Showing posts with label PR New Rules. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PR New Rules. Show all posts

Sunday, January 2, 2011

New Rules 2.0 Investor Public Relations

A Template for a Winning PR-IR Strategy

This “New Rules 2.0 Investor Public Relations” for a private or a public company is designed to guide either a privately-held or public company in dealing investor relations needs through effective use of PR, the business news media and the Internet. This plan builds on both my nearly three decades of effective investor relations and investor public relations experience, along with the “New Rules” approach to public relations and marketing developed by David Meerman Scott and Seth Godin, among others.

What this means is simple: New Rules 2.0 Investor Public Relations blends an innovative and aggressive implementation of a distinctive form of investor relations – IR outreach run along public relations lines along with a keen insight into how the emergence of social networking and social marketing on the internet can enhance Investor Public Relations, taking it to an entirely new level of successful implementation.

A key element of this “New Rules” approach is that social marketing is all about the conversation, the discussion, the free give-and-take of information, rather than the “hard sell” typifying both conventional IR and traditional PR. Top-down lecturing (the typical IR approach taken by most companies) does not work in the New Rules arena of the Internet. Facebook and YouTube invite comments; twitter demands discussion. To be successful, the company with investor relations aspirations needs to be part of that discussion.

The blending of the most innovative approach to conventional investor relations with the most aggressive and visionary use of the Internet sets New Rules 2.0 Investor Public Relations apart from all other approaches to investor relations.

This New Rules 2.0 Investor Public Relations plan, when executed, will ensure that either a public company or a private company (which may intend to become a public company) remains SEC-compliant. This plan will raise the IR profile of company and enhance the company’s position in the equity and investment markets.

The ultimate intent in this New Rules 2.0 Investor Public Relations program is to provide information to current and potential investors, as well as to the various investor marketplaces – primarily through the media and the Internet, but also through all other appropriate communications channels – that will lead to the legal and ethical growth of the stock’s value in the marketplace.

Under this plan, even the company’s PR activities which are primarily focused on product- or service-line promotion, business development – even image or issue management – will have an underlying IR purpose. The reverse is also true – in the age of the Internet, it is no longer possible to silo information programs for “just employees” or “just customers” – or even “just investors.” Investor PR communications will also reach clients and employees and regulators, and it is therefore essential that the programs themselves not be siloed off to “investor relations” and “public relations” and “social networking” service providers or internal divisions within the company – for maximum benefit and minimum blow-back, these programs must be integrated at both the management and implementation levels.

What follows are some overview strategies and tactics that can be used – and, properly implemented, will work – to help a private company attract the attention (or position itself to attract the attention of) investors, and for a public company to see its stock rise to its appropriate and market-determined value. New Rules 2.0 Investor Public Relations is investor relations, but with a twist.

New Rules 2.0 Investor Public Relations requires standard outreach tools which include formalized SEC RegFD-compliant press releases, media pitches and pitch-tip sheets, white papers and case investor outreach communications and targeted work with appropriate business and financial analysts. It also requires a parallel campaign making use of the technologies and tools of social networking, including facebook and twitter, YouTube and blogs, and a host of other technologies and tools. These must be integrated, conventional with social, to create a consistent message across media platforms and to reach and favorably influence the maximum possible number of clients and customers, influencers and investors.

However, effective New Rules 2.0 Investor Public Relations, especially for less well-known companies, must also involve a heavy dose of aggressive, brand-building public relations – PR programs that on the surface seemingly have little to do with stock prices or institutional investors, angels or VCs. However, below the surface, these brand-building PR programs are essential to overall investor relations success.

Before traditional and standard market-making or VC-attracting IR efforts can hope to work for smaller companies, these firms must first become better-known in the marketplace. In addition, when potential investors first show some interest, they’ve got to be able to find motivational information that will “sell the company” without crossing the investor inducement line. Positive information about products or services, as well as news of marketplace success, can be made to fill this need.

This initial New Rules 2.0 Investor Public Relations approach is designed to elevate a company’s media and marketplace “position” with key target audiences, including:

· Business and Financial Analysts who cover the market space

· Individual investors and potential investors – including, for private companies, angels and incubators and VCs of all kinds

· Institutional investors

· Referral sources and other influencers

· Business media pundits, including the growing number of influential online media (including blog media) pundits whose opinions and coverage of companies can dramatically increase public awareness, which is the first necessary step in effective investor relations programs

A strategy note: Every growth-oriented private company is a potential public company. It has been our experience that private companies with public company aspirations should, to the greatest extent possible, follow the SEC RegFD guidelines while still a private company. Adopting and following these SEC guidelines is recommended both for “just in case” reasons and because it will project the private company as more mature (and therefore more worthy of investment) by savvy angels, incubators, VCs and other “flavors” of private-company investment capital. This plan follows this bias toward compliance.

Website

Public and private companies need to have effective investor-oriented websites that provide a wide variety of information required (of public companies) by the SEC and desired by investors and potential investors. A useful example of a public company website (which we designed and implemented in 2006, and which has been maintained as an effective example of the kinds of information needed) can be found at the Patriot Scientific Corporation’s investor’s website: http://patriotscientific.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=40&Itemid=46.

In addition to what is found here in this sample page, additional information is needed, including:

· Case studies, White papers and eBooks

· Analyst reports

· Links to all favorable press coverage (also found on the company’s website press room, but duplicated in the website’s investor relations page)

In addition, the company website should include an “affinity group” section – a closed-panel social networking site (such as is offered under open source by BuddyPress) which will allow clients and constituents, as well as investors and potential investors, to communicate with the company (and the company with them) as well as with one another.

Why have this feature? Realistically, every public company and – ultimately – most private companies will spawn independent websites, blogs, bulletin boards and/or discussion groups which will critique the company (and which will be monitored by the company). By having an internal site which fulfills this function, the company can both more easily monitor the “chatter” and more plausibly participate in the discussion.

Analysts

Business and Investment Analysts can have a profound impact on potential investors, market makers, VCs and others. It is vital to find them and court them, then include them in the discussion. Databases such as Big Dough, while not inexpensive, are essential to finding the right analysts – the ones most likely to cover a company’s market space, the most likely to be enlisted as an ally in efforts both online and off-line to participate in the discussion.

With this information about analysts who can influence stock value or lay the groundwork for courting a VC or other investor, a company will be able to communicate (in a PR fashion, using PR tools) directly to the targeted analysts help build their awareness of the company and its news. The goal here is to put the company on their radar screens for the first time, and to show company as a viable candidate for future investment.

In addition to its other obvious benefits, for public companies, this approach will help to influence these targets to include company in their future Buy-Side research reports. In the event the company does a road show to the investment community, this groundwork with analysts may prove decisively helpful.

IR-Focused PR

New Rules 2.0 Investor Public Relations efforts will include both product/service-oriented and company performance (IR-focused) information.

Plan: The core of PR efforts – whether traditional or New Rules – for any company is built around a plan, which is an integral part of a larger strategic plan which includes business development, marketing, investor relations and issues management goals and objectives.

Some companies prefer detailed and polished strategic planning documents that will be shown to the board and shareholders, to private-placement or public-company investors, to banks or other third parties. Others, however, prefer a back-of-the-envelope plan – bullet-points that allow both company and its communications agency to know where they’re going, when they’ll get there, what it will cost and what success is likely to look like.

Implementation: No matter how big the plan becomes (in terms of activities), the plan should always include the following core activities:

1. An ongoing series of press releases (for release to the Web, as well as to specific reporters and editors) to carefully-selected targets.

2. An ongoing series of press pitches, which will be pushed into the world via email, making use of carefully-crafted media contact lists.

3. An ongoing series of phone pitches or even (when opportunity and need arises) face-to-face pitches with identified individual reporters and editors to generate highly-focused press coverage.

4. An ongoing series of efforts to create opportunities to have the company spokesperson featured as a guest on radio (NPR, Sirius Network, individual station and syndicated programs focused on business or on issues touched by the company’s business model)

5. An ongoing series of efforts to create opportunities to have the company spokesperson featured as a guest on Television (PBS, cable news, Cable business news, etc.)

6. A social media support strategy that will reinforce every press outreach with blogs, Facebook posts, tweets and – where possible – YouTube videos (and video-embedded “smart” press releases) to ensure full integration between conventional and New Rules PR and Investor PR efforts

7. An “Off-Broadway” media strategy, at least at first, seeking coverage early-on in second-tier and third-tier business, trade and investment media.

8. Create and implement an investor-focused media release distribution strategy – a “bread-crumbs” strategy designed to get the word out in the marketplace so that when prospective investors (including VCs and angels and others seeking out private investment opportunities) want to conduct their own due diligence – or who are just “shopping” for that next opportunity, they will find the company.

9. An ongoing series of activities to create opportunities for other media placements (through editorial calendars and focused “reconnaissance” of the media marketplace)

10. Insert key words into wire releases as well as blogs and other efforts to start the reinforce conventional public relations with the ongoing online social networking process.

11. Integrate conventional PR and social networking – using blogs, YouTube videos, Facebook posts, tweets and other online communications to extend the reach of each conventional PR effort

12. Reach individuals directly, over the web, via “news” releases

While “press” releases target media gatekeepers, “news” releases distributed via BusinessWire or other media distribution tools which have guaranteed placement agreements, allowing the company to reach directly to individuals via keyword searches: http://pr-marketing2point0.blogspot.com/2010/11/press-releases-new-online-advertising.html

13. A multi-market media tour (including both a “virtual tour” of reporters and editors in smaller or out-of-the-way markets, as well as in front of them in larger markets)

14. Search Engine Marketing using key words to attract interested individual investors, as well as investment decision-makers (useful for both public and private companies seeking investment funding).

15. Create a prominent position for the Spokesperson (as well as the company) on the wide range of online social media (Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc.) to dramatically increase the company’s visibility when the name is Googled.

16. Positioning company spokesperson as “thought leader

17. A weekly, bi-weekly or monthly press advisory document pitching series of new story angles reporters and editors will want to consider.

18. Integrating the Website into PR and Investor Public Relations goals – The company website needs regularly (at least weekly) updates of information that will enhance the Website’s utility.

19. A crisis communications strategy that will be standing by, ready to go on a moment’s notice.

20. An online market research strategy which will poll targeted audiences with from five to 20 questions, then create press coverage based on the findings. This is a very powerful tool to create media interest (the polling itself can generate online interest).

21. An ongoing plan to capitalize on media trends – putting the company spokesperson forward to provide commentary on all appropriate breaking-news stories.

Integration

To be effective in a competitive media and investment marketplace, New Rules 2.0 Investor Public Relations is, at the core, an integrated program that links traditionally-separate functions such as PR, IR, Marketing and Issues Management into a single co-mingled function that delivers investor support at every level while continuing to provide effective branding, business development, marketing and issues management functions.

Gone are the silos that limit integration – to win in the 21st Century, integration must be the guiding principle of communications. This even extends to employee communications because, on the Internet, no message is private, and no communications effort is isolated.

Such an integrated plan includes:

· Effective, aggressive and technically competent compliance with both the letter and the spirit of all relevant SEC rules and regulations regarding the release of information by public companies. This is the foundational touchstone of all of effective New Rules 2.0 Investor Public Relations activities on behalf of the company.

· Public Relations integration into every “pure” Investor Relations press release. This needs to be done well before release, in order to ensure maximum PR impact (while maintaining full SEC compliance)

· Facilitating media distribution of all IR-focused, as well as all PR-focused, press releases. Even purely Investor-oriented releases will go to targeted market niche and mainstream business media (as well as to purely IR media) targets, including effective wire release distribution.

· Effective and aggressive press clipping service (at least capturing online clips) to monitor and evaluate both the PR and IR value/impact of all Investor Public Relations press releases

· Targeted e-mail outreach to the media, as well as to potential (and current) investors, highlighting company’s success – sticking to subjects already covered in SEC-compliance press releases and formal reports

What New Rules Investor Public Relations “Should” Deliver: There are a number of responsibilities of any investor public relations agency has to their clients:

1. Provide a range of services, such as strategic counsel, corporate governance counsel, SEC compliance counsel and shareholder relations counsel. To this is added specific communications training focused on the IR markets: Shareholders, funds managers, investment analysts, financial media and other key audiences.

2. Create – then distribute – as part of a broader investor relations program, specific IR-focused messaging designed to play well with both shareholders and investment analysts, with reporters and funds managers.

3. Aggressively seek out opportunities to (in a positive context) put the client’s name before analysts and financial media, as well as potential investors (critical for private companies as well as public companies) – this can be done via press releases, via one-on-one contacts or e-mail or phone pitches.

4. Advise and ensure that the client is in compliance with all appropriate public-information requirements promulgated by the SEC; and, whenever possible, to do more than the required minimum.

5. Effectively “crisis-manage” (in an IR context, as well as in a PR context) any blow-ups that impact the company, the shareholders, the board or other factors that might impact stock prices.

6. Maintain regular contact with potential investors, as well as to shareholders – as a group, as well as individually – including monitoring the “boards” when appropriate. Provide events support for annual meetings and other shareholder activities

7. Provide counsel on approaching specific markets – fund managers, side-sell facilitators, etc.

Investment Analyst Tour: An investment analyst/media tour (perhaps conducted separate from the PR-oriented business analyst/media tour recommended elsewhere) has real merit for both public and private companies seeking investors. While the two kinds of tours (media and analyst) serve largely the same purpose (though with different audiences), if budget is no consideration they should not be combined. However, if budget is an issue, combining them can be an effective use of available resources. For budgetary reasons, a media tour and an analyst tour can be successfully combined.

Shareholder Relations In addition to the online captive social networking site noted above – which is a hugely powerful tool for communicating with and relating to investors, online market research can be used to communicate with (and find out the concerns of) shareholders and other stakeholders. This will be built around a questionnaire that will be designed to give the company a profile – a useful “snapshot” – of the shareholders.

Shareholder Education: Shareholders (as well as potential investors) are typically unaware of company’s vision – informing them, helping them to see the benefits of this vision – that’s a key role for both PR and IR to ensure that shareholders or potential investors are “on board” – and to achieve that requires ongoing shareholder education.

Conclusion

In today’s increasingly-integrated communications media world – a world where the Internet is supplanting traditional media as the primary tool for reaching individuals – there is no room for a company seeking to enhance its investor relations for arbitrarily-separated functional silos – PR, IR, Marketing, etc. Instead, success will go to those companies which understand that an integrated Investor Public Relations approach is critical to their ability to reach investors.

This applies to private companies seeking venture capital every bit as much as it does to public companies seeking positive relationships with investors and potential investors, be they individual or institutional investors.

Ned Barnett

Barnett Marketing Communications

ned@barnettmarcom.com - 702-561-1167


Friday, December 10, 2010

PR 2.0 - Use Social Media to Boost Readership of News Releases

Headline: Press Releases are Dead ... Again

Reality: Press Releases have evolved, and - as "news releases" - are alive-and-well on the Internet. News releases can work for you - especially if you support the releases with a full-court press of social media outreach support.

Press releases - a combination of news story and press pitch - weren't "new" when Ivy Lee was creating what evolved into the PR 1.0 that reigned supreme for nearly a century. Done well, they have long served to alert reporters, editors, producers and show bookers about stories and sources. It was widely reported in the '90s that a full 80% of all newspaper articles were based on or supported by press releases and the PR people who wrote them.

In the century that press releases have been useful PR tools, their demise has been pronounced more times than I can count. Every time the pundits gather solemnly for the Press Release memorial service, some innovative in-the-field PR pro figured out a new way to use them to get the word out for clients or employers.

As I noted in my premiere blog-post here, while there remains some utility for "press releases" designed to interest reporters, editors and other media gatekeepers, the real future for releases lies in the hands of PR pros who have transformed media-focused "press releases" into consumer-oriented "news releases." When a release is placed online via a wire service, it can be found by consumers directly, via key-word searches. Those "news releases" should be written for the reader, not the media gatekeeper (though if you can accomplish both, you've really got something!). However, under the New Rules PR 2.0. approach, this is just the beginning.

Here's how to promote a news release and get the most out of it - starting with the best of the traditional, then moving on to the New Rules techniques:

1. Develop something you want to say that will make sense to the consumers you are trying to reach. Remember David Meerman Scott's advice - tell what your readers what they want to know, not what you want to tell them.

2. Write it tight, interesting journalistic style. Avoid hackneyed "press release" style - don't write to please the clients, write to engage your readers. Blogs are often personally stylistic - and that's appropriate ... for blogs. But both "press" releases and "news" releases benefit from being ready for publication - that journalistic style I mentioned.

3. Place this news release for consumers via one of the major wire services - make sure the service you choose has agreements that guarantee placement on major Internet news aggregators (see my first blog in this series - http://tinyurl.com/2wnmpsv - for details on this). Use the keyword function to attract readers seeking your information.

4. Reinforce this placement by posting your release on free-placement sites. A current list is available - drop me a note at ned@barnettmarcom.com. These free placements reach people and also assist with SEO.

These are the conventional press/news release placement strategies, and while "traditional," they still work. But this is just the start. Now it's time to unleash the social networking opportunities now available.

a. Post the release on your Facebook page, then advise all your "friends" that it's available. Invite them to check it out AND invite them to tell their own friends.

b. Mention the release on all the discussions you follow on Linkedin - this also applies to more "traditional" online discussion forums and list-serv discussion groups.

c. Tweet it - send the URL to the release online to all your followers, and encourage them to retweet it to their own followers.

d. Blog it - write a blog about the content of the release (don't "blog" the release itself, but the subject matter) using the more personal and stylistic format available to blogs

e. Promote the blog -tweet it, mention it on Facebook and Linkedin - repost the blog on your Facebook site ... in short, use all the same tools you used to promote the release to promote the blog covering the release's topic

In short, unleash the power of the social network/social media to promote the concept and content of the release, as well as the release itself. In this way, you are going to reach important target audiences with your message, even if your release isn't picked up by the media. Getting your release picked up by the media is the topic for another blog.




Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Advice to a Student - Using New Rules 2.0 to Find a Job

A graduate student recently asked me for some advice - all the entry-level jobs seemed taken, and he was concerned lest he lose out and join the ranks of the chronically-unemployed. I suggested he use the PR New Rules 2.0 approach to help him out ... blending innovative "traditional" with the best of the New Rules 2.0. Here's what I advised him:

1. Freelance - offer your services to tight-staffed organizations that need skilled temps during overflow periods (how to reach out to them using 2.0 rules is below)

2. Volunteer - work for non-profits with the proviso that you're allowed to present your work to top management and/or the board - get seen. I once hired a guy (I had 300 applicants and he'd gotten lost in shuffle) after I saw him volunteering working the media at a non-profit luncheon meeting. The key to this is to find groups that will allow you to work at above-entry-level and to position yourself for visibility (some NFP staffers want to hide the volunteers and take credit for themselves, and working there is a waste of career-building time)

3. Intern - while you're still a student, get internships that will allow you to function at more-than-entry level and build both your portfolio and network

4. Use New Rules of PR to create a social media persona that will attract attention to you. Read David Meerman Scott's 2nd Edition New Rules of PR and Marketing and anything recent by Seth Godin to get a better handle on how to do this. But here are a few keys:

4a. Create a concept or position in which you believe you can both add value and legitimately make a name for yourself.

4b. Create an email sig-file that captures who you are in the context of this environment/niche.

4c. Find something specific - perhaps something in the news - to bring your self-conception into sharp focus

4d. Write something on this and get it published - a 3rd-party ezine is ideal, but your own blog is OK, too

UPDATE: Crisis PR Management Guru Jonathan Bernstein (jonathan@bernsteincrisismanagement.com)adds: Start a blog in which you demonstrate your competence in your market niche, and add to it on a very regular basis. Learn how to optimize that blog for search engines.

4e. Tweet it and Facebook it and promote it in every way you can (posting to email list-servs comes to mind) to get the blog out there, to get it commented on, to get it retweeted and spread around.

4f. Pitch gatekeepers to the jobs you want, using the above as leverage and a reason for them to consider you.

4g. Do the interview and blow it out of the water

4h. Follow-up. You may want to blog about it and tweet about it (but be careful - this will get back to the employer. You may want to contact your references and have them contact the prospective employers directly. I once hired a candidate (I was with a lobbying organization, Tennessee Hospital Association) who had her Congressman (whom she'd staffed for) write her an unsolicited letter of praise. Since we were in the business of courting Congressmen like him, and since she was already in the Top-3, that all but nailed it that she'd get the job.

Note, I'm in the process of doing #4 myself - tweeting (@nedbarnett) everyday providing PR Pro tips on how PR works, and blogging here (something I'll be doing more of). I'm carving out a niche for myself in the realm of bridging the apparent and perceived (but not real) gap between traditional PR/Marketing and New-Rules PR & Marketing.

Beware the expert who doesn't practice what he preaches - but in this case, I'm doing exactly what I'm advising. So find yourself a niche and make yourself an expert in your own right.

FYI - My next blog-post will be on how I used both traditional PR/media relations and New Rules social networking - including steps indicated here - to land a series of five interviews on Neil Cavuto's program.

Let me know what you think ...