S8 Ep6: How to Navigate the PR Timeline for Maximum Exposure with Kourtney Jason

 “You have to give something away to get someone in.” —Kourtney Jason

For any small business, getting noticed isn't easy. Between all the noise online and in their communities, it's hard for owners to get their message heard. Hence, increasing visibility through smart PR and marketing can really help spread the word. When more potential customers learn about what the business has to offer, it leads to more opportunities for sales, growth, and success.

This week, Justine chats with Kourtney Jason about getting publicity for small businesses and authors. Kourtney is the Co-Founder of Pacific & Court, a boutique book publicity and digital marketing firm based in Brooklyn. She helps small businesses and independent authors and publishers to expand their media outreach through various digital marketing services.

Tune in as Justine and Kourtney discuss strategies for restaurants and startups to create buzz, the importance of following up, and tips for pitching media effectively. They also outline the PR process for hiring an agency and managing expectations as well as insights on digital advertising and maximizing publicity opportunities.

Connect with Kourtney:

Kourtney Jason is the President and Co-Founder of Pacific & Court. With more than 13 years of experience as a publicist, she has worked with and represented celebrities, world-renowned chefs, and bestselling authors. She led the in-house publicity departments at Ulysses Press and Time Inc. Books, and further honed her strategic communications skills at Bread & Butter and Smith Publicity agencies. 

Since its launch in 2021, P&C’s publisher clients have included Ulysses Press, KeyPress Publishing, Jesse B. Creative, The Collective Book Studio, Rocky Nook, Dzanc Books, and more. She’s secured coverage for clients in top-tier national media that includes the TODAY show, Associated Press, People magazine, NPR, The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, CNN, Oprah Daily, Salon, Reader’s Digest, and much more. 

Her past work includes high-profile authors such as country music icon Martina McBride, actress Valerie Bertinelli, chef Todd Richards, TODAY’s Siri Daly, New York Times bestselling authors Syd and Shea McGee (of Studio McGee) among others. She is the author of five non-fiction books, including Lights Camera Booze: Drinking Games for Your Favorite Movies, which was included in the Academy Awards swag bags. She lives in Brooklyn, NY.

Episode Highlights:

02:41 People and Perspectives

06:39 PR Strategies for Small Businesses and Entrepreneurs

11:17 The Importance of a Well-Written Pitch  

16:03 The Importance of Building Long-Term Relationships with Professionals

20:08 How to Make Advertising Less Intimidating

Tweets:

Getting noticed as a small business is tough - there's so much competition! Discover smart PR hacks and tips to increase your visibility and attract more customers as you grow with @jreichman and Kourtney Jason, the President and Co-Founder of @pacificandcourt. #podcast #entrepreneurship #socialgood #inspiration #impactmatters #NextGenChef #EssentialIngredients #Season8 #PacificAndCourt ##SmallBusinessPR
#SmallBusinessMarketing #OnlineVisibility

Inspirational Quotes:

07:23 “You have to give something away to get someone in.” —Kourtney Jason

08:35 “You have to be willing to have faith, you have to be willing to take a chance.” —Justine Reichman 

09:32 “Follow up is truly the most important because it's so easy for emails to get buried to be forgotten to fall by the wayside.” —Kourtney Jason  

09:56 “Follow-up is a whole job in of itself.” —Justine Reichman

15:04 “There's no guarantees with PR. You cannot promise the world to people and people expect the world. That's a very big misnomer.” —Justine Reichman

22:37 “Social media gives such detailed opportunities to create an audience.” —Kourtney Jason

Transcriptions:

Justine Reichman: Good morning, and welcome to Essential Ingredients. I'm your host, Justine Reichman. Today with me is Kourtney Jason. She is the Co-Founder of Pacific and Court. 

Welcome, Kourtney.

Kourtney Jason: Thank you so much for having me, Justine. I'm excited to be here.

Justine Reichman: I'm excited to have you here. I do just want to share with everybody, because I just learned where her name came from. I just felt like it connects us in so many ways, Pacific and Court. Kourtney is from California. I live in California. Kourtney now lives in New York in Brooklyn, and I now live in California. And the name of her PR firm is Pacific and Court, which connects not only where she is in her location, but us.

Kourtney Jason: Correct. I love that intersection. We love coincidences.

Justine Reichman: It is. It's a very happy coincidence. So Kourtney, for those listening, if you could introduce yourself, your position and what you do.

Kourtney Jason: I'm the President and Co Founder of Pacific and Court. We're a boutique book publicity and digital marketing firm based here in Brooklyn. So we work with independent authors and independent publishers to promote their books, getting media attention, helping drive awareness in traffic and increase sales across our digital marketing services. And we work with pretty much all genres. Nonfiction is a specialty. Cookbooks are one of my bread and butter and where a lot of my background comes from. We work with books and authors. And yeah, I love what we do. Why books and authors? That's where my career came from. I moved to New York, first started as an entertainment journalist and realized magazines. Sadly, we're just quickly disappearing. I pivoted over to the PR side of things fully understanding what that journalist and publicist relationship is like, and having built those relationships through the first few years of my career. I joined an independent publisher in California, their original offices in Berkeley, California, and I helped them grow to New York. So now, we share office space with them in New York. My work there for six years outgrew that position, went to another independent publisher, then they merged with another media company, then I went to the agency side. And then through COVID, started my own thing.

Justine Reichman: That's quite a journey. And really, it gives you a sense. I always think as much for myself when we work for other people. We work both on the client side and on the agency side, or the publishing, all the different sides of the coin. It gives us an opportunity to look at it from multiple perspectives.

Kourtney Jason: Absolutely. And you never know what you're going to learn in each situation. There was an agency that I worked at for just nine months, I thought that the book industry felt unstable to me. And so I was like, well, I've worked with so many cookbooks, chefs and food writers. Well, let me go see if I can do hospitality PR. So I did that for nine months, and then COVID took that away. I don't think I was supposed to be at that company longer than I was because I learned exactly what I needed. I learned how to do a proposal. I knew how to do a new business call with a potential client. There were so many skill sets that I learned from that job that had I not had that job, I wouldn't have been as prepared to start.

Justine Reichman: I think back to the days around 2000 when I worked at PWC. And one of the greatest takeaways I had from my time there, because I'd worked in family business, I had worked at PR blind communications when it was KBP. That's probably pre-dating you. But my point is that by working at either line communications or working in PWC, there are really hard skills that you learn. You learn how to organize, you learn how to create documents that you can share, you create processes that you can then use when you go and create these other companies. And to me, that was some of the greatest. It allowed me to have a solid foundation and know how to organize and compartmentalize.

Kourtney Jason: With learning that structure and process, you can also figure out, well, here's the way I would improve on top of that, or here's one way that I want to make it more personalized for my background or my skill set and really make it your own.

Justine Reichman: Totally. So now you're in publishing and you do PR for people in the food business whether they're chefs, whether they're cooks. Is it all nonfiction?

Kourtney Jason: We do all genres. We do some fiction, but my background really comes from nonfiction. So I've spent the last 10 plus years of my career with the focus on nonfiction. We do more fiction now. That is a skill set that I've definitely taken the last few years to learn more about that process. It's very interesting. The comparison is fiction, I think you're pitching more of the story. What I've always liked more about nonfiction or just what's different to me is that you're pitching the person like you. I always like to joke that you can't interview a book, it's about the person behind it. Fiction is so much more about what is the story in this book, where nonfiction is, okay, but who is this expert? Why do they have the expertise to write about this? What's their background? What's their story? What sort of service or message are they trying to tell? And that I think it's just so much fun.

Justine Reichman: Yeah, I couldn't agree more. You learn a lot about the person, the insight. Yeah, their perspective. And it's super interesting. I don't just say that because I'm writing a book.

Kourtney Jason: Which will save that conversation.

Justine Reichman: But that's a different conversation. I appreciate hearing that. And actually going through the proposal and writing the proposal, you really learned that it's about the people writing the book and who they are. What do they have to offer? And will they help promote it? Who are they following? All these different things that I didn't think or give enough credit to. And I think going through that process is quite an education for people. Because I think, at least I was surprised. I'm assuming other people are surprised about what wait things play into that. So I'd love to just start off with whether we have a small business, or somebody that's a new author which I think we should actually separate, put them into two different buckets. Let's start with small businesses. Whether it's a restaurant, a hot new restaurant coming up in New York, they're talking about it, or they're talking about it here. But it's like a small pop up, how do those people without being recognized, if they haven't been on Top Chef, or they haven't won some sort of award, think about getting the word out to create a buzz and some PR for whatever they're building?

“You have to give something away to get someone in.” —Kourtney Jason

Kourtney Jason: I really think it's about the invite. When I was doing restaurant PR, I was in the process of doing a restaurant launch. It was inviting the media in like you have to be ready to comp some meals across both restaurants and books. You have to give something away to get someone in. We're sending review copies of books for free. There's no guarantee that there'll be a review, but we hope that there is. And then similarly with restaurants, it's inviting someone to make that really special experience through a drink, through a plate, through a dish. And then hoping through a very good experience that they would write about it, share it on social and create that word of mouth buzz that

Justine Reichman: Celebrities play, and that's for people.

Kourtney Jason: We definitely have some books that we send to influencers with the hope that they'll share, and it is so impactful. And sometimes, you can do it without a budget. But sometimes, what is your budget for me to post this?

Justine Reichman: I don't know what your breadth of knowledge is for small CPG companies, or just other people in the world building better for your businesses for food businesses in particular, and what you might recommend, or what kind of tips you might suggest for those people that want to create brand awareness, want to get their name of knowing full well that it's never a guarantee with PR. You have to be willing to have faith, you gotta be willing to take a chance.

Kourtney Jason: There has to be patience. That's the first thing. It's not going to happen overnight across anything that you're sending out for review, whether it is a product food wise, or a book. It's like a six step process, essentially. There's the pitch, there's the response. There's the mailing of the item, there's receiving the item. Giving that person time to enjoy the item, and then the follow up, and then hopefully getting the coverage. So there are some things that can happen pretty quickly whether you're pitching a podcast reviewer doing a podcast interview, or sharing a recipe for excerpts, or trying to secure a TV segment for a cooking demo. Those things can happen pretty fast. But when you're wanting that very specific product review, that is what takes the longest.

Justine Reichman: You really do have to be patient, and you have to have a good following through it.

“Follow up is truly the most important because it's so easy for emails to get buried to be forgotten to fall by the wayside.” —Kourtney Jason 

Kourtney Jason: The follow up I think is truly the most important because it's so easy for emails to get buried, to be forgotten and to fall by the wayside. And unless you're, I'm constantly sending myself reminders in my email just to be like, okay, if I don't hear back from this person, I will follow up with them in a week just to low friendly check in. Sorry to bug you, but let me know where we're at with this.

Justine Reichman: Yeah, I think it's a challenge to follow if it's like a whole job and of itself. Yeah, be honest. I need to do this on Wednesday. I haven't heard from this person. So for those entrepreneurs that are trying to be scrappy and want to do PR, what is an accessible way? What is an entry way, a point of entry for those folks?

Kourtney Jason: I think it's making sure you're taking the time to do the research whether it's local media, or if you're looking a little wider regionally or nationally. Knowing who those people are that are covering similar stories to what you're doing. So I recommend setting up Google Alerts like that. I'm working with a longtime client of mine, she just launched her own podcast this year. So we're working on promoting that, but she's a friendship expert. So I just set up Google alerts for just the word friendship. So then I'm seeing what is the conversation about friendship out there, who's writing about friendship. And so every day I'm getting this list of resources, outlets and contacts that are covering something similar so that I know who to reach out to, but you can do that with really any topic. I set it up for gift guides every year. I set it up for just the best book roundups. So you could set it up for cocktails, and just start finding those outlets, okay, and then make a note. Make a mental note, make a list of. When I'm ready to pitch this person, now I know what they're working on, that gives you the chance to make it more personalized. And that will help you have a much higher success rate of response and coverage.

Justine Reichman: How challenging is it for these folks that are in startups, or have startups that maybe don't have the same relationships. Haven't been emailing Bonnie, or Sarah, or Jane, or whoever for all these years, and they're coming at it cold. How is their email received?

Kourtney Jason: As long as it's written well to the point, it will be received. Well, freelance writers are definitely, their inboxes are flooded with pitches, but a good pitch and a good subject line. The subject line is so important. That's what makes it stand out. Making sure it's tailored, making sure it's on point that you're going to the right person and you should either say like, though, you might not get a response, but you could very well get a response. It's like, thank you so much. I will keep this in mind when I'm working on an article for X, Y, and Z. Especially with freelance writers and food writers, they're used to that. So it's just having something that's good that will stand out to them.

Justine Reichman: It's really important to have a good subject line. Let's just use my podcast, for example, Essential Ingredients. What would you say would be a good subject line for that if we wanted to pitch the podcast? I don't know. I'm just making it up as trying to come up with something that we can get an example of to get a little insight so that others can be inspired to do it for themselves.

Kourtney Jason: Say that you were launching the podcast. I would start with a new podcast launch, and then Essential Ingredients is the hot new show for foodies, or a must listen for foodies. Something that's short and snappy, but that's really putting your message as succinctly as possible, but also as enticing as possible.

Justine Reichman: I get that. That sounds good. And so you mentioned a well written pitch letter. Is there some rhyme or reason on how we do this? Is there some set of rules that we need to follow?

Kourtney Jason: Make sure that there are no typos. Make sure that you have the person's name spelled correctly.; I get many emails sent to me with Courtney with a C, and I totally get it.

Justine Reichman: But my biggest pet peeve, I'm not Justin, I'm just Justine with letter E.

Kourtney Jason: Exactly. That's an immediate delete if you get anyone's name wrong, but keeping it short and sweet. Go in with the first sentence or two that's like something that will get them to keep reading, that will get them to read the second paragraph. Thinking of it as what is a journalism article? What is the news article that you're writing? So you do want to write your pitch in a very newsy way of what are the facts.

Justine Reichman: My podcast has already launched. But since we use that example, for all those people, whether it's a new product or a new launch, what is the format for that in that pitch?

Kourtney Jason: Saying a little bit about your background. It has launched a new podcast, Essential Ingredients, and then what is the service of it. What is the listener gonna get out of it? So putting in that service, that news hook, what is different? What is your key message? If someone is only reading this one sentence, what is it that you want them to know?

“There's no guarantees with PR. You cannot promise the world to people and people expect the world. That's a very big misnomer.” —Justine Reichman

Justine Reichman: Okay, I think that that really breaks it down for our listeners so that if they're in a startup environment, they can start to do this themselves before they reach out. Now let's talk about going and getting an agency or someone like yourself as a professional. What does that process look like? What could we expect back from it in terms of PR. Because again, I really want to stress, there's no guarantees with PR, you cannot really promise the world's people, and people expect the world. Yeah. So I think that's a very big misnomer for free.

Kourtney Jason: I appreciate you saying that because that is so true. It's an investment. And hopefully that investment, there is a return on that. But like you said, there's no guarantee if there was. Life would be so much easier and we would all be just running these successful businesses. You just never know. But when you're looking for an agency, it's so much about relationships. The process is whether we've reached out to someone because we really want to work with them or work with their book, or we have an incoming message from an author that's interested in PR. Our first step is setting up a new business call. So that's me asking questions about, what are your goals? What is your wish list? Pie in the sky a list media, where do you dream of being featured? I do really want them to be honest with what their biggest goal is so that I do know what I'm working for. But also, it helps me understand if they have unrealistic goals. You never want the client that's like, yeah. If you know, they have to have some self awareness.

Justine Reichman: I'll take 50 over 50/50. Yeah, we'll get you there. I'm just kidding with you.

Kourtney Jason: So it's a very good intro to just, okay, what is the dynamic between us? What would it be like working with each other? I make sure that I tell them what my process is and answer any questions they have. And then from there, usually, by the end of that conversation, I have a good idea of, if they feel like a good PNC client, and then I would offer, I'll put together our capabilities deck for you, or I'll put together a more detailed proposal. I usually send that to them within a week or two, then we proceed on to what are the exact services that they want contracting and launching the campaign?

Justine Reichman: There's so many different kinds of people that have really large companies that listen to Essential Ingredients, and then we've got small startups. Do you work with both?

Kourtney Jason: We work with independent publishers. So independent publishers will hire us with a year-long contract, and we'll work on X number of books for them throughout the year. We work with independent authors whether they are still traditionally published, but maybe their book isn't getting the full attention from their publisher so they want to make sure that they're hiring someone that's working for them and working on their goals. And then there's independent authors that are self published, or using hybrid publishers that will hire us as well.

Justine Reichman: So what would be the entry point to work with you for one of these individuals doing something like that, just reaching out.

Kourtney Jason: We'd set up the call, we have monthly retainers. But we have services that are available at very different price points. So digital advertising is a really low entry for services and that's Amazon advertising, social media advertising. We do the content creation for you, and then it comes with weekly analytics. PR is a higher cost. And then we do full time services. I'm doing proactive outreach for you and your book every single week with weekly reports, and there's just a lot of communication.

Justine Reichman: Sounds amazing.

Kourtney Jason: Thank you.

Justine Reichman: There's a variety of different kinds of agencies. People work in different ways. They have different expertise, what sets you guys apart from other agencies?

Kourtney Jason: I really think it's our energy, our enthusiasm. I just bring a very happy energy to anyone that I talk to.

Justine Reichman: For those listening, you got a great smile.

Kourtney Jason: Thank you so much. I just get so excited to work with people. I'm a people person. So it really is the relationship. I believe so much in long term relationships too. So having the authors that have more than one book in them that are like, I had such a great experience with (inaudible). I'm definitely going to go back to them with my next book. Making sure publishing a book is such a big deal. It's so exciting. Then you've already done the hard work of writing the book, editing the book. Now it's out there. PR is really the most fun part to share it with the world and get that attention, and hopefully get it in front of people.

Justine Reichman: Yeah, I think it is. I'm not there yet. I've only written my proposal, and we've written a few chapters. So we're just trying to shop the book now.

Kourtney Jason: But you'll still have to have a publicity and marketing section to share your strategy and ideas. You still don't have the book, but if you still do have to plan and share with publishers, this is what we would want to do.

Justine Reichman: It was a real learning experience. I'm curious, what is one of the most important things that you might tell someone that is on the fence? They're not sold on PR because it's not quantifiable, and they feel like doing advertising is going to be way out of budget because it seems scary. Years ago, you'd be in TV ads. How expensive is that? And then you have outdoor advertising.I don't want to answer the question. From your perspective, what's the one thing that you would let those folks know that are in that position to maybe break down some of the barriers for them and not have them feel so intimidated by it?

Kourtney Jason: Just asking as many questions, making sure that there's transparency of what you're going to get. And if at any point throughout the campaign, or even before where you're like, okay, but if I'm having hesitations, or if I feel like it's not going the way that I want it to go, how do we talk about that? Because for me, I'm not going to waste a client's time with a pitch that isn't working. That's why I always say I do multiple pitches, pitch ideas and pitch angles throughout the campaign. Because if one pitch isn't getting the response, why would I keep sending that? It means I have to rewrite it. It means that it's not resonating with the journalist so let me regroup and come up with a new angle, a new way to position this, and then see how that works. So that way, I'm trying different things. And we can say, oh, wow, this pitch really did work because it got interest from these 10 outlets, or this pitch didn't work. It's important to have that reflection at the end of the campaign as well. I think it's important to note that in terms of advertising, digital advertising has really changed the game. We still do occasional print advertising for ourselves and for some of our clients, but Amazon advertising has a very low entry point. You can do that with just a couple dollars a day budget. We usually recommend authors start with a $500 a day budget for Amazon advertising, but you're getting three different ads within that. And then we send weekly reports. So we're tracking the impressions, the cost per click, click through rate. And through Amazon, you can even see when the ad has converted to a sale. So you're really seeing the impact. We've had some that have increased author sales by 50%, increase by 20%. So that was really, really interesting.

Justine Reichman: Do you have any hard hitting statistics you could state in regards to advertising that you're recommending for folks, or that you've incorporated into their strategy?

“Social media gives such detailed opportunities to create an audience.” —Kourtney Jason

Kourtney Jason: Knowing your audience is so important because social media gives such detailed opportunities to create an audience. Even through your own social media profiles, there are strategies to find your look-alike audience already putting together who was following you already, and then recreating that audience to expand who you're going out to.

Justine Reichman: It's like having a book audience. It's like having a mock audience by having an audience. You can test them, see how they're going to respond to the other audience who you don't have access to.

Kourtney Jason: For books or for food, knowing what is similar so knowing who your competitors are so that you can also be targeting their audience.

Justine Reichman: Going back to my original question, do you know any hard hitting statistics on what $500 a day for a new book author might mean?

Kourtney Jason: Yeah, I think the majority of our digital advertising campaigns if we suggest a three month campaign at $500 a month, so that's $1,500 over three months. Wait,

Justine Reichman: We originally said $500 a day, you meant $500 a month?

Kourtney Jason: It's like $5 a day, and then $500 per month.

Justine Reichman: Just wanted to clarify for those listening, because I think we might have gotten confused. 500 hours a month. That sounds very doable.

Kourtney Jason: Yes. And through that campaign, I would say like 95% of our campaigns were getting a million impressions for you.

Justine Reichman: Wow.What does that look like in terms of sales of books?

Kourtney Jason: We can't guarantee that it translates to a sale, but we're tracking that every single day and every single week. So we're making sure that you're not paying too much for the cost per click.

Justine Reichman: That you're making more than 500.

Kourtney Jason: With Amazon, it has a function that we also track called Return on Amazon Spend. So you're seeing, okay, we will always want that to be around one or two, ideally, so that you are getting money back on your spend. So we are tracking that, and it's a very good analytic to see.

Justine Reichman: Awesome. Kourtney, thank you so much for joining us. If anyone wants to get in touch with you because they have a book or they're in the food space and looking to get services, what's the best way to reach out?

Kourtney Jason: Send me an email. It's just Kourtney@pacificandcourt.com. My emails on our website too, pacificandcourt.com.

Justine Reichman: For those listening or watching, it's Kourtney with the K. Thank you so much, Kourtney, for joining us. I really appreciate it.

Kourtney Jason: Thank you for having me.

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S8 Ep7: Vegan Valentines: Crafting Ethical Artisan Chocolates from Bean to Bar with Daniel Korson

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S8 Ep5: From Awareness to Purchase: Advertising  Strategies That Deliver Results with Aditya Varanasi