not practical, the company can work through
an on-line PR firm that specializes in article placement.
PR submissions come in many flavors, such as technical white
papers, press releases, customer success stories and opinion-editorial
pieces. Each type requires a different emphasis and style;
properly crafted submissions quickly will grab the attention
of editors and readers. Above all, articles must have real
informative value; otherwise, they get lost in the shuffle.
For example, EzineArticles™, a popular submission site,
receives nearly 9,000 articles per month! Despite the proliferation
of news, analysts see nothing but growth for Web site PR;
in fact developing technologies such as "podcasting"
open up whole new vistas of opportunity.
Companies that fancy themselves sharp Web marketers because
they do effective search marketing and pay-per-click campaigns
often miss the public-relations boat. PR does not replace
on-line advertising, but compliments it. Article placement
can enhance optimization, and PR reaches targeted market segments
with information-rich content. This means when a qualified
prospect spots your ad or scans Google results, they will
recognize your name - and click.
Aaron Wittersheim is president of Whoast Inc., a suburban
Chicago search marketing firm. For more information, visit
http://www.whoast.com.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Aaron_Wittersheim
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