Get Publicity with Briefs & More

June 19, 2008 by Val  
Filed under Speaker Marketing

Get Publicity With Briefs & More

If you’re looking for a good way to get more publicity, then try writing up some briefs, fillers and quizzes. Read the article below for ideas.

Editors Love Briefs, Fillers & Quizzes

By Joan Stewart

Pick up any national magazine, flip through the pages, and count the number of short articles you see. They can include those little 3-inch fillers, short quizzes, 400-word “how-to” articles or resource boxes.

Editors love them. And you can generate some fabulous publicity for yourself by writing them.

1. Because they are so short, editors often rely on them to “fill a hole” on the page. A 75-word brief stands a much better chance of being published than a 750-article.

2. Briefs help portray you as an expert in your field.

3. They appeal to readers with short attention spans and can be skimmed quickly.

4. They’re easy to write. And you don’t need to submit a query letter to editors.
Simply snail-mail, fax or e-mail the copy.

5. Unlike a story idea pitch, or a longer article you are submitting, you can usually
submit briefs to editors at a variety of non-competing publications at the same
time. Editors don’t expect exclusivity on these items and usually don’t care if they
appear in other publications.

6. You can promote yourself, or your product, service, cause or issue much more in a
brief than you can in an article you would write.

7. Briefs are an excellent way to promote a new book, particularly if you are willing to
give away free advice in the brief that ties into the book. You an include a web site
URL or contact information where readers can buy from you.

Types of Briefs

Briefs come in all shapes, sizes and formats. They include how-to articles, tips sheets, quizzes, new product announcements accompanied by a photo, and polls and surveys. If you work within a particular industry that has its own jargon, you can also supply a list of industry words and definitions so readers can better understand your industry.

Sometimes all you need to do is provide editors with a list of resources on a particular topic. If you write books on marketing, for example, you might provide a list of the top three marketing web sites, top three marketing magazines and top three audio tapes on the topic of marketing for small-businesses. This brief can be used as-is, or it can be used as a sidebar to accompany a longer article on marketing that someone else has submitted.

Now get going. Dozens of editors out there are waiting for your briefs. If you need step-by-step directions on how to submit briefs, see “Briefs, Fillers & Quizzes: How to Write Them and Why Editors Love Them.”

This article on how to get more publicity was brought to you by:

Publicity expert Joan Stewart shows you how to use free publicity to establish your credibility, enhance your reputation, position yourself as an expert, sell more products and services, promote a favorite cause or issue, and position your company as an employer of choice. Get more publicity tips at www.PublicityHound.com (link to http://www.speakersuccessonline.com/publicity-hound.htm) – that’s my affiliate link.

I hope you’ve found this article on how to get publicity using briefs, fillers and quizzes useful and will use it to get yourself more press!

Read more related Publicity articles here:

How To Get Publicity

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