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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Tribune Publishing, now ‘tronc,’ issues worst press release in the history of journalism

Tribune Publishing, now ‘tronc,’ issues worst press release in the history of journalism | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

It has been a tense spring in the realm of big-time newspaper consolidation. Back in April, Gannett, owner of more than 100 newspapers across the country, including the flagship USA Today, made a roughly $400 million takeover bid for the Tribune Publishing, owner of the Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times, Baltimore Sun and several other titles.


The intervening weeks have seen a great deal of maneuvering by Tribune Chairman Michael Ferro to rebuff the bid, an effort that advanced Thursday with the news that Gannett may be backing off its bid in light of “expectations” that Tribune shareholders would back management in a critical vote.


[VIDEO: Tribune rejects Gannett’s bid again]


Amid all this business, the Tribune lost its mind, in a press release. First, it renamed and rebranded itself:


On June 20, we'll be tronc. Yep. tronc. pic.twitter.com/PvK8jtrQbp— Michael Zajakowski (@zajakowski) June 2, 2016


“Tronc” stands for “Tribune online content,” or, as this tronc press release renders it in smaller case: “tribune online content.” So obsessed is the new, rebranded company with the Web’s lower-case vibe that its press release starts various sentences that way. ...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Buzzwords and lower-case letters abound. Hope for the survival of the entity formerly known as the Chicago Tribune? Not so much. And the news release? One of the worst examples of baffling, befuddling, techno-speak-filled, corporate jargon laden press release ever seen. And I've seen a lot of them.

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10 Reasons Why Your Press Release Sucks

10 Reasons Why Your Press Release Sucks | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
Press releases will continue to be the workhorse of public relations, even after social media has allowed businesses to engage directly with customers. Here are 10 mistakes to avoid when pitching one.
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PR fail: World’s dumbest news embargo – contentious.com

I cover technology for CNN.com and elsewhere, so I get a lot of pitch e-mails from PR folks. Some of these are very useful and well targeted. Most are rather “meh.”

 

…And a few are utterly stupid.

 

Here’s one such e-mail I received today, in its entirety. Name of the PR person, PR firm, and client are removed to protect the guilty...

 

[Yep. Stupid alright! JD]

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8 of the worst press release mistakes

8 of the worst press release mistakes | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

As much as I would love for the press release to die, it’s still a very effective tool when used correctly.

As Mickie Kennedy from eReleases wrote last month, Google has saved your news release. Gone are the days of keyword-stuffing to make certain you rank high in search results. Google now rewards beautiful prose again.
That said, people still make huge mistakes with their press releases. It's not just limited to PR pros, either. Top-level executives all the way down to interns get them wrong at times.

Let’s look at eight of the top news release mistakes....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Gini Dietrich shares 8 big news release noodles. Good lessons.

Marco Favero's curator insight, May 8, 2015 6:33 AM

aggiungi la tua intuizione ...

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AMATEUR, ARROGANT, WANDERING NEWS RELEASE OF THE DAY | Wine Industry Insight

There might actually be news here, but this transcendentally offal news release won’t tell you what it might be. Lack of organization, absence of clarity, nauseous, self-congratulatory, “look how great I am” tone makes this wordy train wreck fail the “who gives a *bleep*?” test. Can this new venture afford a professional writer?...

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Thinking of Using a Fake News Site? Think Again.

PRSA Los Angeles Chapter Board Member Denis Wolcott provides an update on a previous PRSAY blog post about the Los Angeles-area water district that was caught using a fake news site to produce positive media coverage.

 

Credit The Los Angeles Times for not giving up on a story.

 

As much as I hate to see a water agency that does great work remain in the newspaper’s cross hairs, and as much as I hate to see someone in public relations getting slammed in print . . . the public relations profession needs to take notice and learn from this one.

 

And, the water district may want to ask for help from PRSA....

 

 

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