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Silicon Beach Australia |
It seems you are after web PR agencies Paul, but this thread got me
researching and I found a site that lists a bunch of media contacts in
Australia :
http://www.ourcommunity.com.au/marketing/marketing_article.jsp?articl...
it looks to be a good start for the traditional press.
I'm just beginning my PR adventure and trying to learn as much as I can,
so this is a well timed question. Thanks for the info guys.
> I don't know how far down the PR track you've gone, but if i may
> indulge in some unsolicited advice based on experience I'd say:
> Nothing else beats the hard graft of working through a list of press
> contacts in terms of getting attention. Decide what the audience you
> want to reach is and work out your message(s) accordingly. You need
> to give the journo an angle - one of the oldest tricks for product
> announcements is to present the results of a "survey" that proves
> there's a problem, that your product magically happens to solve! ;-)
> Anyway, there's stacks of stuff on the web about this sort of thing,
> so read widely, check out some media releases from existing
> companies, etc. and synthesise your own plan from there.
> Finally, make sure that you have a spokesperson that can be reached
> on the phone during biz hours, journos working to a deadline will
> more likely pick up the phone to get a fast answer, not wait around
> half a day for an email reply...
>> Press Release sites are good for SEO, not so much for direct traffic.
>> For direct traffic, it's better to contact press/sites directly with
>> your press release. I have a list of some tech contacts we put
>> together that I can send you.
>> On Aug 8, 9:22 am, "Paul | WebEquity" <goo...@boxed.com.au> wrote:
>>> Anyone know of any decent free PR agencies? I've seen a few around
>>> (prfree.com, myfreepr.com, pr-inside.com), but anyone have any
>>> experience with these guys? I'd also like to focus on Australia, if
>>> possible.
>>> Ta
>>> --
>>> Paulwww.webequity.com.au