Itโs an age-old question and one Iโve been asked a lot lately – โHow can I get my story in Elite Agent/the media/the news?โ
And itโs a good question, because sometimes what you want to promote as an agency principal, agent, property manager or support team member, doesnโt really line up with what the news cycle and the media organisation youโre targeting needs.
But that doesnโt mean you canโt get your name or your agencyโs up in lights.ย
It just means you have to work with the media outlet, build strong relationships with its journalists and be prepared to take a different angle or approach to the stories you pitch.
Here are my top five strategies to do just that.
- Build a relationship with journalists
As an agent or property manager, the most successful deals are done when you invest time and effort into building strong relationships with your vendors, buyers, landlords and tenants.
Take the same approach with journalists. If you send a press release, follow it up with a phone call to see if thereโs anything else you can offer them.
I love it when an agent calls me with a potential story and we can go over the details together.
Often, we end up talking about the wider market and what else is happening in real estate, and I usually file away an extra idea or two for another story in a few weeks or months time.ย
Also, if you call me and what youโve sent through isnโt a story, I can let you know how we can change or tweak the story youโve sent through, so that it is worthy of publication.
Or, we can come up with an entirely new idea together.
- Know what makes a story
Iโm going to cut right to the chase here – a record price for a studio apartment in Smith St, when thereโs only two studio apartments in the street, is not a story.
If you follow point one and you really get to know the journalists at the media organisation youโre targeting, youโll also quickly come to know what kind of stories theyโre after.
And the key to figuring that out is understanding who the media platformโs target audience is.
At Elite Agent, itโs you – the agent, the principal and the property manager.ย
We love nothing more than to tell stories that help you do what you do better.
Youโll also never see us write those nasty stories about trust fund dollars going missing.
We like to build the industry up, not tear it down.
So, instead of telling us you had a record sale, share with us the strategies you used to achieve that result.
Instead of sharing that you won an award, tell us you won it for introducing innovative health and wellbeing initiatives that your team adores – and let us interview the team for their thoughts.
Or, if youโve noticed a trend in the industry – perhaps something a few agents are struggling with right now – get on the front foot and write a column about it. We love first person pieces!
And if youโre not sure if something is a story or not, see point one – just give us a call!
- Add value
This is a big one. Every story any news source publishes must contain value for its target audience.
At Elite Agent, we follow the Three Es – Educate, Entertain and Elevate. If a story doesnโt do at least one of those things then itโs not a story.
The big question I tell all of our journalists and contributors to keep at the forefront of their mind is, โWhy should our readers click on this storyโ?
If the answer doesnโt start with โBecause theyโll learnโฆโ or โBecause theyโll feel heardโฆโ or โBecause theyโll laugh/feel happy/share it with their colleaguesโ then weโve missed the mark.
Itโs the same for the stories you pitch or send in. Ask yourself, โWhat will readers/my real estate colleagues get out of reading thisโ?ย
If thereโs not a tangible takeaway, then thereโs no story. You have to add value, every time.
- Get the basics right
Newsrooms are fast paced and turnaround times are exactly that – fast. Deadlines really are deadlines.
If a journalist calls you about your press release, or off the cuff about another story, call them back pronto.
If you donโt, you risk another story taking your place that day. Or worse, they might call your competition for a quote instead!
Iโll let you in on a little secret, every journalist I know, including real estate writers, have a speed dial list of contacts they call when they need a quote for a property story.
These are principals, agents and property managers they know will call them back and provide accurate, timely information.
Trust me when I say you want to be on that list.
As well as knowing how to meet a deadline, have all the other โelementsโ a media organisation needs to publish a story, ready to go.
Think about interview subjects, photos, videos etcโฆ
If two stories come through that have a similar news value and one has images and one doesnโt, guess which one the journalist will pick?
- Skip the sales pitch
I know, I know, selling is in your blood. It comes naturally and you want to sell yourself as an industry expert as well.
But let me implore you to ditch the sales pitch when it comes to news.
Most media outlets, Elite Agent included, keep an eagle eye out for promotional material disguised as news.
Donโt get me wrong, thereโs a place for the more promotional pieces too, and we have heaps of ways we can help you with that.
But when it comes to news, itโs all about adding value and those three Es I mentioned before – Educate, Elevate and Entertain.
After all, itโs that type of content that will position you as a market leader with genuine authority, and thatโs a win-win for everyone.