Question

Topic: Advertising/PR

Customer Participation In Press Releases

Posted by Anonymous on 125 Points
Hi All! Hoping to benefit from your experience in either gaining participation or directly participating in announcement of sale press releases. Thanks in advance!

I work in the marketing department of a technology vendor serving hospitals and other healthcare facilities. While I was hired for my social media expertise, I am also responsible for press releases - something completely new to me. Writing them is not a problem, as I have a journalism background. But getting customer participation and approval is an issue - and apparently always has been at my company.

When we sell our product into a new facility, we want to spread the word and do a press release about it. Ideally, the customer will provide a statement and put their stamp of approval on the release.

My company's established process is to go through the person we sold the system to (the Chief Information Officer, for example), or the end-user we worked closely with (e.g. a Nurse Manager).

This often leads to weeks or months of unanswered emails or "I submitted to my superior/the PR department/some other stakeholder ... but haven't heard back."

I'm wondering if we should *start* with the hospital's PR department? Will they help us obtain a quote from the appropriate person and shepherd the approval process?

Also, if we choose to forgo the quote, do we really need the customer's approval to do an announcement of sale press release?

Any other tips you can offer on getting press release participation and approval is appreciated. I'm sure those of you who work with vendors have some pet peeves - please share! Thanks.
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RESPONSES

  • Posted by Jay Hamilton-Roth on Member
    Based on previous experiences, has your company measurably benefited from press releases? Since it's unlikely a new technology installation will likely produce something noteworthy (for a PR) in important information, consider instead creating case studies. Work with your clients to measure the short-, medium-, and long-term benefits of your products & services. You won't need their quotes, just access to their data.
  • Posted on Author
    Hi Jay. Thanks for the response. We do measurably benefit from these types of press releases - in our industry, new sales and implementations are keenly noted. And yes, we do case studies as well. My question is how best to approach a customer (or *who* best to approach) for participation - whether in a press release or case study, a customer quote is very, very valuable.
  • Posted by Jay Hamilton-Roth on Accepted
    In the future, make it a part of the contract itself, so this issue is clearly noted early on - and resolved in their management structure.

    No, you don't need their permission to note the sale (unless they've stipulated it's confidential). And if you can't get an authorized quote, then provide one of your own, stated from your perspective ("Their system was having reliability problems, and now they will enjoy 99.99% uptime").

    However, this is not legal advice, and if you're at all concerned that your clients may take offense at your press release, talk to your lawyer about what you can say legally w/o client approval.
  • Posted on Author
    Closing this question as I got some great advice from a LinkedIn Group. https://www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussio...

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