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Cooking Up a Press Kit
by Harry Hoover

Published on this site: September 19th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

Press kits, like any dish, may include different ingredients depending
upon who will be consuming them. A good press kit can be used with potential
investors or clients, just as it can for editors. The contents should
be developed based upon your audience.
Let's review some common elements you will find in press kits aimed at
journalists. A letter of introduction - or a pitch letter - often is attached
to the outside of the press kit folder. This could include an overview
of kit contents and your contact information.
Now, let's go inside the folder:
- The Backgrounder.
This is an overview of your company that may include its history and
a profile, company locations, as well as brief bios of key company officers.
- Product/Service Information.
Include product and service spec sheets or brochures, as well as any
reviews you have received from neutral third parties.
- Art.
Photos, charts, graphs and illustrations often help sell the story.
Editors and are always looking for ways to visually illustrate news
and feature items. Including art gives you a leg up.
- Recent Coverage.
If you have received editorial mention elsewhere, include it. This gives
an editor a little more confidence that your story or company has merit.
- News Releases.
Now, I'm not saying you should include every release you have written
since the dawn of time, but include some that are pertinent to the subject
at hand.
- Article Layout.
Laying out a story using text and visuals in what is known as mat format
often can result in additional coverage. Editors can pick up the entire
layout and drop it into the publication. This is more likely to happen
with small newspapers and trade magazines than with major media. But
it can even give major media editors ideas on how to illustrate a feature.
- FAQs and Facts. Frequently asked questions and bulleted fact
sheets also can spur coverage.

Harry Hoover - is managing principal of Hoover ink PR,
http://www.hoover-ink.com.
He has 30 years of experience in crafting and delivering bottom line messages
that ensure success for serious businesses like Bank of Commerce, Brent
Dees Financial Planning, Focus Four, Levolor, New World Mortgage, North
Carolina Tourism, TeamHeidi, Ty Boyd Executive Learning Systems, Velux,
and Verbatim.


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