PR Professionals:  9 Pieces of Advice from Fast Company Editors

Winning awards can boost brand recognition, encourage innovation and create meeting and networking opportunities. Awards that matter are worth the investment of time and money.

Some have a fee so marketing folks, budget dollars for these in 2025. 

Today I attended Fast Company’s video meeting session regarding how to fill out their “World Changing Ideas” awards forms for maximum success. 2024 winners are here. The session was called the “2025 World Changing Ideas Awards Informational Q&A.” 

Senior Editor Aimee Rawlins, Executive Editor, Digital, Morgan Clendaniel and a few others presented. To me, most of the advice applies to creating a variety of PR materials from news releases to pitches. 

They conveyed these nine tips: 

  1. Focus on the past 12 months.
  2. It’s okay to say, “Not for publication” if it’s too early to disclose information.
  3. It matters that you show “capacity growth” with numbers.
  4. Don’t use jargon or marketing speak. We can tell when you lift it off of the website. We know marketing jargon. This was repeated a lot and with passion!
  5. Describe how it compares to others. Where does it sit in the market?
  6. Use the actual name of the solution, project or service. 
  7. Don’t use superlatives. Say what it is, plainly. 
  8. The words need to explain it as fully as possible without URL links.
  9. If a section has a 500-word limit, don’t go beyond that. They read thousands of applications and have to get through them all. 

It takes hours to research these awards criteria and advise clients so I appreciated the information session or “sesh” as some like to say. It was better than collecting and reading a lot of tips material. Plus, I was able to attend a ‘freebie’ senior editor panel.

How Can PR Help You Win Awards?

A skilled PR practitioner is to me, similar to a journalist. They will do the investigative reporting at their company and find out what makes the item super cool and useful and then articulate that efficiently. Apparently, you want to NOT copy paste from the website. 

I appreciated the tips immensely (<excuse the superlative!) because they can apply to any public relations materials that are shared with journalists. 

The application deadline for Fast Company’s World Changing Ideas Awards is this Friday, December 6, at 11:59 p.m. PT. 

As an aside, the woman worker image was produced by ChatGPT on December 4, 2024. I asked for an image of a 45-year-old woman office worker with a laptop.

###Michelle McIntyre is the president of Michelle McIntyre Communications LLC, a tech PR consulting firm. She’s on the board of PRSA Silicon Valley. To buy a ticket to the 17th annual Media Predicts gala and panel event happening Dec. 10 in San Carlos, California, visit this link here. A panel of journalists from ABC7, Business Insider, NY Times, and TechStrong, will give you tips on working with them and you can even meet them to say, “Hello.”

Michelle is FromMichelle on BlueSky and she has 2.7 million views on Quora.

10 Takeaways from PRSA Silicon Valley’s June Media Panel with NBC, NYT and SiliconAngle

Meghan Fintland, PRSA Silicon Valley Chapter’s President who is also Rubrik’s head of global PR moderated a PRSA SV panel of three journalists on June 5th at AMD in San Jose. Panelists were Scott Budman, business and technology reporter, NBC News Bay Area, New York Times Contributor Don Clark, and Mark Albertson, senior writer, SiliconANGLE Media, Inc. 

I missed the event due to a summer cold but have notes from a couple of friends who attended. Here are 10 takeaways I thought were interesting: 

  1. The pace of reporting is much faster than a few years ago. SEO and algorithms matter.
  2. News we cover is what impacts the community. (Scott Budman)
  3. AI is big but what is it all for? What is this moving towards?
  4. If I can snap my fingers, I would get rid of (the terms) “platform” and “solution.” It’s such obfuscation. Just be simple. (Don Clark)
  5. Thank you to the PR world—you are the bridge between me and the CEO, and it’s saved me a million times. (Scott Budman)
  6. Think about other angles, pitching me something related to a hot tech but maybe not necessarily what your product is. (Scott Budman)
  7. AI is impactful in software programming, chip design and test. (Don Clark)
  8. Learn the technology at a deeper level than you need to than to do just the transactional pitching. You are building your brand as a communicator, and that’s more than just what the client wants. (Don Clark)
  9. I cover the tech beat. I can come in ready to report on the newest chip, but an editor will say yeah, there’s a fire. But talking to people in the community, they’re talking about tech. (Scott Budman)
  10. (On how reporting has changed.) Politics! Tech covers China, Washington and AI, especially in semiconductors. (Don Clark)

My PRSA colleague Jennifer Yoder is penning a longer more journalistic article for the chapter’s blog. Look for that story soon.

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Michelle McIntyre is a PR Consultant and IBM vet in Saratoga, California. She thanks Mark L. and Jennifer Yoder for their event notes. Credits: The first photo is Scott Budman and that is from the NBC Bay Area website. The second is of Don Clark and that’s his LinkedIn profile photo. Clark is also a musician.