Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Public Relations at the End of the Semester


It is the end of my third semester being a public relations student and I am ecstatic at the opportunities.

I am really interested in the fundraising, special events, campaign and multimedia. There is so much to learn with so little time and a lot of money to spend.

I must say that I am grateful for Professor Norman Lewis, Professor Steve Johnson, Ms. Quenta Vettel and Ms. Lindsey Stevens at the College of Journalism and Communications who have helped me advance my skills as well as will be helping me out with future opportunities.

I can't wait to continue working with NABJ as well being more instrumental with PRSSA.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Public Relations Principles from Toy Story 3



            I was watching Toy Story 3 and I was thinking “I want to be like Woody”. I want to be the person who you know will come through, loyal to the end, compassionate, caring, persistent and calm. It is not to say that I am not those things currently but while watching the movie his character pulled at me. I connected with Woody; he was the person I wanted to be. Everything I think now has to relate to public relations – if write it here, I must find the PR angle. Here it is: Before one gets in the communication or business field, whether it is titled Public Relations specialist, Integrated Marketing Communications or whatever – decide who you are going to be.
            It gets hard representing an organization, are your principles going to be integrated into the organization or are you going to keep your principles separate from that of the business.
            Also, if the people who you surround yourself with are attracted to another business venture will you have the courage to defend your own principles and thoughts. I really enjoyed the movie, it was nostalgic, but at the same time it really ended the series on a wonderful note and made me think about who I am and who I want to be. Each day I work on the principles I want to have in my Ms. Ann-Makir Magloire person bag and I try to reinforce the ones I’ve added whenever I’m faced with a challenge. (There have been times where I’ve failed or miss an opportunity but I keep on being ambitious).

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Pitching Stories as a Public Relations Practitioner


            PR practitioners’ need to be able to pitch stories on the first throws because there isn’t a “three strikes and you’re out” rule– there’s only one chance to get it right.
            While taking my multimedia reporting course one of the additional sources students were given as reference was an article about pitching stories. I really found the guidelines informative and easy to understand. It can work great for someone in PR or a journalist who is pitching stories to an editor.
Story pitches should primarily be short and also have these four elements as written by
·         What the story is
·         Why the story is timely
·         Why it belongs in that particular publication only
·         Why you are the only person on Earth to write it
What the Story is: Story subjects can be characters – the clown who is always handing out piƱatas for national holidays- but they shouldn’t be topics- financial aid (vague/too general).
      “You don’t want your ideas stolen, understandably,” –Rogers But the subject for a story is very important.
Why the Story is Timely: Why write the story now? Thanksgiving feature or hard news is/may be relevant in November. But, why is a story about white teeth a good ‘now’ topic.
Why it belongs in that particular publication only: Teeth, Gums, Toothbrush stories may relate to a Dentistry magazine. Why should a story about the latest Jimmy Choo be in a Women’s Health Magazine? (Possibly because it affects Women’s Health, but if it is just to talk about the price and which celebrities are wearing them, that should be saved for Essence magazine and similar fashion or celebrity magazine. Same subject but different angle.)
Why you are the only person on Earth to write it: Connections make the world smaller and helps you get or/and keep a job. Having special knowledge, knowing sources, different perspective or other form of relationship to getting the story can make a person the right candidate for a story.
             
            Some final touches for pitching a story include always having contact information left behind for the person receiving the pitch by you (the person who is pitching the story). Email and phone are primary ways that individuals use to contact people. Although, phone can be instant (may vary person to person and on work style).
            P.S. It is important to include days, dates, times and locations for events. All four information together can be pertinent in case additional persons may need to be involved for the story, such as a photographer or videographer. By knowing the day, it can be a quick reference for a person who needs to schedule.
            

© Ann-Makir Magloire

© Ann-Makir Magloire

© Ann-Makir Magloire