0 1 00:00:00,480 --> 00:00:04,720 Now I've summarize some of the things here that have been voiced by journalists 1 2 00:00:04,830 --> 00:00:10,710 and if you want to have a look in more detail about the way that a journalist thinks, have a look at 2 3 00:00:10,710 --> 00:00:16,410 this blog piece which I've linked in the text below from Mike Butcher who is the editor at large at 3 4 00:00:16,410 --> 00:00:18,820 Techcrunch. And he's a really great guy 4 5 00:00:18,840 --> 00:00:25,260 who writes some really interesting pieces and he certainly get swamped by startups or founders trying 5 6 00:00:25,260 --> 00:00:27,300 to pitch their company or their app or whatever. 6 7 00:00:27,510 --> 00:00:33,130 And he created this blog post that acts as a guideline to how you should approach pitching journalists. 7 8 00:00:33,210 --> 00:00:38,760 And he also has this little checklist at the end which is really useful full of things that you should 8 9 00:00:38,820 --> 00:00:43,680 answer in your pitch or at least think about before you start pitching a journalist. 9 10 00:00:43,740 --> 00:00:49,850 So take a look at that and start following some of what I would say best practice for pitching journalists. 10 11 00:00:49,860 --> 00:00:56,700 Now the final thing I'm going to say is that if you're interested in the way that journalism works currently 11 12 00:00:56,790 --> 00:01:02,980 and how the game of getting press actually works, then this is a great book that I would highly recommend. 12 13 00:01:03,060 --> 00:01:09,600 It's called Trust me I'm lying by Ryan Holiday who is a really accomplished young guy actually. 13 14 00:01:09,660 --> 00:01:15,790 He was the head of marketing at American Apparel when he was only 20 and did some great stuff for them. 14 15 00:01:16,020 --> 00:01:20,450 But essentially in this book what they talk about is the way that modern journalism works. 15 16 00:01:20,460 --> 00:01:22,880 The klick chasing journalism. 16 17 00:01:22,920 --> 00:01:28,980 And he talks about some pretty underground ways or hacky ways that he went about getting some major 17 18 00:01:28,980 --> 00:01:35,880 coverage in on national TV or national newspapers simply by creating a sort of sensationalist piece 18 19 00:01:35,940 --> 00:01:42,780 which he leaks to some small the blogs which gets syndicated by larger blogs which then gets read by 19 20 00:01:42,780 --> 00:01:47,760 journalists at The Washington Post or The New York Times and then before you know the news piece is on 20 21 00:01:47,760 --> 00:01:50,080 NBC. So have a read of that. 21 22 00:01:50,100 --> 00:01:56,340 It goes into a lot more detail than what I can do in this course but it's both insightful as well as 22 23 00:01:56,340 --> 00:02:00,010 practical on how you can leverage the press in the modern day.