Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Media Pitch

Meetings for the Cache Valley Area Investors Association will be held every other Thursday where anyone can learn about creating their financial independence


Editor Stanley Johnson,

You might be interested in learning more about the Cache Valley Area Investors Association. The association is located in Logan Utah. It could be beneficial for all members of the community to attend meetings and become more educated on financial independence. If you’re interested I can send you more detailed information.

The goal of the Cache Valley Area Investors Association is to help people understand how to achieve financial independence in the most effective way. This is achieved when your passive income is larger than your expenses. People can do what they love to do once they’ve become financially independent.

Meetings usually consist of a speaker who is an expert of financial independence followed by a question-answer session. The CVAIA meets every other Thursday at the Cache County Chamber of Commerce on 160 N. Main St. at 7:00p.m. The next meeting will be October 15, 2009.

Here is a possible boiler plate:

CVAIA teaches people how to increase passive income. CVAIA embraces the Law of Attraction, Law of Abundance, and Law of Exchange. They practice the methods found in the ideologies of books including Rich Dad Poor Dad, The Wealthy Barber, The Millionaire Next Door, Atlas Shrugged, The Automatic Millionaire and The Secret. CVIAIA began in August 2007 and now has members from many geographical locations and from all walks of life. The members come together with the same belief: that education mitigates the risks of investing.

If you have any questions, would like me to arrange interviews or you need additional material, feel free to contact me anytime. A website you may want to check out is www.cvaia.com Thanks for your time.

Sincerely,


Michon Winget
Public Relations Specialist
michon@wingetfamily.com
801-809-5861

2 comments:

Mackenzie Love said...

Michon -

Great job on the media pitch! Just a suggestion: usually for a pitch, you want to have individual contact information at the top corner (publication, personal editor's name, phone number, location, etc.)Great job on keeping it short - Also include an e-mail subject line so we can see what you would put to get their attention - great job!

Natalie Curtis said...

I like how you included specific info in your boilerplate. Also, great e-mail subject headline. One small AP style thing I noticed is October should be Oct. Way to keep it concise; I like that.