Tag Archives: SME

Developing a Facebook Plan for a Busy Small Business Owner

Part 2 in a short series about using Facebook for small businesses.  Part 1: Is Facebook Right for Your Small Business?

Marketing in social channels requires different tactics than traditional practices.  First and foremost, one needs to understand how specific social networks actually work with respect to how information is shared, how messages can gain extra visibility, and how to build a presence that will deliver long term business benefits.  Facebook is no exception – it’s an entirely unique entity, and understanding how Facebook operates is essential.

I spent quite a bit of time on this aspect in the basic Facebook plan I put together for a friend of mine last weekend.  Her business is a bit unusual – she runs an equestrian boarding and training facility catering to people who show their horses regularly.  Because a large number of local and regional equestrian organizations and businesses – as well as horse trainers and riders – are active on Facebook, she’s considering establishing a Facebook page for her barn.  However, as I mentioned previously, she’s not really “into” social media, and she doesn’t have a lot of time to devote to marketing. My duty, as I see it, is to give her enough basic information to determine whether Facebook is for her, and to help her make her venture successful, if she decides to go in this direction.

Interactions & algorithms: message visibility on Facebook
Individual Facebook users have two main views of Facebook – their “wall” where they post their status updates, and their “home” view, on which they can view their ‘news feed.” The news feed aggregates posts from their friends, and the brands they follow.

This is the central feature of Facebook, and it’s how information is passed along the network.  Once users start “following” a brand, they are not likely to go visit the brand’s page.  Their exposure to brand messaging will be via the news feed, and it’s there they are most likely to interact with the brand.

The news feed doesn’t display every single post generated by the friends and brands one follows, however. Facebook uses an algorithm called Edgerank that determines which posts users see, selecting the posts that have generated the most interactions, and it also considers to what degree the FB user interacts with posts from a particular person or brand. Content that generates no interactions falls to the bottom. Likewise, content from people with whom you rarely interact is also less visible.

Interactions play a crucial role

Let’s talk about interactions for a moment. Interaction on Facebook comes in several forms:

  • Likes – when someone “likes” your post
  • Comments – when someone comments on your post
  • Share – when someone shares your post with their followers, thus amplifying your message.

While all interactions are good, they’re not created equal. Likes are the least meaningful of the three, whereas shares are the most.  On Facebook, interaction is really important – interactions are what trigger more visibility for messages.

Content that makes it past Edgerank into the news feed has won the lottery, of sorts. Once it’s in the news feed, the content can generate more interactions, driving it into various peoples’ news feeds, and expanding the potential audience for our message, and the likelihood that more people will start following your brand.

Building a following on Facebook – what people want from brands

Get Satisfaction’s infographic on why people follow brands on social networks

However, in order to gain any sort of benefit on Facebook, the organization must first build a following, and to do that, it’s important to consider why people follow brands on Facebook.

According to a study by Get Satisfaction (a CRM company) last year, the majority (37%) of Facebook users follow a brand because they are looking for special offers.  A large number of a brands followers (33%) are already customers.  Eighteen percent are seeking interesting information, and only 5% want product or service news.

So what’s a marketer to make of the fact that the majority of followers are 1) already customers and 2) are looking for a deal?   In my mind, the high number of customers represents a real advantage in terms of the sort of viral, virtual word-of-mouth marketing opportunity Facebook provides.  Currying the enthusiasm of the customers, inviting their opinions and feedback, is a great way to improve your organization’s relationship with its clientele.  Engaged and happy customers who respond to a brand’s posts will amplify the message – and broadcast their enthusiasm to their own personal networks.   This is how a brand increases its traction and awareness on Facebook.

Special offers are important, and this is where a small business person needs to get creative, and realize that special offers don’t always mean discounts.  Depending on the nature of the business, specials can be early access to an event or sale, the opportunity to see “behind the scenes,” or the opportunity to test a product. The important thing is keeping the follower’s motives firmly in mind when thinking about what sort of content will attract (and retain) your audiences.

Content – the fuel for Facebook

Any good promotional strategy needs to have measurable goals against which the strategy is set, and it’s in that context I like to start thinking about what sort of content might make sense for a brand.   And by content, I really mean “status updates” and pictures, videos and anything else a brand would want to share with their followers

The question of content is one I emphasized to my friend – because ultimately, a successful Facebook presence depends heavily on the information the brand shares.  As she considers whether or not she should commit to Facebook, I wanted her to ask herself whether or not she can really keep her Facebook page fresh and current.

I framed the issue of content creation in terms of the messages that she’d want to convey, in order to achieve the business outcomes that are the whole point of an exercise like this.   In a nutshell, she wants to attract more customers for her boarding business, to the point where she has a waiting list.  And in order to get people to want to bring their horses to her barn, she needs to appeal to them.  They need to see the amenities her facility offers, the number of professional trainers who teach there, and the care and attention given to the animals in my friend’s care.  She needs to convey to potential clients how wonderful it is to keep a horse at her barn.

To help her out, I outlined the following approach:

1.   Decide on what messages you want to convey, keeping your business outcomes in mind.  So keeping that objective (more boarding and training clients) in mind, I recommended to my friend some simple ideas about the lasting impressions she wants to generate among her followers.  They’re pretty simple, but absolutely contribute to the decision-making process when someone is selecting a barn at which to keep their horse:

  • We take great care of your horse
  • We have a variety of safe and fun places to ride and other amenities for riders
  • We have high quality, experienced, well-known trainers

2.   Figure out what sort of content you can post on a daily basis that supports your chosen messages. In my friend’s case, I suggested that the messaging she creates to support what she wants to convey could take a variety of forms.

  • Illustrate the excellent care they provide with simple photos or videos of horses frolicking happily, snoozing in deeply bedded stalls, grazing eye-ball deep in lush grass and tucked into warm blankets in the winter.
  • Show off the amenities for humans with images and video of riders working with trainers, wild flowers blooming by the side of the riding trails, the sun setting over the nearby lake, etc., wild turkeys strolling across the outdoor riding ring, people gathered in the club room, This is the sort of eye-catching imagery she could easily capture and share on Facebook that her audience would enjoy, and is very attractive to her audience.
  • Text updates provide the opportunity to underscore the barn’s expertise, while being pithy and interesting – requirements for success on Facebook. For those, I suggested that she start conversations around the topics horse people deal with – tips from the trainers, how to get caked-on mud off your mount, and what mosquito repellant works best for horses, etc. Horse care tips – how to quickly pick a stall, how to encourage horses to drink in cold weather – all the knowledge she’s accumulated in her experience makes great fodder for Facebook, and emphasizes the expertise of her staff and the care her barn provides.

3.   Commit to posting content – a mix of text, pictures and video – daily.  Information is Facebook’s stock in trade, and the news feeds are constantly refreshed.  Sharing updates and information regularly is absolutely essential for success.  In addition, brands also need to keep an eye on their walls for conversations and interactions. In the case of my friend, I suggested that daily checks would suffice – she doesn’t need to be a slave to Facebook and constantly obsess over comments, but she should check them nightly and respond to anyone who took the time to post a comment.

Using interesting and fun content to build following and generate attention for her messages would enable her to then issue the occasional “strictly business” type of post, such as announcing the availability of stalls or promoting an upcoming event.  I’m not sure how my friend will respond to the mini-tutorial/strategy for Facebook I devised for her, but I think it’s a decent starter plan.

Small Business PR & Marketing:  PR Newswire offers a variety of tools and tips for small businesses seeking to increase their visibility.  Resources include white papers, press release templates and access to ProfNet Connect, a free expert network.  See the details at: http://www.smallbusinesspr.com/

Sarah Skerik is PR Newswire’s vice president of social media, and is the author of the free ebook Unlocking Social Media for PR, which we’ve updated for 2012.

Is Facebook Right For Your Small Business?

Part I in a two-part series on using Facebook to promote small business.

Does the farm belong on Facebook?

Over the weekend, I spent some time putting together a rudimentary Facebook plan for a friend. She is admittedly not into social media, but she does understand web marketing, and is grudgingly considering establishing a Facebook presence for her organization.

Like many small business owners, she is busy, busy, busy, and she doesn’t have staff devoted marketing activities.  If she wants to do some marketing, she has to stop her “real work,” plop down in front of the computer, and get busy.

Now, some background.  My friend is in the equestrian business – she runs a nice facility for boarding and training horses that caters to people who actively compete at horse shows.  I’ve long thought that Facebook would be useful for her business – she has a good regional footprint, the local associations that run area horse shows are active on social networks, and so are many riders and trainers in the area. So, for my friend, the answer to that first essential question one must ask before planning a social media foray – “Is my audience present on this particular social network?” – is an unequivocal “Yes.”

However, as I mentioned, my friend is busy, and not terribly inclined toward social media generally, and Facebook in particular.  So, as I prepared my recommendations for her, I kept the fact that she’s not a dyed-in-the-wool online networker in mind.  This puts her at a disadvantage, because I do believe that in order to get the most out of a social network for a brand, the people behind that brand’s presence do need to have a good understanding of how the network works, what sort of content plays well, and what kind of postings and interactions people appreciate from brands.  And a good way to achieve all of that is to use the social network in question yourself.

Business benefits of Facebook
Because my friend can’t afford to waste her time, I wanted to give her a very realistic view of what sort of outcomes she could reasonably expect and what sort of commitment she’d be looking at if she decided to engage on Facebook for her business. First and foremost, I framed the benefits of using Facebook for a business like hers, which I described as follows:

  • A means to build awareness among a specific community (in this case, equestrians in the region)
  • Staying ‘top of mind’ with your audience through an ongoing stream of messages
  • The ability to rapidly communicate with audiences (once you’ve established a good following)
  • A way to subtly and unobtrusively communicate with potential customers, and spark word-of-mouth recommendations.

Committing to a Facebook presence

However, Facebook isn’t a one-way street, and it’s not simply a conduit for marketing messages.  You can’t simply post sales pitches and expect to gather any sort of audience. Interaction is required. So, right off the bat, I leveled with my friend, and outlined as realistically as I could the level of commitment she’d need to devote to the care and feeding of a Facebook presence for her brand:

  • Commit to posting content – a mix of text, pictures and video – daily.   For my friend, this means keeping her iPhone in her pocket, and remembering to whip it out and grab a picture or video when something interesting is happening on the farm.
  • Keep an eye on your wall, to ensure content others post is relevant to your business and not spam, and to keep an eye out for comments.
  • Interact with anyone who comments. You don’t need to be a slave to Facebook and constantly obsess over comments. But you would want to check them nightly and respond to anyone who took the time to post a comment. You don’t need to spend a ton of time on it, but you do need to pay attention.
  • Over time, build connections with related brands in the area that are also active on Facebook.  My friend is well established and knows a number of area trainers, vets and retailers catering to the equestrian crowd.  Connecting with these people on Facebook builds connections, and increases visibility.

Lots of brands get hung up on social media, establishing presences that either simply don’t work, or that they can’t maintain.  In my friend’s case, Facebook does make sense – but only if it’s something she can (and will!) maintain.

Tomorrow we go into Part 2 of the plan I outlined for her, delving deeper into how Facebook works, and how to make Facebook work for a brand.

Coming tomorrow:  Part 2, Making Facebook Work for a Small Business

Small Business PR & Marketing:  PR Newswire offers a variety of tools and tips for small businesses seeking to increase their visibility.  Resources include white papers, press release templates and access to ProfNet Connect, a free expert network.  See the details at: http://www.smallbusinesspr.com/

Sarah Skerik is PR Newswire’s vice president of social media, and is the author of the free ebook Unlocking Social Media for PR, which we’ve updated for 2012.

Small Business PR: Top Blog Posts From the PR Toolkit

PR Newswire''s PR Toolkit offers tools and special offers for small businesses.

2011 was a transformational year for PR Newswire’s Small Business Program. In the spring, we refurbished and relaunched the PR Toolkit, an educational resource that provides small businesses information about building and executing successful PR and marketing campaigns. The PR Toolkit provides press release templates and other tools entrepreneurs can use to draft and distribute effective press releases, build their profiles as subject matter experts and plan PR campaigns.

We also publish loads of articles and tips on small business PR and marketing. Here are the top 5 most popular articles on the site from the last year:

Developing a Small Business PR Plan

Ten Ideas for Your Next Small Business Press Release

Five Ways to Make News This Holiday Season

Get the Media Buzzing on a Small Business Budget

Four Tools for Selecting Your Online Press Release’s Best Keywords

As we strive for continued success and growth in 2012, we hope the PR Toolkit can help your small business or your small business clients accomplish the same in the New Year.

Author Cassie Pinkerton is PR Newswire’s SME coordination manager and can be followed on Twitter @PRNSmallBiz.

Case Study: Small businesses generate visibility with press releases

The PR Toolkit for small businesses

Small business owners are progressively more focused on increasing online visibility for their businesses while working within the constraints of limited marketing resources and smaller budgets than their larger competitors.  The good news is that small business PR can generate big results.

Today, PR Newswire has released a new case study demonstrating how news release distribution can bring a small business greater visibility, both online and with the media. The case study can be found at PR Newswire’s online resource for small businesses, PR Toolkit (http://www.smallbusinesspr.com)

Read the case study here.

How to Get Publicity with Social Media

I had the pleasure of attending the annual American Society of Journalists and Authors (ASJA) conference held in New York. The conference, for writers at every level of their career, featured more than 70 sessions covering a variety of topics, and I’ve been posting some of the recaps over the last week or so. See: Breaking into Finance Markets, Writing for Women’s Magazines, Beating Blog Burnout, Writing White Papers, Building a Platform: How to Promote Your Blog and Yourself and Negotiating a Book Deal.

In this post, I share the text of the presentation given by Dan Janal as part of the panel, “Tweet, Blog, Like and Link: Using Social Media to Build Your Platform.” Thanks to Dan for kindly sharing this with our readers.

TECHNOLOGY CHANGES EVERYTHING

Technology changes everything. It even changes the way we communicate with reporters to get publicity.

When the Internet first became a tool for general business use back in 1994, I wrote an article that was printed in many PR journals. It was called, “The Internet Ushers in a Golden Era for PR.”

I wrote about how we could now control the message our audience receives, we can go directly to our audience and bypass the media, and how our stakeholders would gobble up every word of every long report we wrote because they cared. Meanwhile, reporters could write their 500-word article based on our 400-word press release and intersperse the comments and opinions of our competitors and analysts.

Hindsight has proven me to be 100 percent correct — in fact, in some ways more than I could even imagine.

Yes, we can print our press releases on our websites and have them indexed by Google so anyone searching for a book or product or service like yours could actually find the original source material exactly as we positioned it, free from interpretation or misinterpretation from the media.

Yes, we could even send the press release to our followers via email and newsletters. Today, of course, we can use social media, as well, to tell the world what we are up to.

And yes, our followers could indeed follow us back in 1994 by joining our e-zine lists.

Technology had its upside and downside. We could easily send press releases and pitch letters to hundreds or thousands of reporters for free because email is free. And unfortunately, too many PR people actually did this. This was a bad move for reporters, PR people and clients.

TODAY’S PERSPECTIVE, TODAY’S OPPORTUNITIES

So that brings us to today. How can we use technology to improve our media relations and get the visibility we need to sell more products more easily?

First of all, social media is a key. Reporters blog and tweet. You need to be following the 5 or 10 reporters who really matter to you.

Read their stuff.

Comment.

Befriend them.

You will stand out from the thousands of lazy PR people who blanket the emailosphere – is that even a word? — with untargeted pitch letters. You’ll be rewarded in two ways:

  1. When you pitch reporters, they very well might remember you and listen to you.
  2. Some reporters are posting their own requests for information to their followers.

GOOGLE CHANGES EVERYTHING

People go to search engines to find people like you who offer services they want. In fact, they probably use search engines more than they use the media to find new products and services. After all, you can’t count on the New York Times running an article about how to be a better parent on just the day you think you need to be a better parent. That’s what search engines are for.

Reporters type, “How can I be a better parent?” and they find an article you wrote or an article you were quoted in that has a link pointing back to your website. Or they see a press release you published on your website or had reprinted on a media site.

More about that tactic later.

The point is that they find you or a competitor on Google. So now you have to think about how to stand out on Google.

Google is as famous for their secret formula on how to rank websites as Coca Cola is about their secret recipe for Coke, or McDonald’s is for their Big Mac sauce. However, nearly all SEO gurus agree that one key factor is the number of quality websites that link to your website. So if you get a link from me, that’s nice. If you get a link from the person sitting next to you, that’s nice. But, if you get a link from the Boston Business Journal or CNBC.com, that’s fantastic.

So how do you get those great hits? Two ways:

  1. Choose the right keywords.
  2. Send the press release to a place that prints press releases.

I’ll explain. 

KEYWORDS CHANGE EVERYTHING

Are you a marketing guru hoping that prospects find you on Google? I hope not! Did you realize that only 6,600 searches are conducted each month for the term “marketing guru”?

Don’t feel bad, though. The terms “online marketing guru,” “social media guru” and “PR guru” have even fewer searches!

I found this out when I researched keywords for Terri Langhans, who said she is frequently referred to as a “marketing guru” when she is introduced at her speeches and workshops by overzealous emcees. She said she hates the term and wouldn’t mind finding a more popular term for her press release that promotes her new conference, “Help Them Hire You: A 24-Hour Marketing Retreat.”

What are people looking for? If you’re a “marketing expert,” you’ll fare better with 14,800 monthly searches. However if you want to get real traffic, consider using “marketing consultant,” which tips the scales at 74,000 monthly searches. That’s a far cry from “marketing guru,” by nearly 4 times as many searches.

If marketing is a numbers game, then consider the numbers for popular keywords.

You can do this kind of research to find the most sought-after terms that describe who you are, what you do, the market you serve and how they will benefit. Or you can hire me to do that for you. Or you can attend a webinar where I’ll show you how to do this research yourself. Click here for info.

By the way, don’t even think of using “Marketing for Dummies.” It has only 14,000 searches. 

PRESS RELEASES CHANGE EVERYTHING

Remember I said there were media sites that print press releases? It’s true. There are nearly 100 media websites, ranging from the business journals to CNBC.com and TV stations with websites that print nearly every press release they receive from PR Newswire.

Why do they do this?

I’m guessing they do it for the same reasons you do:

  • They want to inform their audience so they become the must-go place for news.
  • They realize that Google ranks a site higher if it has more content. So for the same reason you want to rank higher than your competitor, CNBC.com wants to rank higher than CNN or Fox or any other network. They have competition too!

We’ve been very successful in getting our clients’ press releases printed on these websites. In turn, these sites rank high for the search terms we explored for our clients. There’s a wall of fame on my website that shows this on my blog: www.PressReleaseSender.com

More importantly, the press releases and SEO tactics get more traffic for my clients, which results in more sales. It must be working, because they keep on ordering more press releases.

It’s the combination of keywords and a willing media that lead to success. You can’t have one without the other. If you can do SEO, that’s great. If not, come to me. I can help you. I can also get discounts on PR Newswire, since I buy in bulk. Check out more info at www.PressReleaseSender.com

DEVICES CHANGE EVERYTHING

Many reporters now use tiny little phones, not computers, to interact with the world. Just like you. And those tiny, little phones have tiny, little displays.

That means that if you have a long subject line for your pitch letter, it might be truncated and they won’t be able to figure out what your subject line really says.

That means that if you have a press release with lots of pictures, it might not display properly.

Have you ever received a message on your iPhone asking you to download the rest of a message? I have. Chances are I won’t download or even read the message if it is from someone I don’t know.

YOUTUBE CHANGES EVERYTHING

On the other hand, technology opens more doors. Steven Spangler has appeared on “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” a zillion times. He’s the science guy and has cool toys or tools or experiments. How did he achieve such success?

Well, he didn’t send a press release or a pitch letter. Fortunately, he didn’t send an exploding box.

He did post videos on YouTube showing his toys in action. And some of them did explode. On purpose.

Ellen’s producers found the videos and they invited him onto the show. He was a good guest and they invited him back and back and back.

The lesson is simple: Post your content on the Web. If it’s good, producers and reporters will find you. So will your prospects.

One last piece of advice: Don’t send anything to reporters that explodes. That would not be a good use of technology.

To read my latest thoughts, please subscribe to my weekly e-zine, “Dan Janal’s Irreverent Monday Marketing Memo.” You’ll receive it every Monday. It’s a fun read.

Opportunities & Elbow Grease: Getting Visibility for a Start-Up

Breathless reporting from SXSW 2007 - Twitter hit 60,000 messages per day at the event.

A discussion over on Quora about generating visibility for a start ups has garnered answers from some heavyweights (the founders of Twitter and FourSquare have weighed in.)  But no magic wands or silver bullets were revealed – at their heart, the launches are tales of savvy tactics that recognized (and capitalized upon) opportunity – and hard work.

Evan Williams of Twitter noted that the company launched in mid-2006, “….to a whimper.”  In March of 2007, the company went to South By Southwest Interactive (SXSWi) and got creative.  Williams, noting (correctly) that the action at this event isn’t on the exhibit floor, it’s in the hallways (and indeed, on the sidewalks, at the parties and in the BBQ joints) sunk $11,000 into flat panel displays in the hallways that showed a “Twitter visualizer.”    In addition, the company ensured a positive and interesting experience,  enabling attendees to send a text that would pop up on the screens.  And they took it a step further – those who sent a text would be automatically following a group of ambassadors who were also at SXSWi.

This story is interesting in its own right – the Twitter team created a totally new experience for SXSWi attendees.  However,  Evans also noted in his answer that they had noticed that seemingly all of their users were going to SXSWi, and that’s how team Twitter decided to double down, as Evans said, in Austin.

Listening to your audience and knowing where they are (in this case, SXSWi) is a critical component to successfully building visibility for a small company or a start up.  As another commenter in the Quora thread noted,  SXSWi isn’t the place to launch enterprise software.

Dennis Crowley of FourSquare also related his company’s experience at SXSWi, which was just as inspired as Twitter’s approach, but different in every way.   From getting FourSquare live before SXSWi (they were coding at the airport and on the runway, and flipped the switch on FourSquare just before SXSWi opened), the FourSquare team hustled.   How did they get the word out?  Simple – word of mouth.  Simple, but not easy.

” Start telling friends and stranger to try out your app, ” Crowley advises. “You can do this via word-of-mouth, stickers, flyers, etc.  FYI – We spent $0 on marketing and only did word-of-mouth.”

Crowley also noted that the FourSquare team was all over Twitter, searching for what people were saying about the app, and replying directly to them.  In particular, he advises relying to as many Tweets about features and support requests as possible.  “Get people to spread the love.”

FourSquare turned SXSW 2010 into a giant game.

Providing great customer service is a tactic for start up that more than one marketing pro I queried recommended.  Creating delight is a good way to spark positive online commentary from your new customers.

But what if you’re not unveiling a groovy new social network at SXSW?  Many I spoke to said don’t forget traditional PR, and they’re right.  Well done, a good  PR campaign results in credible publicity that reaches your target audiences.

Reid Neubert, owner of Reid Neubert & Friends, a Bay Area marketing agency, recalled his experience with a successful software start up.  Public relations was a key part of a strategic mix that also included advertising and direct marketing.

“We built relationships with journalists and editors as resources for them (rather than always pitching something,) he continued. “We were often contacted for information and referrals when they needed industry information or expertise, and as a result always included in or quoted in related stories.”

As a result of the PR campaign, coupled with the active and focused trade show and marketing efforts, Neubert noted that within six months of product launch, the company was seen as a major player within its vertical.

“We all hear stories about companies that seem to have come out of nowhere and become overnight successes, he noted, “But usually there is an incredible amount of work that went into those successes. There aren’t any shortcuts.”

The approach Neubert relayed was disciplined and focused. Discipline was also a recurring theme in other conversations that led to this blog post. And building some discipline around goal-setting and planning is also a key piece of the puzzle.

Paul Weber, CEO at Entrepreneur Advertising Group, related details of his own company’s disciplined approach to launching, which started with the number of new clients needed, and then focused on filling the funnel with prospects.

“Literally, with no clients and little money to spend we calculated the number of events we needed to attend, the number of people we needed to meet, the number of direct sales meetings and the resulting close rate of new clients,” he said. “From that point on it was all about discipline in following the plan.”

The kind of elbow grease that really is the key to making or breaking a campaign.  Taking the time to target the right journalists and bloggers with relevant, personalized pitches takes time, but it works.  Observing and listening to your audiences online takes deliberation and patience – but reveals the pain points and opportunities that, when answered, can fuel success.

Have you hit a PR home run with a start up? Let’s hear the details!

Authored by Sarah Skerik, VP social media, PR Newswire.  See you in Austin at SXSWi March 10 – 15.

Follow the Quora discussion: http://www.quora.com/What-is-the-process-involved-in-launching-a-start-up-at-SXSW

Are you building a plan to publicize your start up? Earlier this year, PR Newswire launched the PR Toolkit for Entrepreneurs, an affordable service that helps entrepreneurs and small businesses effectively promote and publicize their products and services online.  The toolkit combines information on  how to write press releases, work with the media, raise your profile as an expert and plan an economical PR campaign with a set of low-cost online visibility services.