Small Business Promotion: Advertising and PR

Coordinate Ads and Editorial Submissions for Maximum Reader Impact

© Thomas Kelly

Mar 28, 2009
Print media still the best, Tom Kelly
An effective marketing campaign through business to business and technical magazines balances and combines the complementary strengths of advertising and editorial.

An effective publicity campaign for an industrial or business to business product launch requires advertising and media relations to be coordinated.

Although Internet-based advertising is growing fast, advertisers still favor print media, according to Rochester Institute of Technology research (1). Print advertising gains higher recognition.

Advertising Strengths

Recognition of a company and its products or services grows each time a reader sees an advertisement. You can repeat an advertisement as often as your budget allows.

For greatest effectiveness, one advertisement should be placed in consecutive magazine issues for 6 or more times.

Advertising Limitations

The biggest drawback to advertising is the cost from magazines and the fees from artist and writer to develop the advertisement.

People scan advertisements rather than read them. The best advertising is brief and succinct. You do not have the same scope as with a magazine article to explain products, services or company, although there are exceptions to this.

Advertising Techniques

To reduce cost but retain effectiveness, place a fractional advertisement (i.e., less than a full page size) in the same place or section in each issue of a magazine. Space will cost less, but you have to pay a placement cost (some publishers are flexible on this).

The advantage is that readers will see the ad each time they turn to that section, and are likely to turn to that section to find your company's contact information.

Explanation of technical products can be difficult in a few words and pictures. Informational advertisements can be longer. The text should be broken into short paragraphs and bullet points.

A variation is the "advertorial"-- an article placed in a magazine as an advertisement, or, in other words, an advertisement that looks like editorial. Publishers will insist that the typeface and design of the advertorial be different from the magazine editorial, and most will print a line identifying it as advertising. This does not necessarily detract from readership: technical buyers gain much of their knowledge from vendor-written material (2).

Media Relations Strengths

Material in the editorial pages of a magazine is better read than advertisements. Because it has passed scrutiny by editors, it has greater perceived credibility.

The cost is much lower than for advertising. Space cost is zero. The cost is the services of a PR agent or writer, or your own time if you do it yourself.

You gain the expertise of the magazine editor and art director who know how to edit text and illustrate and design the graphics for maximum readership.

Media Relations Limitations

Once an editor has published an announcement of a new product, the magazine will not repeat it.

The way to gain repetition in editorial is a strategy in which you send out articles before and after product launch.

There is no guarantee articles and news releases will be published. A PR consultant can help maximize chances of publication.

Coordinate Ads and PR

Submit your news releases before you advertise the product or service for two reasons:

  • Editorial coverage in one issue and an ad in the next issue gives two consecutive exposures.
  • Editors are unlikely to print a news release after an ad has appeared. They want to appear to be ahead of the game.

Before you design and plan editorial submissions and advertising, ask these two questions:

  • Who are they for (i.e., intended readers and market)?
  • What is your objective?

Follow the AIDA principle:

  • attract Attention,
  • develop Interest,
  • generate Desire,
  • spur the reader to Action.

Related Reading: Small Business Success Factors

References

(1) The Case for Print Media Advertising in the Internet Age, by Patricia Sorce, Ph.D., and Adam Dewitz, School of Print Media, Rochester Institute of Technology, February 2007. http://print.rit.edu

(2) Business to Business Survey 2007, Marketing to a B2B Technical Buyer , Enquiro Search Solutions.


The copyright of the article Small Business Promotion: Advertising and PR in Small/Home Business is owned by Thomas Kelly. Permission to republish Small Business Promotion: Advertising and PR in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.


Print media still the best, Tom Kelly
       


Post this Article to facebook Add this Article to del.icio.us! Digg this Article furl this Article Add this Article to Reddit Add this Article to Technorati Add this Article to Newsvine Add this Article to Windows Live Add this Article to Yahoo Add this Article to StumbleUpon Add this Article to BlinkLists Add this Article to Spurl Add this Article to Google Add this Article to Ask Add this Article to Squidoo