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14 March 2010 ..:: PR ::..   Login

PR Consultants UK

PR Consultants UK:
PR services to Agencies and B2B Companies

As past editors of four magazines, we understand PR better than most people - we know where the editors are coming from and what they are looking for - use our service PR Consultants UK.

PR is essentially all about regular and relevant contact with the press. The most effective way of carrying this out is via the medium of regular, focused HTML email press releases. This core strategy will establish both awareness and actual press coverage in the form of news snippets. The editorial awareness can then be supplemented by direct editorial contact, offering "exclusive" articles, case studies etc. PR really can be that simple. We are also expert copywriters for ads, brochures, newsletters etc etc.

PR Consultants UK


Here's an example of one of our many services:
PR Consultants UK

We provide PR Consultants services for businesses in UK and surrounding regions. A very wide range of customers from many different markets have benefited from the highly professional PR Consultants projects that we've carried out in UK. Our PR Consultants service is just one of our many specialist services and we strive to maintain very high standards of quality in PR Consultants and every other service. Clients throughout UK have remarked on how they would recommend PRW to other businesses in UK.

More about our PR Consultants service in UK: the image below contains some examples of PR Consultants produced for businesses in UK. Contact us for more examples of PR Consultants in UK. Partner locations providing PR Consultants in UK: Hampshire, Berkshire, Surrey, Kent, Oxfordshire, Wiltshire, UK and many other regions. From our main base in Basingstoke Hampshire, we can provide expert advice on PR Consultants UK and examples of our PR Consultants service in UK.

PR Consultants in UK

 

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Top 7 questions to determine whether sales leads are qualified

There are seven essential questions used to determine if the contact or business is a qualified prospect:

1) Does this contact or business have a need for my company’s services or products?

2) Does this contact or prospect business perceive a need or problem that may be met by my company’s product or service?

3) Does the contact or prospect business have a real desire to fulfil this actual need or solve this problem?

4) Can this contact's desire to fulfil actual needs or solve problems be converted into a belief that my company’s product or service is needed?

5) Does this contact or prospect business have the financial budget to pay?

6) Does this contact or prospect have the company authority to buy?

7) Is this potential contact's purchase large enough to make it a profitable sale?

These are the questions that you should ask, and we ask them as well, during the prospect qualification process (which is always the most important part of the lead generation process).

 

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Top 10 PR Tips

1) Talking about doing PR isn't as good as actually doing something. Waiting for the best story to happen can take a while, it is better to get something out there

2) Have a steady stream of appropriate PR to editors seeking your content

3) Read the up-coming Features list and try to put some PR relevant to the feature

4) Find a PR company that can make something out of your product or service, that you might think is normal

5) Use pictures with your PR to help Editors to visualise your uniqueness

6) 'The more you write the less gets read' good PR companies have learnt to be brief and to the point

7) Recycle old PR with a fresh new slant, in some fringe publications

8) Good PR agents will find a good story by just interviewing your customers

9) Fully written-up Testimonials with pictures are like gold, you can use them for PR and for sending to prospects in your marketing materials

10) Measure the success of your PR with clippings, but allow time for editors to start using your submissions

A technique used in public relations is to identify the specific target audience, and then to tailor every message to appeal directly to that audience. The audience can be a general, nationwide or worldwide audience, and it is often a segment of a entire population. Marketers often refer to "demographics" such as "black males 20-40" for example. In public relations an audience is often more fluid, being whoever a company wants to reach. For example, recent political target audiences include "soccer moms". There is also a grouping based on fitness, eating preferences etc.

As well as audiences, there are stakeholders, people who have a "stake" in a specific issue. All audiences are potential stakeholders, but not all of the stakeholders are audiences. To provide an example, a charity enlists a PR agency to produce a campaign to raise money to find potential cures for a disease. The charity and the sufferers of the disease are stakeholders, and the audience is everyone who could donate money.

 

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Please tell us about your requirements, and we will provide you with a no-hassle, no-obligation QuickQuote.

PRW Communications
Old Barn
North Waltham
Basingstoke
RG25 2BW

Tel: 0845 474 0014

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