Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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Message To P.R. People: Stop 'Reaching Out' To Me, OK?

Message To P.R. People: Stop 'Reaching Out' To Me, OK? | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

In a reply to a publicist who contacted me recently on some subject or another, I surprised even myself when I wrote to her that I could not take up her pitch because she used the phrase “reaching out” in her email.


If memory serves, I actually went so far as to tell her it is my policy to say no to pitches in which the phrase “reaching out” or any of its variants is applied. It was a ridiculous, ornery reply to a well-meaning request for coverage, for which I apologize.

However, the “reaching out” phrase rankled me, and I am trying to figure out why. One reason is its overuse. This phrase -- “reaching out,” “reach out,” “reached out” or whatever form it takes -- is certainly overused in the p.r. biz today (and in many other places too)....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Adam Buckman slays another tired bromide by lazy PR people who keep "reaching out" or wanting to "chat." 

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Don’t laugh too hard at tronc: Yes, it’s a dumb name — but the grim outlook for journalism is no laughing matter

Don’t laugh too hard at tronc: Yes, it’s a dumb name — but the grim outlook for journalism is no laughing matter | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Well, that sure got weird, didn’t it? Tribune’s takeover of what used to be called Times-Mirror was messy when it started, a decade and a half ago, and has gotten worse every few years: This is the company, after all, that took over several great newspapers, crowed about “synergy,” and made a few legendary editors so uncomfortable that they left their posts. (One of them was Dean Baquet, who’s now executive editor at the New York Times.)


And they sold their papers to Sam Zell, who had no background in newspapers and made an even bigger mess of things before filing for Chapter 11. Last fall, the company put Tribune Tower, where its original newspaper is based, up for sale.


But now Tribune has a new trick: It has renamed itself tronc – a term that means, in French, “poor box,” and if modulated to “trunk,” something worse. According to Tribune’s current chair, Michael Ferro – who was invited onto the board by former CEO Jack Griffin, whom he fired — this is a bold step into the future. Here’s a corporate release:...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

The goofy new brand emphasizes "content curation and monetization," not the Pulitzer-quality journalism of before. Whatever!

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Why PR Firms Are Dead to Me - Grant Cardone TV

Why PR Firms Are Dead to Me - Grant Cardone TV | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Is hiring a public relations firm even worth it in a world that changes so quickly? Has the whole game of a public relations firm become obsolete because of 800 TV channels, thousands of satellite radio channels, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, Medium, Meerkat, Periscope, blogging, Blabbing and all of the other social media platforms? Can a firm even grab the attention of television, radio or newspaper producers long enough to pay attention to their pitch?


I’m writing this after giving three different firms a year each to produce results. They promised results, I expected results — neither result was delivered. And each relationship started the same way; we met at my home or out for lunch to get to know one another. I told them my story, they asked who I wanted to reach — they got excited, I signed a contract and then I pumped them with massive amounts of relevant content that they could pitch to producers....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Grant Cardone asks a great question and provides some tough answers.

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Journalists still think PR pros are liars

Journalists still think PR pros are liars | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

DS Simon published the results, titled “The D S Simon Media Influencers Report,” which revealed that 90 percent of digital journalists say a PR pro has lied to them. Sixty-eight percent say that PR pros lie to them “sometimes,” and 20 percent say they’ve been lied to “often.


Good news, though—only three percent of digital journalists think that PR pros “always” lie to them. Bloggers, however, have a bit more cynical view, with seven percent saying that PR pros always lie to them...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

A recent study revealed that the spin-doctor stereotype is alive and well, with reporters and bloggers sharing how often they've been lied to.

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The 6 Worst Press-Release Topics That Startups Pitch

The 6 Worst Press-Release Topics That Startups Pitch | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

A lot of businesspeople wonder why a certain press release fell flat. Nine times out of 10, the answer is quite simple: It didn't highlight any news.

Once you're able to understand what's newsworthy, your press releases will start to generate results.

Focusing on the following six topics is a surprisingly common pitching mistake in the startup world. While some of the topics are trivial or just advertorial, others have a germ of an idea that could made newsworthy by a shift in focus in the press release....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

It's no surprise that bad news releases get bad results. Read 'em and weep.

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Uber General Manager: Public Relations Is a Waste of Money - PRNewser

Uber General Manager: Public Relations Is a Waste of Money - PRNewser | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Last week Uber General Manager Chris Nakutis (follow him on Twitter) spoke to a group of entrepreneurs about his experience launching the e-commerce platform Short Stack–and became the latest heavy-hitter to weigh in on the “do startups need PR” debate.


As you can tell from our headline, he answered in the negative.Nakutis said that PR was not a valuable tool in growing his business and that the return on investment was not immediate or well-defined despite the good press.


Here’s the key quote: new companies “can almost jump over the PR process.”...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

PR is not necessary if you're not repaired to utilize it properly.

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PR News Throws Up An Air Ball | 15-Seconds

PR News Throws Up An Air Ball | 15-Seconds | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

One of our readers alerted us to a surprising example of how NOT to recover — and the most interesting part is that the mistake was made by PR News, an outfit that publishes newsletters, blogs, guidebooks and other resources which they say hone  PR practitioners skills in things like media relations and crisis management.


It seems PR News sent out a blast email this week trying to get businesses to buy some of their products.  The email talked about how to “score big” in business and carried the subject line: “Don’t be like Wichita State.”


Apparently the theory was that the subject might catch the eye of folks following the NCAA basketball championships.  What PR News failed to understand is that it would offend supporters of the Wichita State basketball team which had just lost in the tournament following a 35-0 start to the season....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Surprising PR fail and poor apology to Wichita State

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Hilarious and Depressing Video Exposes How Phony Local TV News Has Become

Hilarious and Depressing Video Exposes How Phony Local TV News Has Become | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Conan O'Brien shows how America's #1 source of news has been infiltrated by press release garbage.... “Ripping and reading”—a nickname for the practice of taking a press release and reading it on air—is a disturbing trend that has disseminated on local newscasts. In December, comedian Conan O’Brien took on the practice in a hilarious segment featuring a spree of local news anchors reading the same words from a press release about Christmas gifts....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Somewhere a PR person is doing a happy dance for all of this Christmas gift coverage. On the other hand, there is something disconcerting about the numbing sameness when you think about how many good local stories did not get coverage.

Marco Bertolini's comment, February 18, 2014 3:47 AM
Unbelievable ! And I thout the news here in the Netherlands are bullshit !
Marco Bertolini's curator insight, February 18, 2014 3:52 AM

Une vidéo hilarante - et quelque peu inquiétante - des télés locales américaines.  Même si vous ne comprenez pas l'anglais, vous remarquerez vite quelques similitudes entre les interventions !

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BREAKING NEWS: It's Time to Get Rid of Your Website's PR Section

BREAKING NEWS: It's Time to Get Rid of Your Website's PR Section | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Should you REALLY invest in a PR Section on your website? We think not-- and here's why.The time has finally come: You can go ahead and get rid of that “Company News” section.


Nobody’s reading it. In fact, a recent analytical report compiled by Chris Scott of Headscape suggests that the fewer than 1% of visitors who DO read your press releases tend to leave your site shortly after.


So there you have it: your company news page – with all its press releases, employee event descriptions, award notifications and job promotion updates – is actually driving your prospects away...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

What the hell happened to PR? That PR sectionsection on your website is actually driving visitors away according to research. Now what?

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Justine Sacco’s aftermath: The cost of Twitter outrage

Justine Sacco’s aftermath: The cost of Twitter outrage | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Social media offered many opportunities for (quite justified) outrage this year. But did they come at a price?


...Here was instant comeuppance for someone who said something terrible. Here was comeuppance for a white person generalizing shallowly about Africa, the continent, as if it were one large country with only one story to tell. Here was a woman reveling in her whiteness and assuming that her whiteness was some kind of shield against a disease that does not discriminate. I was amused by the spectacle. I followed along even though something in my stomach twisted as the hours passed. It was a bit surreal, knowing this drama was playing out while Sacco was at 38,000 feet.


At the same time, I was horrified. It all felt a bit frenzied and out of control, as interest in the story mounted and the death threats and gendered insults began. The online outrage and Sacco’s comeuppance seemed disproportionate. The amount of joy some people expressed as they engaged with the #HasJustineLandedYet hashtag gave me pause.


Somewhere along the line, we forgot that this drama concerned an actual human being. Justine Sacco did not express empathy for her fellow human beings with her insensitive tweet. It is something, though, that the Internet responded in kind, with an equal lack of empathy. We expressed some of the very attitude we claimed to condemn....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Roxane Gay offers a thoughtful reflection on the lessons from Justine Sacco PR fail.

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How Funny Tweets Win You New Customers

For companies that haven't found a humorous voice on social media, the joke's on them. For those that have, here's how they leverage laughs....


Done well, tweeting can even land you a dream job. Here at Fast Company, our executive editor Noah Robischon even has a framed edict on his office wall: “Stop tweeting boring shit.” But stifling yawn-worthy tweets is one thing, composing a one-line comedic gem for the masses is quite another.


We’ve come to expect it from stand-up comedians such as Megan Amram, the spambot @horse_ebooks that posts bits of context-free hilarity randomly pulled from online texts, and formerly unknown Justin Halpern, who rose to fame tweeting the caustic observations of his father from @shitmydadsays. But brands bringing the funny on Twitter? Not so much.


To wit: @ChipotleTweets took to fake hacking its feed to produce a stream of nonsense notes meant to evoke a chaotic mirth similar to that of @horse_ebooks. Though the tactic earned the burrito chain several thousand new followers, Chipotle quickly resumed its regular (not particularly humorous) promotional voice....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

The joke's on brands that fail to use humor effectively. While it can be effective, humor is a dangerous game in marketing. An even bigger issue for brands is using fake hacking as a social media and content marketing strategy. Definitely, doomed to fail.

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Tragedy In Boston: What The Hell Was Epicurious Thinking? | Mr. Media Training

Tragedy In Boston: What The Hell Was Epicurious Thinking? | Mr. Media Training | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
After the tragedy in Boston, one brand thought it would be a good idea to tie its scone recipes to the bombing.

 

After every national tragedy, you can be sure that some clueless brand will try to exploit it.

 

In today’s episode of “What the hell were they thinking,” the food website Epicurious sent out the following tweets to its 385,000 followers...

 

Get your legs blown off by a terrorist? Try these scones! Lose a cherished friend? Maybe this bowl of breakfast energy can help!

 

Okay, those tweets are beyond absurd. So Epicurious deleted them and tweeted this alleged mea culpa:

 

First, let’s be clear: their earlier tweets didn’t “seem” offensive. They were offensive. The word “seem” shifts the burden of blame onto their readers, who the brand seems to think were overly sensitive. It stops short of fully acknowledging the obliviousness of their tweets....

 

Jeff Domansky's insight:

For the one millionth time, another example of how marketing and tragedy never, ever mix! The outcome is always bad PR. And their half-baked apology only made things worse.

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Publicity Stunts: When Good Ideas Go Bad « crowdSPRING Blog

Publicity Stunts: When Good Ideas Go Bad « crowdSPRING Blog | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
Many companies large and small have attempted PR stunts and there are some great examples of successful events large and small that have worked out for the sponsoring company: think Red Bull’s Stratos Mission, with it’s daredevil leap from the edge of space, or Kentucky Fried Chicken’s giant logo in the Nevada desert, or even the granddaddy of them all, the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. These efforts and others like them garnered tons of free press coverage for their sponsors, generated millions of impressions, and ultimately led to increased awareness and sales. But for every successful PR stunt that is launched by a wide-eyed marketing team, there are dozens of unsuccessful efforts littering the road. Even though the old saw, “there is no bad PR” is still widely subscribed to, real damage can be done when an attempt at a PR stunt fails, in truth the damage done to a sponsoring company’s reputation can be immense (not to mention the expense). Here are 5 legendary examples of PR efforts gone horribly, terrible, awfully wrong. #fail has never had better friends than these!....
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Sorry State – The Tale of the Tapes | 15 Seconds

Sorry State – The Tale of the Tapes | 15 Seconds | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

We suppose it is possible for the Department of State to screw up the handling of questions about whether they lied to reporters even worse — but it is hard to figure out how.


The video below from CNN’s Jake Tapper today nicely lays out the series of offenses — but here is our quick summary:


In February 2013 Fox News correspondent James Rosen asked then State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland if there had been direct talks between the U.S. and Iran.  She essentially said “NO.”


In December 2013, Rosen points out to Nuland’s successor Jen Psaki that the correct answer would have been “YES” and asked if State routinely lied to reporters when they found it convenient. Psaki with a smirk said there are times when diplomacy needs privacy to succeed. (Translation: yes, we lied)....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Lots of crisis management and media relations lessons here.

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A transcript of Donald Trump’s meeting with The Washington Post editorial board

A transcript of Donald Trump’s meeting with The Washington Post editorial board | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

The Republican frontrunner met with the editorial board on Monday morning. The full transcript follows at the link above:

 

FREDERICK RYAN JR., WASHINGTON POST PUBLISHER: Mr. Trump, welcome to the Washington Post. Thank you for making time to meet with our editorial board.

 

DONALD TRUMP: New building. Yes this is very nice. Good luck with it.

 

RYAN: Thank you… We’ve heard you’re going to be announcing your foreign policy team shortly… Any you can share with us?

 

TRUMP: Well, I hadn’t thought of doing it, but if you want I can give you some of the names… Walid Phares, who you probably know, PhD, adviser to the House of Representatives caucus, and counter-terrorism expert; Carter Page, PhD; George Papadopoulos, he’s an energy and oil consultant, excellent guy; the Honorable Joe Schmitz, [former] inspector general at the Department of Defense; [retired] Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg; and I have quite a few more. But that’s a group of some of the people that we are dealing with. We have many other people in different aspects of what we do, but that’s a representative group....

 

Jeff Domansky's insight:

I thought they had quit making episodes of the Twilight Zone. If you enjoy politics, this will keep you entertained. One lesson though for PR and public affairs pros. Who suggested he meet with an obviously hostile crowd? There was no possible win here for Trump given his lack of substance and who he was meeting. Recommended reading. 11/10   ;-)

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Pitch, Please: Journalists Sound Off on Media Relations

Pitch, Please: Journalists Sound Off on Media Relations | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Hello again, readers.

Since we didn’t quite have time to peruse our favorite pitch responses last Friday, here’s a new edition of our weekly media relations series, put together with the help of our friends at Muck Rack.

First, Farhad Manjoo of the New York Times may be the most powerful tech journalist in all of media right now, and he has a point to make...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Lots of lessons from this PRNewser collection of woefully bad PR media pitches. They will make you wince!

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5 of the Worst PR Scandals of 2014

5 of the Worst PR Scandals of 2014 | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
Invariably, each year brings its share of PR crises and scandals, and 2014 was no exception. This year had a robust number of meltdowns, PR debacles and downright embarrassing episodes among some of the globe’s most recognizable brands. Here’s a partial list of some of the year’s worst PR crises.
Jeff Domansky's insight:

These PR fails offer valuable lessons.

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Read the emails in the hilarious Monsanto/Mo Rocca/Condé Nast meltdown

Read the emails in the hilarious Monsanto/Mo Rocca/Condé Nast meltdown | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Last week, Gawker uncovered a hapless tie-up between genetically modified seed/pesticide giant Monsanto and Condé Nast Media—publisher of The New Yorker, Bon Appetit, GQ, Self, Details, and other magazines—to produce "an exciting video series" on the "topics of food, food chains and sustainability."


Marion Nestle was offered $5,000 to participate for a single afternoon.

Since then, I've learned that Condé Nast's Strategic Partnerships division dangled cash before several high-profile food politics writers, in an unsuccessful attempt to convince them to participate....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Conde Nast and lack of transparency in Monsanto-sponsored brand "journalism" project backfires generating the kind of bad PR that corporations hate.

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Why Google Plus PR fail speaks volumes | The PR Coach

Why Google Plus PR fail speaks volumes | The PR Coach | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

When it comes to recent Google Plus news, what we have from Google is a failure to communicate.


To recap, last Thursday Vic Gundrota, senior vice president for Google Plus, publicly announced his resignation by this rather touching Google Plus post And Then.


His boss, CEO Larry Page, responded with his own G+ post to Gundotra’s.


The cat was out of the bag the previous week with this post on the Secret app: “Vic Gundotra is interviewing.”


Of course the news exploded in the technology media and speculation continues to echo around the Internet. Including Google’s own survey asking if G+ would be missed as reported by Curtis Jacob?


What was missing was a proactive Google PR response....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Google mysteriously mismanages the Google+ breaking news.

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How LIVR Fooled the World (And Why the World Probably Deserved It)

How LIVR Fooled the World (And Why the World Probably Deserved It) | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

One of the hottest new apps set to debut this week at SXSW, that annual intermingling of tenuous ideas and easy money, was LIVR, a social network exclusively for drunk people. Media and investors alike lined up to laud it....


"I've worked closely enough with media, and I've done enough of this sort of thing before, to know that the media would blindly jump at it. I was more surprised when people did reach out to me; I can count on one hand the number of outlets that bothered to call me up.


The media in a way allows this to happen to themselves... The media will just jump at a juicy story and not look deeper into it. I think it's because a lot of people working at these blogs and media outlets are overworked and underpaid. Especially around an event at SXSW, they need to crank out story after story. So it's kind of like this cheapening journalism. I don't know if they can even be called journalists anymore; it's more media as a mouthpiece for the companies that want to get a message out."...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

What the world of technology and new app launches has come to: bullshit as a service.

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Russian Response to Sochi Problems Goes Creepily Wrong

Russian Response to Sochi Problems Goes Creepily Wrong | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Apparently, Russian authorities think journalists are sabotaging hotel rooms in Sochi -- thanks to bathroom surveillance cameras.


The press arrived in Sochi this week for the Winter Olympics, and it did not go well.


Tweets, photos and full-on articles told the world of shoddy, unfinished accommodations that gave Vladimir Putin's Olympic Games a black eye before they'd even started. Russian officials remained largely mum as Sochi's unfinished construction — rooms without doorhandles, toilets that can't flush paper — became the story of the week that ends Friday with the Olympics' opening ceremony.


Then, on Thursday, a Russian official finally addressed reporters, ostensibly to set the media straight and correct the false narrative that gained so much momentum....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

So much for setting the agenda and controlling the PR key messages. Setting up to be the bad PR Games.

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Top 10 PR Blunders of 2013

Top 10 PR Blunders of 2013 | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
Power going out at the Super Bowl; Maker's Mark announcing its plans to dilute its whiskey; the woman who hid under her desk to avoid a TV reporter; Manti Te'o's fake girlfriend and a Canadian mayor's crack-laced meltdown. Welcome back, my friends, to the show that never ends. Time once again to take a couple of minutes and enjoy the wacky world of public relations blunders, bloopers and boners of 2013.
Randi Thompson's curator insight, December 28, 2013 7:48 AM

We can all learn from their mistakes.  Which one is your favorite?  

pulau seribu wisata's curator insight, January 1, 2014 11:28 PM

i like this scoop.it

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PR Exec Fired After Wildly Offensive 'AIDS' Tweet

PR Exec Fired After Wildly Offensive 'AIDS' Tweet | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A public relations executive for the prominent New York-based Internet media company IAC lost her job on Saturday after she posted a message joking about AIDS in Africa and race on her Twitter account, sparking an online furor.

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Worst PR fail of 2013! And, by a senior PR person who should know better.

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A Red-Headed Reporter’s “Confessions” Shouldn’t Be a Big Deal

A Red-Headed Reporter’s “Confessions” Shouldn’t Be a Big Deal | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

You can easily make the argument that young journalists need to learn that online verbal diarrhea has consequences in a business where you're expected to maintain at least a modicum of objectivity and personal distance from the audience....

In case you’re unaware of Shea Allen’s story, up until a few days ago she was an investigative reporter in Huntsville, Alabama, probably doing her fair share of personally satisfying work but I guarantee suffering through all the various indignities that go along with being a reporter in Huntsville, Alabama. That ended, both the good and bad, as soon as she published a post to her personal blog called “Confessions of a Red-Headed Reporter,” which both laid out and ever-so-gently riffed on the real life of a small-market reporter. This was the result...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Cautionary social media tale and lessons for a reporter who laid it all out in her personal blog posts. While tongue-in-cheek in some cases, many of the claims were actually potential cause for firing individually, let alone as a group. Biggest problem? Not good for the TV brand and certainly not credibility building for the journalist.

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Bad Pitch Blog: The "Celeb is Dead, Quote My Expert" Pitch: TWO THUMBS DOWN

...When you find out the aforementioned movie critic passed away via email, it sucks even more. It sucks to find out someone died via email at all, right? But when that email is a pitch shoving "a relevant expert" down your throat, it's a whole new universe of sucking. It's a dimension of sucking so far beyond the "sucks universe" that it takes light from sucks a year to reach it. It's a state of sucking so far beyond sucking it takes the light from sucking one year to reach this new level of bad pitching. You get the idea. Yet, less than 24 hours after Roger Ebert went to the big movie theatre in the sky, someone who shall remain nameless, sent out the following pitch en mass. This pitch was sent to me separately by Shannan amd Traci - two different PR professionals....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

This PR agency pitch to a blogger is so utterly and completely bad, it's hard to describe. No self-respecting "PR pro" pitch this way... ever.

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