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national public radio Tagged Articles
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The Inside Word on Word-of-Mouth Marketing
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| In this interview Dave Balter explains word-of-mouth marketing. Balter founded BzzAgent in 2002. His company has provided word-of-mouth media services for dozens of Fortune 500 companies and has been featured in The New York Times Sunday Magazine, The Wall Street Journal, The Economist, and on National Public Radio. |
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Don't Squander Your Message
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| If you've listened to the news on National Public Radio, you might have heard sponsorships ending "on the Web at Sodexho.com." But they don't tell you how to spell it! They don't even say "so-dex-ho," let alone the far more effective "s-o-d-e-x-h-o." When you're entering a website, if you're even one letter off, you won't get there--you'll get to someone else's site, perhaps, or a "server not found" error. |
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Taglines Passe? Try Six-Word Memoirs.
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| I recently listened to an interview by Larry Smith and Rachel Fershleiser (who compiled Not Quite What I Was Planning: Six-Word Memoirs by Writers Famous and Obscure) on National Public Radio. The basis of their compilations was the legend that when asked to write a six-word novel, novelist Ernest Hemingway responded: “For Sale: baby shoes, never worn.” |
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Great at Multitasking? Well, That’s a Bummer!
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| Some wear it like a badge, others are visibly overwhelmed. Multitasking, they feel, is a necessary component of being competitive and in touch in today’s world. In fact, it is quite the opposite... and much, much worse. Here’s why. |
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Other national public radio Related Articles
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“Your PR Doctor’s Tips for Getting Media Attention on Radio”
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| One of your “PR Doctor’s” favorite public relations elements in an integrated marketing communications plan is talk radio. Talk radio provides opportunities for profit and non-profit organizations to gain extended exposure in an interview format. And there are many opportunities that exist in communities around the United States to capitalize on this media offering. And many times these radio stations are very eager to find new people to interview about new and interesting subjects. So, let’s see what type of advice your PR Doctor has for you to gain media attention on radio. Here are 10 tips for getting your company or organization’s message on radio.
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The Inside Word on Word-of-Mouth Marketing
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| In this interview Dave Balter explains word-of-mouth marketing. Balter founded BzzAgent in 2002. His company has provided word-of-mouth media services for dozens of Fortune 500 companies and has been featured in The New York Times Sunday Magazine, The Wall Street Journal, The Economist, and on National Public Radio. |
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Flexing Your Media Muscle on the Radio
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| Do you know about the radio renaissance? If you’re a NichePreneur®, you should! Popular wisdom has been telling us for years that radio was dead -- but that popular wisdom is wrong.
Satellite radio, streaming internet radio, and the popularity of podcasts has made radio a powerful platform for NichePreneurs® who want to establish or expand their Expert Identity. The audience for radio is exploding, like never before. At the same time, it has gotten more and more demanding to be a good radio guest. No longer is it enough to put out a good sound bite on demand for the local affiliate. Here’s what you need to know: |
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What's Great About PR
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| You can become the talk of the town with public relations. Public relations means exactly what it says. But it is also accurate to say that it means publicity-free stories and news about you and/or your company in newspapers, magazines, newsletters, and house organs, on radio and TV, and in any other type of media. |
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Taglines Passe? Try Six-Word Memoirs.
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| I recently listened to an interview by Larry Smith and Rachel Fershleiser (who compiled Not Quite What I Was Planning: Six-Word Memoirs by Writers Famous and Obscure) on National Public Radio. The basis of their compilations was the legend that when asked to write a six-word novel, novelist Ernest Hemingway responded: “For Sale: baby shoes, never worn.” |
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Don't Squander Your Message
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| If you've listened to the news on National Public Radio, you might have heard sponsorships ending "on the Web at Sodexho.com." But they don't tell you how to spell it! They don't even say "so-dex-ho," let alone the far more effective "s-o-d-e-x-h-o." When you're entering a website, if you're even one letter off, you won't get there--you'll get to someone else's site, perhaps, or a "server not found" error. |
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Why A Top Sales Manager Needs To Be On All His Reps’ “Pre-sets”
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| You have to be more popular than Howard Stern.
You also have to be cooler than Opie and Anthony too.
Why? Because one of the most critical elements to successful sales management is to always make sure you are tuned into the radio frequency of your salespeople.
Here's why. There's only one radio station that your sales executives like to listen to and that radio station is: WIFM. (You might say WIIFM, but let's not get too technical here...).
This is the "What's-In-It-For-Me" radio frequency. This is the only station they pay any attention to and if you're not broadcasting on it all the time, 24-7, then your sales reps are gonna switch you over to some other station on XM or Sirius radio...or worse yet, turn off the radio completely!
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Why a Top Sales Manager Must Always "Tune Into the Right Frequency"
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| It's definitely clichéd, but I think this is one of the most critical elements to successful sales management and that is to make sure you are tuned into the right radio frequency with your salespeople.
There's only one radio station that your sales executives like to listen to and that radio station is: WIFM. (You might say WIIFM, but let's not get too technical here...).
This is the "What's-In-It-For-Me" radio frequency. This is the only station they pay any attention to and if you're not broadcasting on it all the time, 24-7, then your sales reps are gonna switch you over to some other station on XM or Sirius radio...or worse yet, turn off the radio completely!
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Our National Debt: Now, That's Scary
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| I've been hearing a radio ad that's right on the money - literally. It depicts a little kid coming to the door for "trick-or-treat," dressed not as a vampire or a ghost, but as - that's right - the national debt.
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NPR with @KerriMPR and @GuyKawasaki
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| Loved appearing on Minnesota Public Radio with Kerri Miller
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