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- Putting the Bop in the Bop-She-Bop
- or How to Prepare a Press Kit that Works
-
- by Sam Bellotto Jr.
-
-
-
- Publicity is a primary ingredient for shareware success. If you
- have all the time in the world, place your programs on as many
- BBSs and in the libraries of as many vendors as you can and wait.
- If you have all the money in the world, advertise.
-
- For those who don't want to wait forever or aren't independently
- wealthy, good news! Lots of valuable publicity is free for the
- taking. Trade magazines. Newspapers. Special interest magazines.
- These media outlets regularly print software reviews. In fact,
- they want to print software reviews. The trick is to get them to
- print yours.
-
- How? Paraphrasing a well-worn slogan, the way to a media editor's
- heart is through the press kit. A professionally prepared press
- kit can almost insure you some valuable editorial coverage.
-
- Briefly, a good press kit contains not only a copy of your
- shareware itself, but a two-page description of your product, a
- minimum 4x5-inch color glossy screen shot taken of your software,
- and a business card. Everything should be neatly packaged in a
- 9x12 pocket folder.
-
- The purpose of the press kit is simply to do the editor's job for
- him or her. Yes, folks, rarely do any of those lofty individuals
- whose profiles grace the pages of your favorite publications have
- anything to do with the dirty work of reviewing software. (Unless
- it is the latest release from Bill Gates. If yours is the latest
- release from Bill Gates, don't bother reading this.)
-
- Nine times out of ten, a lower echelon editor is responsible for
- filling up those "What's New" or "Industry Briefs" columns. This
- drudge has deadlines, bills to pay and a life outside of the
- office. A package placed within reach of this unheralded
- individual which will allow him/her to fill up three or four
- column inches with very little effort is generally considered to
- be a gift from heaven.
-
- I know this for a fact. I spent nearly 15 years in hot New York
- City editorial offices covering technology in one aspect or
- another. I would paw through the "slush piles" (what we called
- all those unsolicited manuscripts) looking for press releases
- that I wouldn't have to spend any time editing like a prospector
- panning for gold. Hell, they were gold!
-
- Companies that never got any coverage by me wasn't due to the
- fact that they had bad products, or that my readers wouldn't be
- interested in what they had to offer. Rather, many other
- companies gave me well-written releases geared to my editorial
- approach, enabling me to get my "regular departments" filled in
- time for a two-hour lunch and on to more interesting work. Geez,
-
- I wasn't a dummy, you know.
-
- And therein lies the rub. Don't you be a dummy.
-
- The heart of a good press kit is the press release. Physically,
- one-and-one-half to two pages, double-spaced is a good length. It
- allows the editor to swiftly fill from a small news brief to a
- longer column. Don't assume that if you inundate the editor with
- a short novel you guarantee yourself an article. Chances are the
- editor will seize up over the task of red-penciling "War and PC"
- and that'll be the last anybody will see of it.
-
- Others favor putting together a good, general press release that
- can be sown promiscuously throughout the industry. I don't. I
- think each press release should fit its target. Study the
- magazine, newspaper or whatever that you want to hit on. Write
- your release to complement that publication's style, tone and
- audience. Don't cloud something written for "Computer Idiot"
- magazine with paragraphs of technical specs. If the medium you
- are aiming at goes for "just the facts," give them "just the
- facts" and not a glowing endorsement from Anita Bryant.
-
- Remember. The less work you make an underpaid editor put into
- your press release, the likelier it will see print.
-
- The first page of a good press release has the company name,
- address, telephone number, fax number, e-mail address and the
- like at the top. List a human being as the contact. (Contact:
- Human Q. Being.) Don't forget the date. Begin the press release
- itself about halfway down the page with a succinct headline that
- describes your software in eight or words or less. Skip another
- inch and begin the press release itself.
-
- Allow for plenty of margin space, with one-and-one-half inches at
- the bottom. Double space the text. And heed this word of warning:
- now that typewriters are extinct, the temptation exists to
- desktop publish your press release, justified, in 12 point
- Garamond with italics. DON'T. Have you ever tried to edit a press
- release submitted justified in 12 point Garamond with italics?
- Root canal is preferable.
-
- Pick a clean, pedestrian monospaced font. Turn off justification.
- Let the editor decide where to italicize or boldface.
-
- Finally, paper clip your press release pages together if you have
- more than one page. If you have more than two pages you probably
- fell asleep several paragraphs ago.
-
- Establishing a company name is a step up. It makes you look
- professional. If you don't want to bother with a company name,
- use the name of your software. Or your dog. This is easy for
- authors with their own homes. The Postal Service told me that any
- homeowner can get mail for a home-based business and I believe
- them because I've been getting mail addressed to Crossdown (my
- software) at my address for over a year now. Apartment dwellers
- might want to consult/bribe their own mail carriers.
-
- In addition to the press release, include one or more glossy
- color screen shots of your software. The minimum size should be
- 4x5 inches, 8x10s are preferable, with wide margins all around.
- Yes, I know that many publications are capable of accepting
- images on disk, but unless the editor who gets your press kit
- happens to be from the planet Metaluna all that editor is going
- to see from looking at a disk is a square of plastic. You want
- the editor to make immediate eye contact with your gorgeous
- screen graphics, get a rush of endorphins and exclaim "wow!"
-
- Also, larger photos scan easier.
-
- Each photo should have a caption on a separate piece of paper
- scotch taped to the back (for easy removal.) The caption should
- impart some bit of information not readily apparent from the
- photo. In other words, "Screen shot from latest release of Cosmic
- Cabbage computer arcade game by Navel Arts" is not a very good
- caption.
-
- Each photo should also be labeled on the back with your company
- name in case it gets lost.
-
- Include a business card. Business cards are not expensive.
- Editors just love to collect business cards and, in particular,
- affix them to huge Rolodexes. Even editors with computers do
- this. I am not exactly sure why. Regardless, if your press kit
- makes a hit with the editor, your business card is going to be
- kept and, who knows, maybe several months down the line you'll
- get a call from that editor which could lead to even more
- valuable editorial space ... or a free lunch.
-
- -----------------------------------------
- Sam Bellotto Jr. is the author of Crossdown and Enigmacross. He
- currently serves on the ASP Public Relations Committee. From 1970
- to 1985 he edited a wide variety of business magazines and held
- nearly godlike power over the life and death of new products.
-
-
-