Wednesday, May 19, 2010

One person who is a great online communicator is business coach Judith Morgan. I have always admired how she sticks to what she enjoys when it comes to successfully promoting and marketing her own businesses, so this month I've asked her to reveal some of her secrets...

Judith, tell us about your business overall and your new project.


My new project is called TheMillionEntrepreneurs, T1ME for short.   www.TheMillionEntrepreneurs.com - its a global community/tribe for self-employed people, small businesses, start-ups, the newly redundant, the prematurely retired, entrepreneurs, solopreneurs, those who have reluctantly chosen to work for themselves and those who wouldn't have it any other way.   Our mission is to provide free resources to members to help them become more successful at it fast, to offer a community to relieve the isolation and a peer group enabling you to feel "normal" and to speak with a voice to get us the recognition which is long overdue.   Just think what would happen if we all went on the dole!!

I know that you have quite an ambiguous feeling towards PR and that for a long time you weren't sure you even wanted to do it, what changed your mind and made you want to put your head above the parapet?

Social media marketing.  The fact that we can take control by doing it ourselves.   As you know, Paula, my ambivalence was always about being instantly available to journalists who work to very tight and short deadlines and if I couldn't instantly free up the diary space, I'd missed my opportunity.   Also, I was aggrieved that we would often pay for PR and then the journalist or publication would not be able to attribute our contributions and sound bites by getting our URL correctly printed and appearing in the piece.   All that work and nothing in it for us.

Social media marketing changes all that and with Twitter, Facebook, blogging etc.. if puts the control firmly back in my hands.   If the link doesn't appear or appears wrongly, its all my own fault!

Tell us about the promotional and PR activities that you do. I already know you run an Internet radio show, for instance, tell us more about that..

I love audio.   I love meeting Entrepreneurs and listening to their stories and sharing them with a wider audience.   Since Internet radio is in effect a podcast, in 15 minutes online together you and your interviewee can create something which will work virally online on the web and turn into a quick inspiring/learning platform.

I love Twitter for how quick it is and blogging for how well it brings people to my website.   I love how instant the Internet is all round - you get instant results and feedback, no denying what you are selling is working or not.   I'm just trying to get my head round Facebook after watching The Virtual Revolution on BBC and discovering that Facebook is now a "country" with a population larger than the States so we ignore it at our peril.

How much time do you spend on promotional activities?

Every waking moment I am not actually delivering service to my clients.   Its the first equal most important thing I do in all my businesses. I have a marketing plan for each business and I focus on that very much.

What PR activities have you found work for you, and which ones don't?

I have worked recently with two women who told me they had both found a client through Twitter. I don't think I have done that yet but blogging this week has brought me three very useful contacts alone.   I'm too new into Facebook to know whether or not it's done me any good, but I am confident the time invested in learning how it works will pay off - with those numbers, its got to.   Twitter is the second largest referrer of traffic to my websites and that's so quick and easy to achieve.   Keyword rich blogsites on specific topics are starting to work well.   For instance I am somewhat knowledgeable about Lease Options and this week, that site has brought me three leads alone, and very valuable ones at that.

What do you enjoy least about PR and promoting yourself?

The somewhat grinding relentless of it never being "done", i.e. you can never rest; you've got to keep on keeping on.

What's been your highest point so far PR-wise?

RDF Television asked me to consider being on Secret Millionaire.   I politely declined and put them in touch with Gill Fielding instead. The rest is history!   Gill grabbed the baton and ran with it.

And your lowest?

Online forums and the horrible battering one takes on there from naysayers and negs.   I don't read it but I know it goes on.

What have you learnt about PR over the years? 

What little I know about it, Paula, I've learned it all from working with you, interviewing you and reading your book, attending your workshop. I did also work with a PR company way back when I was an accountant.   These days PR is often spin.   I must say I am still mistrustful although I have seen our mutual clients do very well with it, just by following your book to the letter.   Good on them.

Can you link a rise in turn over with PR? 

In one business, a small mention in a magazine which was read in dentists' waiting rooms years after the event - that stood us in very good stead and continued to bring us clients years for probably as much as four years.   You can hit pay dirt with it and a lot of the stuff which really works seems "flooky".   The social media marketing is very important to my business, vital really.   So the answer is an unequivocal yes because I don't do anything offline at all.

What advice do you have to give to someone starting to do their own PR and promotion?  


Grab a copy of your nice pink book, read it tonight and put it into action tomorrow. Its what I really like in a book these days, i.e. you really can read it in one sitting of a couple of hours and use two or three ideas instantly and they will make an immediate difference to your PR strategy, enabling an immediate start for little or no cost. We can all do our own PR.

What are your plans for the future?

To build my community of one million global entrepreneurs and build a business which serves that market, helping, supporting, inspiring, connecting. To spend the winters abroad in the Caribbean and to write and speak more.

Many thanks to Judith for her thoughtful answers. You can listen to Judith's radio show here


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The Do Your Own PR Guide to Men's Magazines

Ever wondered which magazine would best suit as a platform from which to market your product or service?  Just because your target audience is male, that doesn't necessarily narrow it down.  There are many men's magazine in the market today, and all are aimed at a slightly different type of man.

Men's Health (Monthly)

March 2010 Issue
Cover Price:  £3.99
Tag Line:   "100% Useful"
Cover Image: A Muscular Man
Cover Headlines: "Fight Fat and Win!"  "Gym-Free Six-Pack Cheats"  "Weight Loss Special"  "Seven Simple Ways to Double your Salary!"
Competitions: No - but free grooming products offered with monthly subscription

Emma's observations

Appearance seems to be high on the agenda for readers of this magazine, with fashion domination the advertisements placed here.  It is mostly for designer labels, with a slight smattering of high street for good measure.  Societal status and physical build come second only to labels, with cars and body-enhancing health supplement ads also scoring high.  Expensive watches are advertised here, as well as reasonably-priced gadgets, such as printers, indicative of a certain income level.

Men who read this magazine seem to put a high premium on looking the way say society dictates men should look based on media images, and Men's Health gives its readers all the tools to do just that.  Large feature sections on nutrition and a sixteen-page weight loss special tell us that this magazine's main agenda is body image, and how to achieve a good physique.  Whilst there are features on sex here, it is more in the way of the psychology of women - how to do well on dates and how to guess what she is thinking - rather than images which objectify the opposite sex.  This is suggestive of Men's Health readers being more concerned with well-being and self confidence than anything else - because, whilst the magazine's main emphasis is on outward appearance, the magazine itself in its tone and its content choices does not come across as shallow.

Predicted Target Audience:

Age:   18-45
Annual Income: £18,000-£35,000
Main Interests:  Physical Fitness, Appearance, Personal Image

Esquire (Monthly)


April 2010 Issue
Cover Price:  £4.25
Tag Line:   "The World's Most Upmarket Men's Magazine"
Cover Image: Actor, Leonardo DiCaprio, throwing the contents of a whisky glass at the camera
Cover Headlines: "Exposed!  The Six Men who can Swing the Election"  "Could Your i-Phone turn psycho?"  "Noel Gallagher's the Most Overrated Man in History - by his brother, Liam"
Competitions: None

Emma's Observations

This magazine is a departure from all things humdrum and ordinary in life, with advertisement emphasis on luxury; twenty-seven fashion advertisements, all of which are designer labels (no high street brands) and six for expensive watches and computers are indicative of this publication's target audience being men with more disposable income than the average.  Car advertisements also have a strong presence here too, suggesting the importance of societal status and self-image to the reader.

This magazine is all about the respect you hope to command in life, based on what you know, wear and own.  There is much evidence here that this glossy is aimed at men who enjoy wealth and abundance, with features predominantly based on time off, adventure, fashion and art.  Nudity is handled tastefully, with a feature on photographer, Rankin, and a new exhibition of his work opening in London.

Men of high stature are prominent here (wealthy actors, politicos, media moguls etc) - evidence that these are the sorts of men that readers of this magazine are expected to admire and aspire to.  The tone of this magazine proposes that you must be a certain calibre of male to consider reading it.

Predicted Target Audience:
Age:   25-65
Annual Income:  £30,000 - £100,000
Main Interests:  Personal Image, Gaining Respect, Societal Status

FHM (monthly)

March 2010 Issue
Cover Price:  £3.90
Tag Line:   None
Cover Image: Model, Abbey Clancy, in a bikini on a beach
Cover Headlines: "Wet and Wild - Abbey Clancy's Island Adventure"  "100 Great Adventures"  "Just How Scary is Google?"  "On the trail of the Storm Chasers"
Competitions: Yes - for items featured in review sections, such as aftershave, games consoles, mobile phones, fashion and plasma televisions

Emma's Obervations:

Fashion and cars score an equally low ranking here, with more emphasis on more everyday entertainment such as home movies and travel.  This could be construed as evidence that FHM readers place a higher premium on experience than material possessions and what others think of them.  Perhaps a contradiction then, that beauty and personal hygiene advertisements feature strongest amongst the ads; body-enhancing health supplements are present too, indicative of the importance of personal image to the reader.

This is a glossy designed for men who are more comfortable in their own skin, rather than concerned with how society perceives them.  The features are largely based on travel and different culture abroad, plus a wide range of experiences the world has to offer.  The absence of politics in this magazine suggests that its readers are men who don't take life too seriously, but appreciate the opportunities it presents.  There is a noticeable absence of nudity in this publication, despite what the cover might promise.  This is a read designed for and inquisitive, intelligent, yet laid-back reader.

Predicted Target Audience:
Age:   25-45
Annual Income:  £15,000 - £30,000
Main Interests:  Experiences, adventures, technology

Loaded (monthly)

March 2010 Issue
Cover Price:  £3.60
Tag Line:   None
Cover Image: Kimberly from pop band, The Pussycat Dolls, in her underwear
Cover Headlines: "Frank Skinner: "I still love a good k*** joke""  "Take Me Out girls Take 'em off!"  Competitions: Yes - one, for item seen on this year's Celebrity Big Brother

Emma's Observations:

A distinct lack of advertising here - one might assume that this publication is not a preferred platform for companies from which to peddle their wares.  Fashion advertisements score the highest here, but more for high street brands than designer labels.  The other type of advert which is prominent in this magazine are those which advertise DVD's and magazine of a similar tone, again suggesting that this publication is aimed at men with a modest living budget.

Loaded's main concern is with female nudity, and the various provocative poses it can ask of it models.   These images are not always presented in the best of taste, either, serving only to cheapen any additional content the magazine has to offer.  Features on footballers and celebrities such as Vinnie Jones enforce the magazine's "lad culture" agenda - that is, the overtly masculine and almost thuggish tones which run through this glossy.

Predicted Target Audience:
Age:   18-30
Annual Income:  £7,000 - £25,000
Main Interests:  Sex, Celebrities, Football

Attitude (monthly)

March 2010 Issue
Cover Price:  £3.99
Tag Line:   None
Cover Image: Leader of The Conservative Party, David Cameron
Cover Headlines: "Dave, 43, Westminster - looking for Gay Love"  
Competitions: Yes - for music, grooming products and DVD's

Emma's Observations:

There are no car advertisements here; this suggests more emphasis on the meaning of experience over status and self-image through material wealth.  This is further enforced by the dominance of holiday ads and concert announcements throughout this magazine.  Of the four fashion adverts, three were for underwear lines, indicative of a need to impress a potential suitor, which is backed up by the body/genital enhancement ads also featured in the magazine.

Travel, music and politics are the order of the day when it comes to the readers of Attitude.  Aimed at a gay readership, the differences between this and publications designed for a straight male audience are subtle, and yet distinct.  With ten full pages dedicated to Conservative Party leader, David Cameron, this is a mature, slick and impressive publication; informative and lively without being over the top. Whilst there are sexual connotations throughout this publication, unlike Loaded, this is sex without the sleaze - all handled tastefully, without any graphic vulgarity.

Predicted Target Audience:
Age:   18-35
Annual Income:  £12,000 - £35,000
Main Interests:  Travel, Experience, Fashion


Nuts and Zoo (weeklies)

5-11 March 2010 Issues
Cover Price:  £1.70
Tag Line:   Nuts: "Britain's Biggest-Selling Men's Weekly!"
Zoo:  None
Cover Image: Both magazines feature topless glamour models
Cover Headlines: Nuts:  "I found Jesus in my frying pan!" "Big Brother's Sophie naked!"
Zoo: "Is your boss a bas****?"  "Sammy Braddy - World's Best Boobs!"
Competitions: Nuts:  Yes - text in a photo to win cash, and a subscription to Nuts comes with free stereo headphones, Zoo: Competition offering £5000 to an aspiring cover star

Emma's Observations:

With fashion and car advertisements noticeably absent from both magazines, we can deduce that these publications are not aimed at a particularly upmarket audience.  That, however, doesn't mean that they don't have their uses in terms of promotion.  Nuts takes particular interest in grooming products - hair styling products, etc - whilst Zoo readers are more interested in the latest DVD releases and new food products.

These magazines are specifically designed to provide topics of conversation amongst adult males when they congregate in one place, i.e. the local pub.  Yes, they will discuss the nudity of the celebrities and the stories about strange occurrences, but they might also remember a well-place product or special offer whilst on the subject.  Word-of-mouth advertising is still extremely effective, and, whilst these weeklies are not especially high-class, they are highly accessible to a young male audience.

Predicted Target Audience:
Age:   18-35
Annual Income:  £7,000 - £25,000
Main Interests:  Sex, Sport, Unexplained Phenomena

GQ (monthly)

April issue
Cover Price:  £3.95
Tag Line:   "News, Style, Adventure, Luxury, Comment, Women."
Cover Image: Actress, Gemma Arterton in underwear
Cover Headlines: "Hooked Up: The true story of Tiger's girls"  "Future Shock: What will life REALLY be like under the Tories?"  
Competitions: None

Emma's Observations:

An incredible amount of fashion advertisements are present in this publication (Mainly designer labels, with one or two high street names), telling us that fashion and outward appearances are of the utmost importance to the target audience of this magazine.  Car ads are also particularly strong, showing a keen sense of status and a desire to gain respect.  A high number of ads toward the back of the magazine for high-profile living locations reinforce this.  Readers with more disposable income will find this an appealing read, with advertisements for expensive watches, jewellery and quality alcohol appearing.  There are also advertisements for holiday homes, indicating a calibre of man who enjoys the finer things in life.

Politics, men of high stature, current affairs, food and interior design are all prominent in this publication.  This is, in fact, the only men's glossy to feature interior design and property so highly - handy to know if the product you want to promote is related to this.  This is upmarket without the snobbery; it's FHM for the slightly richer man.  The tone of the magazine is not intimidating.  It is accessible and interesting.  With this in mind, this would most likely reach the widest range of readers.

Predicted Target Audience:
Age:   18-45
Annual Income:  £15,000 - £100,000
Main Interests:  Travel, Experience, Fashion

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Wednesday, May 12, 2010


One of my clients, Yvonne Bignall, is organising the very first UK VA Celebration Day, organised in line with IVAD (International VA Day) and OIVAC (Online International VA Convention).  The day will be held at the Hilton Hotel in Reading.  During the day there will be VA specific presentations, with plenty of opportunity to network with other VAs and a great 3 course lunch.  Whether you are new to the VA industry or established, it’s a great opportunity to share your VA highs and lows!  If you are looking to expand your VA business, you may find a perfect associate.  All in all, something for everyone.  For further details please go to www.ukvaday.co.uk

For a free PR resource pack and ten day trial of our media request service click here