PR for Startups Event – Videos

This evening Kristin Maverick hosted a nextNY event, “PR for Startups”. The basic overview for the panel was, “Tools and tricks that work, what you need to know, what you can do on your own, when it’s time to bring in outside help or hire someone devoted to PR for your company.” You can read the full overview for the event on the nextNY website. There are some tweets from the event as well.

I will leave my post-event thoughts for another day. I have posted the videos (~90 minutes) from the event below. I split it into four sections for easy viewing. Here are the speakers listed from left to right:

  • Rose Gordon, News Editor, PR Week
  • Gillian Reagan, Reporter, The New York Observer
  • Adam Isserlis, Director of Digital Media, Rubenstein Communications
  • Peter Himler, Founder/Principal at Flatiron Communications LLC
  • Sabrina Horn, President, The Horn Group
  • Chantelle Karl, PR Manager, East Coast, Yelp
  • Mary Kathleen Flynn, Senior Editor, The Deal
  • Jay Kolbe, Vice President, Weber Shandwick

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

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3 COMMENTS
  1. Maggie says:

    ton of video – wow

  2. Amy Ziari says:

    Thanks for pointing this out to me, Allen. I somehow managed to make it all the way through!

    As someone who does startup/tech PR and you being on the receiving end of so much of it, can’t wait to hear your thoughts in your followup.

  3. Sabrina Horn says:

    Last Thursday night, I was very proud to be a part of an event called “PR for Startups” in which fellow PR professionals and members of the media discussed how and why startups should use PR to help grow their business. Amid a lively 90-minute discussion, an audience of entrepreneurs gained insight into how to make PR work for their needs specifically, whether they should hire a full-service PR agency or handle PR in-house.

    Hosted by NextNY, the event took place at Rubenstein’s offices in Midtown and my fellow panelists included: Rose Gordon, News Editor, PR Week; Gillian Reagan, Reporter, The New York Observer; Adam Isserlis, Director of Digital Media, Rubenstein Communications; Peter Himler, Founder/Principal at Flatiron Communications LLC; Chantelle Karl, PR Manager, East Coast, Yelp; Mary Kathleen Flynn, Senior Editor, The Deal; and, Jay Kolbe, Vice President, Weber Shandwick.

    More than anything, I think what the audience learned is that the most important decision startups should make is to decide what their business strategy is and what they want out of PR. A full-time firm might be overkill for small companies with a market-specific product. Startups need to decide who they want to reach and why they want to reach them. What are your business objectives? What influencers do you want to reach? Do you need a comprehensive communications or will hiring a freelancer for a few hours a week suffice? At Horn Group, we often advise potential clients to wait longer before hiring a firm because they might not need it and all the services and costs associated with hiring an agency may simply just be overkill at the earliest stages.

    Another vital point I’d like to stress to any company regardless of stage is that PR is more than just publicity. PR is market strategy, positioning, competitive differentiation, a social media campaign, crisis communications, customer reference programs, analyst relations, financial relations and so much more: not just getting a hit in The New York Times or The Wall Street Journal. While it’s true that any CEO could probably contact the tech editor at a major daily newspaper and secure an interview, firms like ours offer much more than just a big hit. We work with our clients to develop a strategic communications program that will make a big splash in the areas of importance to your company and then keep the momentum going well beyond that. If you’re starting a company, you have to decide if you’re prepared for that level of communication. Some start ups have the go to market strategy and board-level directive that requires that kind of effort, others just need to create a little buzz in the market to get things going. Either is ok – it just depends on what kind of business you have and what your goals are.

    I’d like to thank my fellow panelists for a fantastic discussion, NextNY for organizing the event, and the entrepreneurs who attended for their interest. Thanks, Sabrina

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