If you think your inbox is overflowing with junk messages and stuff you don’t care about, what if it were 100x worse?
This is what reporters are trying to manage.
Every. single. day.
Plus, their jobs are all about tight deadlines, breaking news, crabby bosses, and low pay.
It's nothing new.
Before technology, reporters were drained by irrelevant faxes and phone calls.
Pointless pitches that aren't clearly valuable to their audiences.
Maybe you're wondering why you get crickets when emailing a 3-page self-serving story idea about your book???
You know, the one with 6 attachments, 27 links, and 14 questions.
Reporters need to see something interesting that jumps off the screen.
So how do you grab the attention (and trust) of the media so that you land a coveted interview?
{BECOME A MEDIA MAGNET WITH FREE PUBLICITY. GET THE FREE GUIDE HERE}
When you know why your story is relevant to a reporter and their audience, there's a shift.
You have to know what...
No clue about algorithms.
No money for ads.
No problem!
You can STILL grow your business and always have warm leads when you learn the strategy I've been using for 20+ years.
My clients, including Maria Swann, use this strategy. Maria now has wait lists--and higher rates! You can, too.
I explain it in the video above. Check it out!
There’s 1 thing I despise about people in public relations and the online marketing space.
You know, the cutesy 30-somethings who brag about pulling in 7 figures while bopping around in Barcelona.
They can land you bigtime interviews with Oprah, Dr. Phil, and Grant Cardone.
But there’s a catch.
They deliver sound bites and temporary confidence for your 15 minutes of fame.
Temporary doesn’t cut it for experienced, savvy entrepreneurs.
Look, I started my business as a media relations and PR company in 2000.
I spoon-fed clients pithy soundbites so they'd feel confident and credible during interviews.
And here’s what I know 1,000% that you may not realize.
Media attention rarely brings lasting success or self-assuredness.
It doesn't have...
My coaching client, attorney and DEI advocate Diana Patton, beautifully used the ‘bridge and guide’ technique I teach for messaging and introductions.
She seized the opportunity to self-promote during a recent morning TV interview.
The original topic for Diana’s segment was health and wellness.
So, how was Diana able to blend and weave in her angle about the advocacy and diversity work she does?
It’s all about paying deep attention in media interviews...and sales conversations.
I teach you how to listen closely and think on your feet so that you know precisely where and how to weave in your sound bites, control your message, and self-promote with confidence.
Conversations will flow naturally and easily while you stay on point.
And if you want to talk strategy around your story and how to share it with dream clients, apply now for a free Story Power Session.
A 6-week online group training for experienced entrepreneurs, coaches, therapists, and consultants
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