Monday, 30 July 2012

The lady with the PR plan.


Hi guys,


We have another brain to add to the collective. My sister Jen, a recent PR & Communications graduate from Sheffield Hallam was so impressed with the concept and potential of this project that she has volunteered her skills and enthusiasm to help us get some exposure and buzz surrounding it!


We've been chatting about it and Jen has come up with a brief action plan, listing a few aims that we want to achieve and some ideas on how to do it.


This may be of particular interest to Ben, especially the online stuff. But, as we're a tiny team we're all involved in everything so your comments are much appreciated!


We can flesh it out together and hopefully set some loose dates for when we want to do stuff and get contacting potentially interested parties!


Here's her initial thoughts...


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Digital Theatre Project

We last spoke on the 27th July, at that time I proposed that a good way to generate some interest around this would be to start looking into different platforms that may cover the project and offer; promotion, enticing people to come along. Or interest, to simply talk about it and gain some recognition. Or finally, gain some kind of sponsorship. I have drafted up a plan of how to approach the process of gaining the 3 elements above.
I understand that the production will be shown in October, 3 months is the perfect time scale for something of this size, however, nothing wants to be written, distributed or even hinted at until there is an idea of the script, actors, venue etc! The plan is in the order of relevance (roughly, it will be a matter of opinion) and should be a suitable work load for one person over a time scale of 1-3 month.

Aim
1.              To gain the interest of local print media (the incentive to report on the project will largely be down to the use of school pupils, and that we are giving pupils an excellent insight to a desirable industry.) If pupils do not end up being used, another angle can be taken.
2.              To create a buzz surrounding the event online. 
3.              To gain online coverage through industry specific sites such as wired.com
4.              Find sponsorships in local Digital media/PR agencies.
5.              Entice usual theatre goers to try something new.

Objective
1.       In order to complete Aim 1, a press release must be created and distributed to local print media. To ensure the greatest coverage possible, a press release obtaining information and invitation should be created (date needs to be confirmed before doing any of this!) then a news release after the event holding all the information of success, thanks and information of next year’s LDF, thus allowing papers to create a final article on the festival.

2.       In order to complete Aim 2, a public blog or website needs to be created that spells out simply what the digital theatre is/why/who/where/what. This information will be the back bone of anything else online. (I understand the characters may have their own twitter feeds? This is a good idea, but it will be time consuming and if a small scale event, it may not have the desired impact.) The use of a hashtag on the first online publication of the event is vital in getting people talking and engaging with each other prior/throughout the event. Key to social media buzz often lies with bloggers, getting bloggers interested in LDF and the digital theatre will ensure that the “right” kind of people are talking about it, but it also offers scope for others to pick up on it too. The best way to reach tech/digital/media?/film? Bloggers is directly! Email, tweet etc to strike conversation and offer more info.

3.       Aim 3 is best approached by using similar techniques as 1 and 2. It is arguably the most difficult aim as LDF and the Digital Theatre is a small project. Sending emails/tweeting the website or editor/journo of website is the best bet of having a suitable website write about it.

4.       Leeds has an astounding amount of fantastic digital comms/media/PR agencies that I’m sure would be interested in the what/where/how of the Digital Theatre and LDF as a whole. Emailing and phoning digital agencies with the aim of gaining sponsorship (financial, resource letting, joining the team?) could result benefitting both sides. Often smaller agencies are looking to join their local community in events like this as it allows them to create some industry and Leeds worthy news for their own services such as news letters or blogs.

5.       Aim 5 is a case of good old fashioned print media, however this is where we could do with financing from Aim 3! The use of print leaflets placed in promotional hot spots within local theatres, suitable bars and the news areas in libraries etc is key to getting the ordinary person experiencing something they’d never heard of before. This element could make a nice story for Aim 1, meaning that an alternative press release could be sent to different print (or the same, if original press release is unsuccessful) as a way of promoting what will showcased at x venue on x date and how it will be something theatre goers will not have heard of before but will enjoy.

Audience
Primary
LDF usual? - Industry experts, graduates trying to break into the industry, local Leeds people, new business start ups as a form of networking, press, bloggers. Mostly reachable through online PR techniques.
Secondary
Ordinary people, none industry specific, families, school trips? Generally offline.

Media
Offline
Yorkshire evening post
This is Ikley
Morley Observer
Metro
Online
Wired.com
Specific bloggers – amount TBF.
Guardian.co.uk

Mediums
Offline – leaflets, press coverage, press release and news release.
Online – email, blog, twitter, website.

Timescale
ASAP – October?
3 months.


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