Beyond the Launch
Here’s a little secret of the PR industry: the news media likes news.
Any PR firm worth its salt will get any client a nice spike of coverage, when they have newsworthy information to share.
After the big news event comes the trough of despair. That’s the point at which coverage slows to a trickle — and when clients start to wonder what they’re paying that fancypants PR firm for, anyway.
You need to PLAN for that inevitable dip in coverage. You need to create a schedule of events, a timeline for content creation and distribution, etc., to make that dip a shallow one.
You might have gained a placement for a bylined article that gets scheduled to appear a few weeks after the Big Launch. You might have created a series of case study videos to vlog about in the subsequent months after the Big Launch. You could have netted a juicy speaking engagement for the client CEO in the month following the Big Launch. You might have done all of those things, and more, in the months before the Big Launch. (Just think of how relaxed you could feel, with all of that spadework already accomplished!)
You can’t promise the moon every month, but you need never fall into a pit, either. A month without meaningful, “move the ball downfield” activity is a very, very bad month.
Successful PR is not about the Big Launch. It’s about the follow-through.
Posted on: August 14, 2009 at 3:28 pm By Todd Defren



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RT @tdefren Beyond the Launch – Planning is key to securing media coverage [link to post]
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RT @TDefren Beyond the Launch [link to post] Not just for PR but also marketing – something to bare in mind for launching Spark
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Love it! Great job Todd…although this shouldn’t be a secret, it will surprise even some of the most seasoned veterans. Sometimes we forget just how important planning and day-to-day focus can help minimize the dips. I call it the equalization of spikes and valleys: http://is.gd/2k1rO
Any suggestions of what to do about the new Google algorithm?
Same thing happened to a buddy of mine with http://flauntparty.com . Shot up quickly, then died away
Very true. Launches are temporary but keeping everyone interested takes time!