Katie Price to edit the Today programme?!
November 24, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Katie Price and the Today programme. Two things I’d never expected to see in the same sentence.
But yes, Katie Price has reportedly been asked to guest edit Radio 4’s flagship Today programme. Guest editors are invited to take part in the show every year – between Christmas and the New Year – to inspire its broadcasts over the holiday season.
So if the reports are correct, she will follow in the footsteps of previous guest editors Norman Tebbit, Richard Branson and Bono, according to The Times.
Whether or not it actually happens though, we shall have to wait and see.
Why use twitter?
November 19, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Great article from the Guardian on the benefits of Twitter, well worth a read:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2010/nov/19/alan-rusbridger-twitter
ABP – Always Be Pitching
November 18, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
According to The Telegraph’s Travel Section, it took a matter of minutes, after the announcement of Prince William’s engagement to Kate Middleton, for the news editor to be flooded with company press releases linking (tenuously in many cases) their products to the couple. This is hardly a new idea for sending out releases (every World Cup for example; sees hundreds of company stories loosely based around the football tournament) and it illustrates how keen companies are to pitch stories and get coverage for their brand (you can see the story here: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/travelnews/8137941/Royal-wedding-PR-companies-take-advantage.html – our favourite was probably the Irish Ferries’ release).
To have some success with your pitching, whether it’s by using tenuous news to get coverage for your brand, or intense marketing to win business, or networking to find potential investors for your IPO, you have to get out there and shout to get your name heard and that’s what the best ‘sales’ people do.
With the economy still the key issue for the UK government, the recent trade mission to China was the largest ever, with the PM himself going, along with four other cabinet ministers and 43 business leaders (ranging from the CEO of Diageo to the Chairman of Barclays and the Chairman of Yell Group). The goal of the visit, according to Cameron, was to build a much stronger relationship with China and increase exports to help get Britain’s economy back in shape. However, as The Telegraph tells us “his achievements are lagging well behind the EU15 billion of trade deals secured by French President Nicolas Sarkozy last week”. Perhaps Cameron should have booked his flights 10 days earlier!
But it’s not only the French and British who are pitching abroad; President Obama has recently been in India, where according to The Economist; “A few business deals for American companies were brushed together into a package worth some $15 billion, announced in a speech in Mumbai—which supposedly will create 50,000 jobs in America”. This would certainly be a bit of welcome press for the President who seems to have faced a lot of pressure from various sides lately.
This all tells us there is no doubt we are in an increasingly competitive age where your pitch has to be; bigger, better, louder than the people who tried before you but preparation is also key to success. In our pitch training courses we teach delegates to play to their strengths and tailor their approach (this is vital) so that they are comfortable in their style and ensure they are offering a solution that their audience will actually want.
Of course winning over your audience can sometimes also take a little luck and persistence but whether it was exactly the coverage they wanted or not, there’s no denying that the above Prince William stories got them into The Telegraph. So could we really blame them for trying again for the next big (tenuously linked) event?
Will Edwards – www.bluewoodtraining.co.uk – November 2010
Gaga: The Degree
November 10, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Proof if proof were needed that she has made her mark.
A university in America is offering a course on the ’social phenomenon’ that is Lady Gaga.
Professor Mathieu Deflem Sociologist at the University of South Carolina said he’d initially planned a course on the Sociology of Fame or the Sociology of Celebrity, and was just going to use her as an example.
But, in his words, he thought: ’Oh, what the hell? Let’s make the whole freaking course about Lady Gaga and her rise to fame’! Students will learn to “engage in sound and substantiated scholarly thinking” on issues related to her rise to fame.
“It’s not the person, and it’s not the music. It’s more this thing out there in society that has 10 million followers on Facebook and six million on Twitter. I mean, that’s a social phenomenon.”
He’s got a point. Here’s the full article: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-11672679
Gemma Carey, Bluewood Training Ltd
Recipe for…
November 3, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Attractive female presenter? Check. Successful pairing with male co-presenter? Check. Already hosting a popular features-based show? Check.
Next, extract said duo and launch another features-based show with a popular breakfast slot.
The result? Plummeting viewing figures thanks to the miunderstanding that the duo made The One Show popular in the first place. They didn’t. It was the package as a whole. Thus, Daybreak is suffering from embarrasingly low viewer numbers and the BBC’s Breakfast is enjoying the overflow.
What to do with the PR meltdown that is the failure of this seemingly-doomed programme?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-11682842
Gemma Carey www.bluewoodtraining.com
