1961 Boston Globe TV Commercial Portrays the Life of Stay-at-home Moms

The 1960’s-era stay-at-home Mom was much different from today’s Moms. In 1961, the Boston Globe hired the ad agency BBD&O, who hired Bert Stern, to shoot a one-minute ad for the paper. Its target: the stay-at-home Mom.

Click to view the ad:

boston globe ad 1961 Continue reading 1961 Boston Globe TV Commercial Portrays the Life of Stay-at-home Moms

One Size Never Fits All

When reaching your audience, one size never fits all.

Here’s a good example. One client needs to communicate to about 1.27 million people. In doing so, they decide to send a letter. Let’s think about this…how many different demographics can come from 1.27 million different people?

Well…let’s see. There are differences in:

  1. Income
  2. Education
  3. Age
  4. Ethnicity
  5. Culture
  6. Gender
  7. Sexual Orientation
  8. Learning Styles
  9. How One Chooses to Receive Information
  10. Tech Savvy
  11. Differing Abilities
  12. Region

I’ve only included 12. However, these 12 can be broken down further. For instance, a person with a college degree may only read business journals whereas another person with a college degree enjoys entertainment magazines. So, how will one letter reach all 1.27 million. It won’t.

Even though you may think your budget won’t allow multiple streams of communication, you have to at least consider reaching your audience many different ways.

Some may like to read. Others to listen to the radio. Then there are those who will only pay attention to text messages.

Don’t lose out on reaching your audience by not paying attention to who they are and how they receive information. Think about the clothes we buy…one size never fits all.

Know Your Audiences

If you are contemplating a public relations career, there is a lot to think about. Most people believe public relations is just networking and building relationships. They may believe it’s taking someone to lunch, hitting the golf course or tennis courts, or eating at trendy restaurants and bars. That’s not it. There is much more to it.

For public relations to work, you have to pay attention and know in whose hands you need to get that vital piece of client information. You have to know and understand the client’s audiences.

Reading both magazines and newspaper in print and online, subscribing to blogs, watching television, and other sources of media, etc. – you need to find out who the key players are that report on a particular business industry.

If we represent an author, we would not send out a press release or contact a reporter/writer in the technology field. If we represent a music artist, we wouldn’t contact a writer who writes for corporate entities. Most of us have clients in various industries so we need to have an arsenal of contacts in all fields.

It can take several emails or telephone calls before we can even get to the contact person. However, using key words in an email or voicemail to get their attention might speed up the process. By merely mentioning an article they’ve written or an award they’ve received – that could be the ticket to getting your foot in the door.

However, if time goes by and we haven’t connected – we may have to be a little more persistent. Send a follow up email asking if they received the first one, or drop them a note inviting them to lunch – we all have to eat. Be subtle – you don’t want to look like bothersome pest.

What happens when you finally get that meeting? How will you take advantage of the time you spend with them? Know that media professionals are always looking for new stories and subject matter. Good stories and subject matter. Be creative. Add a special twist to the new product launch. What is new and innovative about it? How can it help the reader? What will it do to make the reader’s life better? This is the information they need to have. Their audience is the reader. That’s the appeal.

If you have more than one client in their field of interest – kill two birds with one stone, talk about all of your clients. Be prepared – develop a brief overview of each of the clients. Have electronic information ready to share that includes your client’s expertise, products and/or services, website and any other information that will help them make a decision. If a client has products – it might be a good idea to have a few giveaways handy.

A public relations professional has to know audiences. You must know your audience: media professional, client… and you must know their audience, the end-user.

Ways to Nurture and Grow Your Audience

Sonia Simone, co-founder and CMO (Chief Media Officer) of Copyblogger Media, wrote a blog back in July 2012 entitled, “How to Protect Your Business’s Most Important Asset (No, It’s Not Your Website). In it she shares her thoughts on how to nurture a healthy and robust relationship with your audience.

Some of the key points she touched on were:

  1. The audience comes first … always
  2. Use content to provide value that scales
  3. Know your audience
  4. Think carefully about how you want to be known
  5. Tell the truth
  6. Listen more than you talk
  7. Remember that you are in business

“When you recognize that your audience is your one irreplaceable asset, you’ll start to make better decisions,” said Sonia. She goes on to say, “you won’t be tempted to promote a bad product or slap ugly, irrelevant ads on your site, because you’ll know those things aren’t worth turning off your audience.”

“Figure out exactly who you want to talk with — which normally will be the people who can become your absolute best customers. Find out what they worry about, what they need, what they want, what makes them angry.” I agree whole-heartedly with this statement. Too many businesses, especially new businesses, want to target anyone… anywhere, whether they fit the audience or not – just to sell their product or service. This only wastes valuable time.

Read more of Sonia’s informative blog here.