Try It

What Makes A Press Event Tempting?

Home Roxstars What Makes A Press Event Tempting?

What makes a press event tempting?

I don’t attend as many press functions as I should. I dislike smalltalk and calculated networking — mainly due to not being very good at them — and I get nervous. I also find it easier to consider in a more relaxed scenario, plus I’m allergic to long, boring speeches; they cause a severe reaction wherein my mouth keeps opening and inhaling lots of air. Oh, and I’m far more comfortable in Converse than a collar.

That all fussily said, I will go to an event (when possible) if it sounds like a fun or intriguing and definitely informal venue (see my Converse comment) and/or like there is sufficient work value. Unlike some of my counterparts, free drinks or food aren’t the determining factor!

The Aloha Collective — a quartet of one–(wo)man travel PR bands who are all chums — cleverly teamed up for such an event last week. They shared costs to hire out the space and produce goodie bags, divvied up invite duty and, cumulatively, offered a wide range and large number of clients to enquire or learn about. On top of that, the wide time slot — 1-7pm — made it easier to attend for a brief window.

As far as I could tell, this was a PR-only event, with no clients present. I loved that. Other journalists will, I think, disagree, but I personally prefer talking to you PRs than directly to your clients. While there is a chance of getting exclusive gold from them, clients will only, doggedly be pushing one brand (their own), whereas you typically have multiple offerings to discuss as well as a far greater sense of what works and what doesn’t. This is also why single-client events or meetings almost never tempt me.

The trick at events for PRs, I always reckon, is to have a few solid ideas ready to recite, and to be able to quickly yet seamlessly progress conversations from ‘how are you?’s onto pitching. Because if you don’t get a wiggle on, someone else will soon catch your eye, or say hello to the journalist, and then the opportunity has passed and an awkward, generally-unproductive three-way chat instead beckons.

I was rubbish at avoiding these in my PR career — which is among the good reasons why it ended!

What Richard Thinks…

“It wasn’t so much the press release which impressed me (nor the £5.5Kpn starting price!), but rather Chloe’s accompanying, additional-angle-pushing email intro.  I imagine it’s been widely picked up.”

We're more than just a database

Sign up now and see how you can distribute winning campaigns every time.

BOOK A DEMO

Subscribe

Tomorrow's Business
Roxstars

Roxhill updates

Click below to choose which updates your receive.

post
post

Previous
A Private Word Is Better Than No Word At All

Roxstars

Next
Food and Substack

post
post

Similar Posts

Other Posts by

Get started with Roxhill's PR and Media Database today

Feature-rich, yet easy to use. Get a demo of our PR tools for improved data accuracy and savings on competitors.

News & Updates

Subscribe to our newsletters

Tomorrow's Business Roxstars

We use cookies to enhance site navigation, analyze site usage, and assist in our marketing efforts. Accept cookie settings by clicking the button.
You can view our Cookie Policy or Privacy Policy.