![]() |
|||||
| Free Tools and Information for Candidates, Campaigns, and Activists | |||||
|
|
The Number One Rule for Getting Press Coverage for Your Campaign by Joe Garecht This article appeared in the February 28th, 2002 issue of the Local Victory Newsletter.
Local political campaigns don’t
have lots of money to spend on TV advertising. They have other, more
practical uses for their hard-
Of course, getting the press to cover a local campaign is hard, especially when there are bigger and better financed races on the ballot. Getting press coverage can be done, however, with a little ingenuity and some old fashioned hard work. The Most Important Thing The single most important rule for getting the press to cover your campaign is that you must “create news.” What most political campaigns fail to understand is that just because they say something is newsworthy doesn’t make it so. The only events, announcements, statements, speeches or other items that the press will cover are those that are newsworthy. Of course, determining just what is newsworthy can be hard. There are no set rules, and what is newsworthy in one campaign will not be news in another – the qualifications vary with the race. Below are some questions you should think about when determining whether or not your news is newsworthy:
Reporters Need News |
Recommended
Reading
Winning Elections at the Grassroots |
|||
|
Copyright 2007 by Joe Garecht, all rights reserved. Content, text, graphics, |
|||||