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Tobin Communications

Tobin Communications Nets Radio Gold with Howard Stern

By Maury Tobin

A client I work with on transportation funding and policy issues recently was on The Howard Stern Show. The show aired part of a syndicated radio interview in which my client addressed the exigent need for increased infrastructure investment in America.

After airing the segment, which was part of an ongoing Tobin Communications Radio Media Tour (RMT), Stern and his news wing-woman Robin Quivers discussed that improving the nation’s infrastructure should be a must and an issue around which people and policymakers rally.

It was a good day as the potential audience zoomed into the millions. These mainstream media gatekeepers “got” why a new transportation funding bill is essential. My firm was able to see that certain messages and strategies are helping build an identity and voice for the coalition my client helps oversee.

From Several to Many PR Opportunities 

When Tobin Communications began working intensively with this client, the coalition was not in the middle of any PR campaign or time-sensitive lobbying initiative. However, we determined that its communication needs to be fluid and ongoing, as well as showcase the coalition and its members through original and fresh content.

We knew that infrastructure was one of the issues on which President Trump campaigned. We knew members of Congress promised action on this front. We determined that an updated and overhauled website, unique content that could be produced for various digital platforms, and increased member involvement could help us enhance the coalition’s reputation and reach and, more importantly, also keep the groups in the coalition vested and mobilized.

Because we want Congress to do the right thing and invest more in the nation’s airports, deteriorating roads and bridges, public transit, ports, and interdependent connectors, our goal is to extend America’s transportation story. But to do so, we need to make the coalition’s PR more than occasional blips.

The Stern show mentioning our spokesperson and the coalition by name was a media coup for a group of transportation heavy-hitters who beat the pavement in the insular advocacy world of Washington, D.C., but whose sphere of influence increasingly must include the businesses and many diverse towns and cities that rely on the nation’s transportation system.

PR is Not All Glitz and Glamour 

Through the years, Tobin Communications has broadened its client services to stay relevant as smart phones, digital technology and viral communications became mammoth factors. Daily we see that PR sits at the confluence of being an art and a skill.

Some of what PR practitioners do has an immediate impact and is measurable. But other elements — such as building credibility and a presence — are not fixed variables. They are animals that have to be fed and nurtured. This is what makes clients happy, but also our work challenging.

One of the things I’ve noticed in the PR industry that’s troubling are the firms that put a higher premium on spotlighting themselves rather than helping their clients succeed. It makes no difference to me if I am the principal of a PR firm in a tony location downtown, in a hip room that evokes a resurrected Mad-Men era, if my client doesn’t shine.

What we know about this era of communications is that what we saw years ago as new media (that now is becoming older media) or what will emerge next as some prophesized panacea can’t replace what PR clients need the most: hard work and understanding and employing a range of communication strategies.

In closing, I would like to caution those who say radio is in its fading years. People being able to access current news and information with them almost anywhere they go changed that dynamic years ago. Radio pros, whether celebrities like Howard Stern and Robin Quivers or newspeople at a small operation in Idaho, speak to the heart of America every day and share information about people, places and things that can shape perspectives and change our country for the better.

Learn more about Radio Media Tours.

Maury Tobin on WCCI Radio

Radio – A Constant in a Changing World

By Maury Tobin

Unless you’re visiting an ashram, you probably know that the Caps won the Stanley Cup last week after Vegas sports theater was met by a blitzkrieg of fans watching the win on big-screens in D.C. streets.

The next day I was interviewed by Brian Reusch, station manager of the radio outlet WCCI. Brian knows I am a longtime Caps follower and would be happy to give my take on the victory. (You can listen to the interview here.)

WCCI is based in the Quad Cities, Ill., market but its signal covers other parts of Illinois and regions of Iowa and Wisconsin. As a proprietor of securing radio publicity for clients through Radio Media Tours (RMTs), I have been placing guests on WCCI for nearly 20 years.

After working on political campaigns, I started Tobin Communications, Inc. (TCI) in 1996 and radio was my bailiwick.

Since then, our company has expanded its services because we recognize that our clients have both traditional and newer public relations (PR) needs. During this time, I have read, listened to, and studied those opining on the decline of radio, and I’ve concluded that this medium is still an American darling.

According to recently released Nielsen statistics “radio reaches 93% of adult Americans (18+) each week, some 228.5 million consumers, more than those watching television (216.5 million), using an app or accessing the web on a smartphone (203.8 million) or watching video on a smartphone (127.6 million).”

Social media and cable news are not panaceas. Radio is a solid contender in shaping issues and narratives. We continually see that radio remains a constant voice as people commute to work, sit in airports, cook dinner, exercise, take their kids to soccer practice, and tap into news and conversations about a soup of topics.

America is a country on the move. Devices like smartphones help the public and thought-leaders access and mold information and entertainment whenever they want.

TCI has found that in the summer RMTs sometimes run up against less interference and competition. PR campaigns, especially those partly rooted in media outreach, can present a fresh perspective.

Additionally, they reinforce that forging relationships with newsmakers is vital and everything can’t be condensed to a post that will make Twitter aflutter.

Learn more about Radio Media Tours.