Blog

The Five-Paragraph Essay Resurfaces

Posted by Kelly Stremel on March 17, 2010

The Five-Paragraph-Essay Resurfaces

When learning how to write a five-paragraph-essay in school, we were taught to say what you’re going to say, say it, and then recap what you just said. It sounded redundant. It sounded simplistic. Why spell it out?

Yet these simple rules still hold true in communications.

For clients, tell them what your plan is, deliver it, and recap what the results were. It may be redundant. It may be over communicating. But PR may be just one element your clients are thinking about, and you never want to leave room for them to question what you’re working on. Tell them what you’re gonna do. Do it. Them tell them what you’ve done. There are no surprises. Everyone appreciates knowing what’s going on.

For reporters, tell them what your news or your pitch is, explain why it’s relevant, then follow up and tell them again. It’s harder to be heard these days because there are so many people to listen to. How do you get through?

I try to pre-brief reporters to give them the benefit of time. Then I tell them why my story is interesting, relevant, and timely. Following up is usually part of the equation. For every 20 “not interested” there is a “yes.” And the “not interested” this time around could be a “yes” next time.

And in these hard-to-be-heard times, is it really possible to over-communicate?

Tags: (none)

Comments

There are 0 comments on this post. Post yours →

Post a comment

Required fields in bold.

 

Case Studies

Curious about our experience and how we have created market leadership for our clients?

See Our Work

What you need, when you need it is our approach to marketing.

What We Do

We’re not an advertising agency or a PR firm. We’re just like your in house marketing department.