During Game 4 of the Jazz and Lakers series, I came across a great Pizza Hut ad (below) that I thought was extremely well done.
As you’ll see, this was down with real people and hidden cameras.
Pizza Hut nailed this one, because, and this is my opinion, this ad will probably net them some ink. Not all ad campaigns create such a creative result that the media ends up following it. I haven’t checked to see if this has been written about yet, but the ad team definitely provided the PR team with some great pitching fodder.
Locally, Nationwide Auto Insurance’s unique ad campaign by putting their logo on parking stall lines netted some ink in a local paper here (sorry I can’t find the story).
As a PR guy, I tend to think PR rules the world (stole that line from Cheryl) but if you are going to do an ad, try and make it creative enough the notice will take notice of it so it has a longer shelf life.
An Ad Worth Ink
Footnoted
One of the most satisfying experiences working in the PR industry comes when you secure an opportunity for a client to tell their story in front of a captive national audience. This week, after multiple phone calls, emails, and meetings, our colleague Don Osmond finalized an appointment for Footnote.com to showcase their site on the Glenn Beck Show, a true testament to the importance of networking.
Footnote.com will be talking about their most recent project, The Interactive Vietnam Veteran’s Memorial Wall, as we prepare for the Memorial Day Weekend. The interview will detail the inspiration behind the project, the logistics of building the site, as well as share some of the wonderful and touching stories that people have posted on the site.
You can watch the Footnote.com interview Friday, May 23 on the Glenn Beck show on CNN Headline News at 5 p.m. ET (rebroadcast at 7 p.m. and midnight, check local listings), or listen for the radio interview with Glenn Beck on Premiere Radio Networks Friday at 11:30 a.m. ET (check local listings). Also available on www.glennbeck.com. Glenn can also be heard on XM satellite radio on channel 165.
Insight to Web 2.0 PR
Cheryl Snapp Conner has just been featured on this week’s MSPMentor Podcast discussing some of the key PR issues that channel focused companies, and MSPs in particular, should be aware of when engaging Web 2.0. She provides insight in effectively using social networking, corporate blogging, and the best tactics for issuing news.
Take a listen:
CEO could not be reached for comment
I have literally hundreds of business cards in my desk that I’ve accumulated throughout the years from trade shows, new business meetings, etc.
They range from editors to CEOs and contain nearly every bit of contact information that you can imagine: address, phone, fax, e-mail. Nearly ever way to contact someone; some even include Skype info for editors.
While all that information is valuable to the recipient, for a CEO it can be detrimental. That’s why we recommend a CEO have a stash of business cards that don’t include their cell or direct phone numbers that they can give to the press. Whyzat?
A few years ago on a press tour, a VP walked into a meeting with an editor to talk about his company’s channel strategy. Unbeknownst to the VP, however, his CEO had met with the same editor a year earlier to discuss the same thing. The editor wanted to follow up on a statement the CEO had made previously, but the VP’s message had changed.
After the VP left, the editor called the CEO on his cell phone, which he had obtained previously from the CEO’s business card he had saved. The editor couldn’t reach the CEO and ran a less than positive story accusing the vendor of changing its channel strategy and concluding with the statement, “Calls to the CEO were not returned.”
Here’s the problem: The CEO was on a plane when the editor called and didn’t get the message until after the story was published. Should the editor have called the PR agency? Yes. But many situations like this can be circumvented by ensuring that you give the reporter your PR agency’s number, or at least an alternate card.
A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words
Most typically, PR consultants operate in the background, heard but not necessarily seen. Today, however, we can't resist putting the following photo of our Senior Consultant Clay Blackham in lights. Notice the stunning mustache? Until the hour before his mother's wedding, Clay declared his intention to wear this manly addition to his persona all the way to the end. At the final minute, however, he relented and shaved the offending bristles once full shock value had been achieved.
In honor of the occasion, however, our partner in podcast Brad Baldwin has immortalized Clay's macho appearance in film. With all due respect and apologies to the original source files, today we share the true and typically hidden personality of Clay. Enjoy.

- Specialization
- Focus
- Results
"Cheryl Snapp Conner's team was instrumental in securing coverage for the Phonex Broadband Neverwire in not only the computer trade press, but in key consumer outlets such as Businessweek, USA Today, PARADE Magazine and CNN. Her agency provides the kind of high-end results and focus that regularly outpaces even the larger national agencies. In one case, an inbound call from a USA Today article she placed resulted in an immediate $150,000 sale."
-Brad Warnock
VP Marketing, Celio Corp.
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