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Josh Tetrick

Josh Tetrick

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Getting Big Press

Posted: 06/ 8/11 02:29 PM ET

You're working in a company or organization trying to do some good.

Maybe you're Katie Meyler of More than Me, an organization driven to get little girls off the street and into school in Liberia. Or perhaps you're the founders of LiveProud, a company (yes, a for-profit company!) that turns trash -- plastic cell phone cases, keyboards, soda bottles, and more -- into performance clothing.

You're rocking it, but you want more. More eyeballs, more sales, more donations, more engagement, and most importantly -- more impact. And your PR/marketing budget? Ah, right around $0.

So how do you get some big-time attention? Short answer: Send simple, personable, and genuine emails to lots and lots of people who write blog posts and newspaper columns about your world.

Think to yourself: How does the story of my organization or company relate to their perspective? How does it blend with stories they've written in the past? How does it jive with them on a personal and emotional level?

I'm speaking from experience. We just launched a social enterprise (AKA, a good-for-the world company) this past February with $0 marketing dollars, yet we've been covered by three of the top ten blogs in the world, three of the top ten newspapers in the US, and have received hundreds of smaller mentions in blogs from Argentina to Australia. Luck? Nope. Because we're special? Nope. The love had much more to do with a replicable approach to reaching out and getting noticed.

Here's the email language and format that we used to get all the attention. I copy and pasted the message word for word from one of the hundreds of emails we sent out:

Hey Erick,

Big fan of your work since way back in the Business 2.0 days. Thanks for the great stuff throughout the years; your insights have become required reading for me.

We were hoping you'd take a look at a social investing platform we're about to launch for organizations with a social/environmental mission.

We act as a platform, like eBay, for the everyday person to invest, not donate, in social enterprises. For example, 20,000 people could invest $50 each in HalfUnited.com, one of the companies raising money with us. You can check out a post about the concept and the company, called 33needs, in a social innovation blog: http://bit.ly/fWGZF6

It'd be great if you'd consider chatting with me about what we're up to. Is there any chance we could talk for a few minutes?

I'd be grateful for your time. Again, thanks for all the great content over the years.

All the best,

Josh

Remember: Simple, personal, and genuine. And a little tenacity, especially in the world of impact and social good, goes a long, long way. Now, keep rocking it!

 

Follow Josh Tetrick on Twitter: www.twitter.com/joshtetrick

 
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1 hour ago (4:03 PM)
Josh, great article - and thanks for including LiveProud.

We, too, have been very fortunate early in the game with getting some big press. A number of major media sources have run LiveProud articles/v­ideo - some solicited, others just luck o' the draw.

At the end of the day, it has always come down to our "story." What are we doing different then everybody else? Why is it better? Why should people care?

While it's easy for us (or, at least, I've always thought it was - "saving the planet by making shirts" is a great headline), sometimes it really takes some soul searching. The best first step has to be shortening what you (the owner, marketing, entreprene­ur, etc) do to a concise statement. Four or five words why you're the best. Get people interested­, get them asking questions.

And roll with it from there...

Phil
http://www­.liveproud­group.com
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
joshtetrick
17 minutes ago (5:07 PM)
Thanks, Phil. Awesome tips, and the tagline: "Saving the planet by making shirts" is hard to beat!