How to Get Your Service,
Product, or Idea On TV News--for FREE!
by Dr. Kevin Nunley
Index
of Articles
Few things in media are
as powerful as television exposure. Anyone who has ever
been on TV can tell you, a few shots on the tube and people
are recognizing you in the supermarket.
Local television news has
taken off as one of the most trusted voices in media. Like
it or not, when your local TV anchor person says something,
huge numbers of people regard it as hard truth.
Imagine this scenario.
You're trying hard to introduce the general public to your
new service. Advertising is expensive, so you're having
o get creative to make your marketing ideas stretch. On
the local nightly news, the veteran anchor person who everyone
in town has watched for 20 years, turns to the camera and
mentions your new service. Then he cuts to a video of a
promotion at your store.
Impossible? Not at all
when you know how TV news works. You can have your business
featured on TV for free if you follow these guidelines.
ALWAYS REMEMBER...TV
IS VISUAL!
The most important thing
about television is that it is VISUAL. In many cases, the
story may not sound interesting or be interesting, but if
it LOOKS interesting, it gets on TV.
Once at a fund-raiser,
all the media personalities in town were gathered together
for a banana split eating contest. Knowing that every television
station would be sending a camera to cover this novel and
VISUAL event, I decided to be the most novel and visual
person in the contest.
We all sat down, television,
radio and newspaper people alike, and prepared our chops
for the starting whistle. As the eating commenced, I pulled
out a giant silver spoon the size of a small shovel. The
television cameras immediately swung to me.
That evening, at the neglect
of all the other media contestants, footage of my spoon
and I were prominently featured on the news of several television
stations. The visual approach to TV worked.
FIVE THINGS THAT TV
PRODUCERS LOOK FOR.
There are five basic categories
of stories that television likes to cover. You won't find
these written down anywhere on a news room bulletin board.
They are instinctive to assignment editors.
Number one are political
stories. Anything that has to do with local, state, or federal
politics gets on TV. If the Gotebo, Oklahoma dog catcher
does something that upsets two people, it's somehow viewed
as a worthy news story. Expect to get on TV if you mount
an accepted challenge to a government official, entity,
or proposal.
Big community problems
get the same kind of coverage. These are often things that
touch everyone. Potholes, mosquito eradication, garbage
service, flood control, and crime all fall into this category.
Activities that solve big community problems, or potential
problems, get attention too. This could be something like
people planting fifty trees in the city park.
Education and Health earn
a lot of television coverage these days. The first one is
because everyone is concerned about kids. The second is
because television news viewers are disproportionately middle-aged.
They have an increased interest in health information and
issues.
Celebrities always get
television time. The reasons are obvious. The man or woman
who couldn't care less about the other topics mentioned
will always look up when the local NBA star or visiting
movie star comes on.
I will awkwardly lump sports
into this category as well. Sports make up to 50% of local
news in many towns.
Finally, television loves
novelty. Some experts say that anything visual and original
will get on. I'm not sure I agree. Strictly original stories
often leave assignment editors wondering why they should
cover it. You are far better off doing something that's
done once every year or two. The cameras will show up for
something that they know from experience will be a winner.
Contestants diving into
a swimming pool of green jello to grab a key that starts
a free car is the oldest stunt in the book, but it invariably
brings the TV vans out in droves.
"BUT HOW CAN I GET MY
PRODUCT OR SERVICE ON TV?"
If you can ATTACH your
product, service, or idea to a topic that the news wants
to cover--you're in!
Just like the person promoting
an issue that wanted to get their position on the news,
you can get your business on TV news by finding some way
to attach your biz to a topic that TV would cover. Can your
business get involved in a community service program that
will be newsworthy?
Not long ago two boys decided
to camp out on top of their house in hopes that someone
would notice them and give them tickets to a hot NBA basketball
game. It's was just goofy enough to get the TV cameras out.
Everyone laughed. One sharp business person called a TV
station and explained he was on his way over to the boy's
house to offer them his tickets and bring them down off
the roof. The TV news director immediately saw a story happening.
He ordered a camera crew to meet the business man as he
arrived at the boy's house.
Did the guy with the tickets
get on TV? Yes! Did he look good to people watching? Yes!
Did lots of new customers arrive at his store the next day
to tell him what a great guy he was and buy a few things?
Of course!
HOW TO CONTACT THE NEWS
DEPARTMENT.
The media is very telephone
oriented. Your best bet is to call the news department and
tell whomever answers all about your story. Get to the point.
Make sure your story is good. Tell the reporter that answers
the juicy or visual part first. Remember that while you're
talking, the reporter is thinking:
1. What's in this for
us? Will our viewers be interested?
2. Will my boss think
this is a good idea?
3. How much trouble
will it be for us to get this on tape and on the air?
If you can get positive
answers on those three points, you've got a great shot at
getting some TV. Keep in mind that TV stations run short-handed
and on a very tight deadline. They've got a lot of work
to do in very little time.
Kevin's
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Kevin Nunley provides marketing
advice and copy writing for businesses and organizations.
Read all his money-saving marketing tips at http://DrNunley.com/.
Reach him from his site via email.