Technology vendors often contribute
bylined articles to trade journals. The articles are great
exposure for these companies but they don't come cheap –
the trades rarely pay for these articles but the vendors
spend time and resources to assign pieces, write them, approve
them and submit them. Your PR agency can help your clients
leverage their investment by wringing top value out of these
articles. Here are some possibilities:
1.Reprints
2.White papers
3.Product briefs
4.Booklets
5.Speech outline and handouts
- Reprints
It's pretty galling to contribute a byline to a publication,
only to turn around and spend major bucks for reprint
rights. But reprints are good things: they significantly
increase your client’s exposure to the market. Make
sure you use the reprints anywhere you can, including
press kits, presentation handouts and conference take-aways.
Post them on your site too. Even if you haven’t
paid for electronic rights you can probably link to the
publication’s URL, assuming they’ve posted
your article online. (It doesn’t hurt to ask.) If
you’ve got digital reprint rights and are posting
the article on your client’s site, avoid using a
scanned hard copy of the printed article – the resolution
is poor and not very readable. Create a .PDF file and
use that for posting and downloading.
- White Paper
Please don’t use the published article as is for a
white paper -- even if you retain all rights it's shamelessly
self-plagiarizing, and if the publication retains all rights
it's rather criminal. However, you can use the article text
to form the technology section of a white paper. Edit for
length as necessary and re-work the text to emphasize your
client’s product and technology take. Then add white
paper elements like a beginning executive summary and a
problem statement. Follow these with your technology section,
and then add details on how your client’s product
will solve the problem, a customer case study, and a conclusion
on how great the product is. (You can always switch the
order by writing a white paper first, then editing the technology
section into a bylined trade journal article.)
- Product Briefs
The article can serve as a great basis for expanded product
briefs – say the front and back of an 8-1/2x11, or
a longer technical brochure. Edit the article for length
and jazz up the text, and you’ve got a solid technology
basis for the marketing document. (Good marcom can explain
what a NAS gateway is, but not by yammering about “enterprise-wide
intelligent data management portals.” Puts readers
right to sleep.)
- Booklets
One of the best press kits I ever saw included a sharp and
informative booklet on the vendor’s technology. The
booklet explained the general technology’s development
and background, presented the vendor’s product, and
listed clear customer advantages. It impressed both journalists
and customers in a way a press release or even a white paper
wouldn’t have done. Booklets are labor-intensive,
so use your trade journal article as the basis for writing
your own.
- Speech Outline and Handouts
Use existing articles as the basis for client speeches and
presentations. Since trade journal articles are usually
vendor-neutral, they’ll work as-is for similar talks.
When the presentation is about a product you can still use
the article outline for the background technology and analysis
then add product details, customer case studies, and Q&A’s.
You can use article reprints as a handout, or turn the outline
into speaker’s notes and use that instead.
If your client gulps at the cost of developing a trade
journal article, don’t leave them gasping for breath
– list all the ways they can leverage it to increase
market exposure and profits. |