Media Kit: 25 Component Possibilities
by Catherine Franz
Published on this site: May 17th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

Media kits, virtual or print, include a combination of information
whether created for electronic delivery or print. The number of
components depends on the kits focus and intention. For instance,
an authors kit would include a different combination of information
than a service business, or a multifaceted company or speaker.
Here is a list of component elements to pull from and tips to bring
a media kit together. No single kit will need all components. Choose
the components that match your or the receivers needs.
Table of Contents (TOC).
Kit receivers always appreciate this feature, it respects their
time. I recommend this rule: five or less pages, include the TOC
in a personalized letter, using design elements such as bold, larger
font or centering to set itself off from the rest of the letter.
Six and more, use a single sheet. And place the page before all
other pages, including the letter. For electronic delivery, use
color, to help gain attention.
Company Information.
An "About Us" page includes contact information. It is
also an accumulation of other aspects about that company, however,
in summary format. When founded but not how founded, vision and
mission, simple list of services or product or just an overall view.
About Our Departments.
If you have several different departments in your company, you can
include a page with a summary of each departments responsibility.
About You.
Similar to number 2 with the focus on a single individual. You will
want to focus the language and information to exactly what the media
needs to know. For example, solopreneurs the particulars would be
about you, credentials, and information with a single focus. Similar
to a resume but not quite.
Founder Page.
Do you have a company founder with an interesting story of how they
started the company? It doesn't matter if they are deceased or retired.
Honor their tenacity and creativity with their picture.
Upper Management.
It is important to stress any special skills or background in the
company that is an asset. Use one page per management level or several
on a single page. Several pages are okay for this section if it
supports the media request.
Services.
One per page or several to a page. If you don't have enough material
for a whole page, create enough. If more than one service, add a
list of the other services at the end of the page to indicate what
else is available.
Products.
Use service tips above. You will want to include whatever pictures
need to depict the product.
Employee.
This component is seldom included, yet it is a significant way to
demonstrate how the companys differences. This information
is about the staff as a whole. Presentation depends on what the
intention of the media kit. Statistics, number of employees, tenure,
company events, or community projects, work well here. If the statistics
don't shine, don't include.
Company History.
Adding a history can make or break media attraction. If a young
company you might think its could be a negative element, not
true. Depends on what side you are presenting in the kit. For a
season company, it is a must. What prevails or whether to include
or not, is how interesting is the story. If it is interesting or
creates curiosity, include it.
Awards.
Include any awards or special interests of employees. Do you have
published authors in your company, an Olympic participant, or something
else? Consider including. Sometimes a backdoor interest can bring
media coverage in. If there is only one award you can add it on
another page. To create a whole page from short information, list
past winners or describe the selection process. Ceremonial pictures
add interest.
Distinction Page.
This page needs to show how the company is different. Comparison
charts, like those found in most software product sales information
pages, are easy for readers to scan and comprehend. Graphs also
work well.
Client List.
List clients whether they are well-known or not. If your client
list is extremely confidential, mention this in lieu of the list.
You can expand the information by providing some brief background
information about the client.
Company Affiliates.
If you have a formal affiliate program, add this information. If
you use top quality vendors, add their information as well. Connection
add flavor to being attractive.
Press Releases.
Use releases with dates less than 90 days.
Publication List.
If an author, where published. If short, expand by adding details
about the publication. A few summarized paragraphs will do. If you
are or where a columnist or write your own electronic or printed
newsletter add this information as well. Add copies only if relevant
and current.
Speaking List.
Have you spoken at events or to groups? List, if old, don't include
when. Instead group by categories. Include panel participations.
Radio/television appearances.
Guest or host, doesn't matter. Tell them where they can listen to
any audio or video clips. I don't recommend including. They are
too expensive to send and for receivers to store. You want to set
the availability information off in some sort of design element
to make sure it isn't missed. To expand an appearance I like to
suggest adding elements about how you got on the show, what you
did and didn't like, or other details about the experience. Human
interest stories always spark interest to the media. Give enough
to peak their curiosity.
Personal Story.
What is your personal story about starting the business, creating
a product or service? Is it a rags to riches story? Usually people
don't think they have a good enough story to include, however, that
normally turns out to be fiction. Look for the buried treasure,
dust and polish to see the shine. Someone that can write from a
charge neutral standpoint is best for these.
Testimonials.
You can spread testimonials throughout the components using pull
quote design effects. And also have their own page. To expand, enlarge
font size or reduce margins.
Endorsements are personal acknowledgements.
For media kits, credibility stands higher. They include more
detail than testimonials. Add copies of special endorsement
letters or just mention them in other components. Only add
with the endorsers permission. Products and book authors frequently
include these. Be creative with this in your kit.
Reviews.
Product or book reviews are not endorsements. Reviews give an overview
charge neutral opinion. Reviews have their own language. To learn
that language, read movie or book reviews.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs).
This component is a must in every media kit. Normally, media reads
these pages first or second. Formulate questions by asking media
personnel. Don't guess what they want.
Photos.
For trainers, speakers, or other professional services, color photos
are too expensive to include and aren't necessary. A small 6x9 black
and white is appropriate.
Community.
Add volunteer projects you have worked on or positions you have
held. To expand, add additional details about the organization.
Note: Two-side pages count as one page.
When you are ready to send out a media kit, pull together the pieces
that fit, create a personalized letter, slip in the contact persons
business card, usually the same person signing the letter, and its
ready to mail or e-mail.
A beautifully designed media kit is nice but not necessary. Visual
impact is important, yet, you can do this with a matching color
theme and quality paper. Content needs to be the first and foremost
focus. Fancy-looking media kits but if it doesn't say anything to
the receiver, its trashed. Value is in the information and
news worthiness.

Catherine Franz, a Business Coach, specialized in writing,
marketing and product development. Newsletters and additional articles:
http://www.abundancecenter.com blog: http://abundance.blogs.com

|