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How to Chase (and Win) Government WorkLet’s say you work in PR.

Furthermore, let’s say you work in the agency or solo world, singing for your supper every day.

Hi, I’m you. I’ve been doing this for nearly 30 years, and for the last 15, have been running my own show.

Still with me? Okay, here’s where it gets fun.

What if I told you that, in a typical small or mid-sized metro market—you know, the Des Moines’, the Kansas City’s, and the Nashville’s of the world—there were several million dollars of annual PR spend available of which you might not be aware?

And, all of it largely free from the baggage you find in other sectors.

No startups that want you to work for free, no mom-and-pops cringing because every dollar they pay you comes from their butter-and-egg money.

Millions of dollars in available work, spread across projects as small as a single news release to integrated campaigns billing seven figures a year.

And exactly none of it is hiding under a rock.

So, where exactly is all this work?

Well, I’ll give you a hint.

You may or may not be able to fight city hall. But it makes a damn fine client.

You just need to know where to look for the work, how to sort good opportunities from bad, and how to pursue the good ones in a way that burns as few of your resources as possible.

Some Quick Numbers

The claim that there’s several million dollars of local and regional government PR work in every metro area is anecdotal but completely borne out by my decades of doing this type of work all over the country.

If anything, it’s conservative.

Your regional planning agency?

They probably have several contracts a year for public involvement and maybe a six- or seven-figure multi-year program for air pollution education.

Your public housing authority likely has ongoing tenant and public education needs.

Your department of transportation is spending millions of dollars for each new mile of concrete, and nearly every bit of that planning, engineering, and construction demands, under the law, that the public is kept in the loop.

Oh, and the federal government?

A cool billion dollars a year on various PR contracts. And, another $500 million on in-house PR staff, according to research from taxpayer advocates.

Police, fire, education—the list goes on and on.

And none of this is particularly political work. I’ve signed contracts in reliably red states and blue bastions alike.

The government today is involved in nearly every aspect of our lives.

They generally do a miserable job of communicating their value to stakeholders, which is one reason the government is trusted less than media, business or NGOs in America, according to Edelman’s 2018 Trust Barometer.

Chasing Government Work, Really?

Right about now, there’s a fair amount of eye rolling going on.

Government work? RFPs? Greg, it’s like you’re combining all my boring dreams and terrifying nightmares into a single, blobby, bad idea!

Settle down, folks. Although it’s not for everyone, public-sector PR offers solos and agencies a surprising range of potential benefits:

OK, But Isn’t Getting Government Work a Pain in the Butt?

That depends.

If you don’t have a plan and flail around for weeks on a $30,000 proposal that ends up looking and sounding like every other agency’s BS, then yeah, chasing government work can seem, pretty quickly, like it’s not worth the effort.

But it doesn’t need to be like that. In fact, you might not even have to go through the RFP process at all.

Whether you have one or two public-sector contracts to round out your book of work or you decide to make a major push into that sector, three things still apply:

On projects as varied as one-off infographics and multi-year, multi-million dollar public education campaigns, I like to think I’ve figured a lot of this out.

I’m not smarter than you, and I don’t know some secret government language that wins me work.

What I am is a guy who’s made all the mistakes, fixed them along the way, and now wants to pass on that knowledge for practitioners who want a piece of this very large, very diverse PR market.

That’s why I approached the Spin Sucks team about doing a webinar, and that’s why I’m inviting you to join me on Thursday, May 17th at noon EST.

What You’ll Learn

If you can spare one hour, you’ll learn:

I’ve been PR practitioner for a long time.

But my friends also know I’m a die-hard cheerleader for my fellow entrepreneurs in this business.

I want nothing less than for all of us to make a whole lot of money doing interesting, satisfying work.

Learning how to tap into the large, lucrative public-sector PR market can be a big part of that.

I hope you’ll join us May 17th.

What You’ll Walk Away With

The goal of this webinar is as simple as it is audacious.

At the end of an hour, you’ll have a better feel for whether government work is potentially right for you or not.

And you’ll have solid, actionable steps you can take to get started looking for opportunities.

But this is about more than just blah-blah ideas.

I want you to have real tools that will help you kick ass in this space.

So every participant will walk away with a big, downloadable resource bundle to help you dive in if you decide you want a piece of the public-sector pie:

The Spin Sucks Webinar Series: Chasing Government Work

See you on Thursday!