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Writing Skills: Writing skills for PR

Course Code: WS-WSP      Days: 1
Show all Communication Skills Courses
Scheduled Dates (sort by: location | date)
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26/03/09 London (Central) (SE1) £ 699
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Audience

This seminar is for anyone who is new to writing for PR or wants to re-cap on the different writing techniques needed for news and features. It is designed for in-house and agency personnel and marketing professionals, and will be particularly useful to anyone who has until now found writing a struggle or a challenge.

Skills Gained

  • Abolish writers' block - forever
  • Have a firm starting point for any piece of PR writing - and know where to go from there
  • Have the confidence to recognise a story and to sell your ideas to your company or client
  • Make your press release the one in a hundred that will get into print
  • Collect information with all the skills of an experienced journalist no matter how new you are to the media world
  • Be creative with story ideas and use lateral thinking to expand a gem of an idea into a full-blown feature

Course Outline

Why clients don't know everything

  • The conflicting priorities of clients (or companies) and the press
  • What the press want from a press release
  • What the client wants from a press release
  • The tightrope-walking act of the PR professional and why it's important to get the balance right

How to write a successful press release

  • Different types of press release
  • Characteristics of news and features
  • The importance of understanding the difference in writing styles
  • Writing news intros - a formula that works every time
  • The importance of adding value with good story ideas
  • Benefits and features
  • Common errors in press handouts
  • Build your reputation by avoiding the pitfalls
  • Case histories - the good, the bad and the downright dreadful
  • Eye-catching headlines - what works and what doesn't
  • Every picture tells a story - caption writing that counts
  • Captions that inform and tempt the reader into your story
  • The must-have-list every good press release should have
  • How to give your releases a professional look - plus real life examples

How to make writing as easy as speaking

  • Writing fast, writing fluently
  • Taking the struggle out - putting the fun in
  • Identifying the roots of writers' block - and banishing it forever
  • Accessing your creativity; it's easier than you think
  • Understanding the psychology of the writing and editing process
  • Step by step to achieve sparkling copy
  • The four step process that guarantees results

How to write fascinating features

  • Finding ideas for features
  • Useful sources
  • Fabulous formats - different types of features you can use to ring the changes
  • Researching the style of your target magazine
  • Audience
  • Copy style
  • Regular slots
  • Understanding what the editor wants
  • Making contact
  • Presenting a well informed synopsis
  • The rules of give and take - and how it can work for you and your client
  • Making your copy more active and dynamic
  • Don't rush into editing
  • How to revise when the time comes

Making a start

  • The nuts and bolts of a well-written feature
  • Writing the intro - easy formulas for success
  • Tips and techniques to get your story up and running
  • Structuring your feature
  • Making order out of chaos
  • Links and transitions - the secret of getting your feature to flow
  • Common sense approaches when all else fails

Collecting your information

  • Taking the brief
  • Is it achievable?
  • Does it fit the strategy?
  • Getting the extra information you may need
  • What the client wants to tell you and what else you need to know
  • Interviewing secrets of the top journos
  • Planning your questions
  • Taking 'tangents'
  • Keeping them on track
  • Maintaining control
  • How to identify good quotes. And why they can be the life and soul of your story
  • What makes a dreary, disappointing or unusable quote
  • Questions that trigger great quotes and why you as the writer should never make them up yourself


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