Skip to Content
Why does this site appear as text-only?
Lincoln Bicentennial | 1809-2009 | Live the Legacy
Licoln's Life
Licoln's Legacy
Learning About Licoln
For Kids
The Bicentennial
The Bicentennial
Menu 26 Begins - Skip Menu
Programs & Events
April 19, 2010
Lincoln and Juárez
Morrill Act Conference
Lincoln and the American Dream
Oxford Conference
Rededication Retrospective
Howard Conference
Marian Anderson Tribute Concert
February 12, 2009
Lincoln Memorial Rededication
Breakfast Tribute
Bicameral Congressional Tribute
National Teach-in
With Malice Toward None Exhibit
Poetry Event
Mother's Day Tribute
Kentucky Inaugural
Virtual Hodgenville
Early Bicentennial Programs
Commemorative Coins and Stamps
New Lincoln Penny
Commemorative Coin
Commemorative Stamps
Town Hall Series
Endorsed Programs
Process
National Exhibits
States
Speakers Pool
Members
ALBC & C-SPAN
Video Archive
Get Involved in Your Community
For Community Wide Celebrations
Community Promotion
Bicentennial Links
Menu 26 Ends
Donate
Volunteer
Sign Up
For Teachers
Community Promotion
Be Media Savvy
Do:
Be honest and direct.
Follow up with reporters and other contacts a week after and say “I am (your name) from (name of your organization) following up on the news release that I sent you last week to ensure that you have received it. It is our hope that you will inform your readers about the Abraham Lincoln Day commemoration on February 12 and the programs available to them.”
Be brief in conversation and voicemail messages, provide your name, organization, and phone number, and state clearly why you are calling.
Be gracious. There is a fine line between being assertive and being pushy.
Do Not:
Confuse publicity with advertising.
Send your Abraham Lincoln Day materials to a media outlet without pinpointing the most appropriate reporters to receive them.
Send your press release as an attachment to an e-mail (most reporters prefer e-mails with the content embedded in the message).
Assume that the media will cover your programs. They have many requests for coverage on their desks and need to know why your program deserves attention.
Opportunities:
Get information about upcoming public meetings (such as PTA meetings and school board sessions) and contact organizers to obtain time on the agenda to give a short public announcement about Abraham Lincoln Day.
Use your press kit materials as the basis for information packets you may want to send to potential sponsors and partners and hand out at a program or event.