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DEADLINES
Submit your news by the 28th of each
month for publication in the next issue.
Use these guidelines for press releases
The Journal welcomes your news and wants to publish it. You can
help by following these guidelines for press releases:
- In the subject line and for file names, use a short headline
instead of simply labeling it "For the Journal" or "Press release."
Better: "RELEASE: Smith promoted" or "RELEASE: Company expands."
With pictures, use a tagline similar to the story tag line. For
mug shots, use the person's name.
- Make sure you have news: If you're simply submitting an advertisement
in disguise, it's likely headed for the wastebasket.
- Write it to the benefit of the readers: Your release stands
a better chance of being used if it contains information useful
to the publication's readership. Offering consumer-friendly information,localizing
national trends or explaining a complex issue are a few ways to
reach editors, producers, readers and viewers.
- Keep it short and to the point. Put the news first. Cut out
the fluff and stick to the facts. Make sure your information is
accurate. If you want to editorialize, put it in an executive's
quotation ("We believe this is the best widget in the South,"
company president A.B. Seay said.)
- An effective press release will contain the following:
- Contact information - Who to call for more information.
- Release date - When do you want the information
out ("for immediate release"; "For release Dec. 2")
- A catchy headline - This is your best chance
to grab the editor or producer (but "catchy" doesn't mean
misleading).
- The body - This is the information you want
the public to know.
- E-mailing? Your best bet is to send your release as part of
your e-mail message. If you're sending it as an attachment, make
sure the person on the other side can open it. Put your headline
in the subject line.
- The release should stand on its own: A good press release will
sell itself. There's no need to enclose a cover letter; it's just
one more piece of paper someone has to handle.
- If you're sending a picture other than a head-and-shoulders
shot fan individual, try to make it an action shot rather than
simply a group of people standing around.
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