How to get your book or other product into Target

target store
If you sell a book or other product that’s a good fit with customers who shop at Target, you have a lot of work to do.

For starters, you should be pitching a story to the Minneapolis Star Tribune that ties into what you’re selling. That’s because most buyers for Target live in Minneapolis, where the chain is headquartered, and most of them read the local daily newspaper.

Let’s say the Star Tribune prints a story.  The long, arduous job of winning coveted shelf space in Target is just beginning and could take a year or more.

It will require a formal presentation to a buyer.  At that meeting, you must provide details for your advertising and publicity campaigns, as well as your plans for marketing, merchandising, in-store demos, point-of-sale displays, giveaways, promotion with credit cards, special events and more.

Unless you’re a huge household name, Target is unlikely to include you in their circulars or advertising, so you will have to help sell your products at Target through your own efforts and use every trick up your Publicity Hound sleeve.

Margie Zable Fisher, president of Zable Fisher Public Relations in Boca Raton, Florida, may well be one of the foremost experts on getting your books and other products into Target stores.

When a potential client asked Margie for help getting her products into Target, Margie could barely find any information.  She spent hours researching the topic and talked to current and former Target buyers, manufacturers and distributors, licensing companies, sales rep companies and more.  Most of them asked her to use the information anonymously.

The result of her research is the special report “Skyrocket Your Sales by Getting Your Product in Target.”  It shows you, step-by-step, how to do it, even if you’re a small business.

I love Target, and I found the report fascinating. The next time I shop there, I’ll be looking at the merchandise a whole new way. She even teaches you how to search the shelves for valuable clues about the kinds of products Target loves.

Even Guy Kawasaki, Entrepreneur magazine’s “Wise Guy” columnist, endorses the report.

It’s only $49, a real deal considering that the initial order for Target stores is often 9,000 products or more.

What? You say you’d rather sell to Wal-Mart? Buy the report and you’ll get 7 tips on how to sell to Wal-Mart.

By the way, if Target, Wal-Mart or any of the other big box stores accepts your product, that’s a terrific story for your trade journals and business publications.

Songwriter needs to reach music supervisors, film execs

Tamra Engle of Oakland, California writes:

Tamra Engle“I’ve worked for over 25 years as a musician. But the ‘rock star’ in the mirror is now in her late 40s, but still able to crank out tunes that TV, films and new media are willing to pay me for. I write songs to pitch to the few TV/film folks I am establishing relationships with.

“So my publicity focus is to that very small behind-the-scenes group of music supervisors and film producers who can give me the work, as well as any other company that needs music for their corporate presentation, video game, or whatever. What, pray tell, are the best publicity tactics I can use to convince those people I’m their gal? I have gotten on to blogs like The Muse’s Muse and ProBlogger, I have a monthly newsletter that I send out to my fan base and have generated a few press releases to industry trades.

“Your Hounds can read about me and hear samples of some of my personal as well as TV music at my website if that helps them formulate some suggestions.”

How to pitch bloggers–21 tips

Darren Rowse of ProBlogger offers a comprehensive list of almost two dozen excellent tips for anyone pitching bloggers.

Most bloggers say they hate being referred to as journalists. But when you read his tips, you’ll notice how many of them also apply to pitching journalists.

Entrepreneur’s Almanac features press release tips

When  Jacquelyn Lynn contacted me asking if she could include some of my press release tips from the free tutorial “89 Ways to Write Powerful Press Releases” in her book “The Entrepreneur’s Almanac 2008-2009–Fundamental Facts, and Figures You Need to Run and Grow Your Business,” I  jumped at the chance.

Being included in authors’ books ranks right up there as one of the best ways to generate publicity for whatever it is you’re doing or selling. That’s because books have a long shelf life.

I’m mentioned in more than 40 books, and the mentions continue to generate leads many years after the books were published.  If you’re an expert who has advice to share, you can find your way into books, too. Here are more publicity tips on how to get mentioned in books.

In Jacqueline’s book, I’m on pages 225 and 226. 

The entire book is chock full of resource boxes, tips lists and helpful advice for entrepreneurs large and small. 

FEMA’s phony press conference a PR disaster

Talk about a PR disaster.

FEMA, the federal disaster agency, created its own when it staged a phony press conference last week in which FEMA employees posed as reporters and threw soft-ball questions at agency leaders so they could tell us what a good job they were doing at the California fires.

During yesterday’s commentary on “Face the Nation” on CBS,  Bob Schieffer had a good suggestion for FEMA: fire the flaks who were responsible for this mess.  And if the agency wants to generate authentic publicity, send whichever PR people are left to California to help the fire victims. 

“Somewhere on their employment application form there must be a clause that says “Your IQ must be below a certain level to work here.”

Thanks to James Romenesko for the heads-up on this one.

Speaking of press conferences, the majority of them are a huge waste of time unless you’re dumping bad news and giving all media the same story.  Far better to stage an interesting media event that they’ll really care about. (See  “Creative Alternatives to Boring News Conferences.”)