When confronted with an obstacle — say, a brick wall — too many of us try to bust through it with brute force.
This is especially true in public relations.
Media communications folks send a pitch to journos. If they don’t get a response (the brick wall), they’ll email again. Then call. Then email. Then call. Call-email-email-call-call.
What comes next?
The wall wins. It wins almost always. It’s harder and stronger than your brute force (repeated pitches).
So, you move on to the next writer-editor-producer. Then what do you?
You repeat the pitch-follow-up process.
Instead of trying to force your way through the wall, just walk around it. Try to appeal to the declining journalist’s self-interests:
- What is he working on?
- How can you help?
- Give him some options. It’s harder to say “no” when it’s not a yes/no proposition.
- Instead of launching breathlessly into your pitch, ask some questions.
- You’re not selling your story. You’re trying to help. This is a critical mind shift.
Use finesse instead of trying to break bricks.
It’s more elegant, and, you’ll find, more effective.