Remove Consumer Remove Interviews Remove Newspapers Remove Print
article thumbnail

Can Print Still Flourish in The Age of Digital? An Interview with Star Tribune Magazine’s Sue Campbell

MaccaPR

Has digital media – from Huffington Post , Google News and BuzzFeed to Kindle e-books, Twitter and (God help us) more than 8 million blogs – finally vanquished Print? Recent headlines provide brutal evidence: Condé Nast announced last December it was shutting down the print version of Self magazine to go online-only. Long Live Print”!

Print 48
article thumbnail

What’s Going On With Media – And How Does It Impact Your Public Relations Strategy?

Stern + Associates

But social platforms are totally different from newspapers or websites: they require small, bite-sized presentations of news, increasingly in video rather than text form (though they will usually link text-based articles on the media outlet’s website). There’s no question that the media as we know it is going through the agony of change.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Book It! 8 PR Tips For Nailing TV Segments

ImPRessions - Crenshaw Communications

Any good PR person knows that we consume news very differently than we did a decade ago, thanks to social media. Broadcast follows print. Many media outlets compete with one another, but in general, print and broadcast have a symbiotic relationship. Yet television talk and news has been surprisingly resilient.

Print 245
article thumbnail

Meet the Media – Dan Rosenheim

Landis PR

How is reporting different at newspapers, TV and wire services? The great strength of broadcast is its ability to take news consumers directly to the scene and witness events — a wildfire, a debate, a demonstration, a major speech — as they unfold. Dan Rosenheim is the Director of Business Development at Bay City News.

Meeting 98
article thumbnail

Will Television Follow Newspapers’ Fate?

Flatiron Communications

One of the bigger questions that emerged from last week’s Business Insider Ignition conference revolved around whether traditional television will endure the same pain as the newspaper industry has. TV will soon feel newspapers’ pain.” “Give consumers what they want, which is what X1 does.”

article thumbnail

5 Tips to Pitching Success – When PR Stands for “Personal” Relations

Deirdre Breakenridge

When I started out in PR, my focus was building relationships with the media who were mostly print journalists at newspapers and trade publications. Yes, there is still print and broadcast media. After all, back in the day, working with a newspaper reporter was completely different than coordinating with a radio show producer.

Pitching 150
article thumbnail

Increasing Your Media Coverage Through Storytelling

PRSay

As communicators, we have long relied on earned media or public relations — usually in the form of media relations — to place our clients’ names on the internet, on TV, in print and on the radio. Sure, go after The New York Times as your boss asked, but don’t forget your local newspapers, TV and radio stations.