This Top Fashion PR Links post is sponsored by Ruby Press, a boutique public relations agency representing style-driven businesses. For more information on sponsoring a post, please contact info[at]prcouture.com

Elle’s beauty & fitness director shares insights about pitching multiple contacts at the same time (Cision Blog)
How can I translate my love of fashion to a college education? (KansasCity.com)
Bluebird Showroom Melds Tradition and Technology (Retailing Together)
What PR People Wish Bloggers Knew (Publicly Relating)
Fashion 2.0 | An Interactive Future for Fashion Magazines (The Business of Fashion)
[The following is a guest post by Dina Fierro, Fashion & Beauty Director for Attention, a leading social media firm. She also blogs about her love of fashion and beauty at www.eye4style.com]
As an experienced publicist (6 years!) and a longtime blogger (eye4style celebrates its 3rd anniversary in March), I’m in a pretty unique position to speak on the topic of fashion PR/fashion blogger relations. By day, I create online media strategy and conduct blogger outreach for some of the biggest and most well-known beauty and fashion brands around. Meanwhile, I’m regularly pitched by fashion and beauty brands hoping to get coverage on my site. In short, I see it all. Good pitches and bad from public relations firms that are trying desperately to engage successfully with online media. I have also experienced professional and unprofessional behavior from fashion and beauty bloggers, even those I count as friends.
In the last few years, public relations has had to adjust its traditional media relations plans to include bloggers and other online media. This has not always been a smooth transition. Accordingly, fashion bloggers’ quest for legitimacy has led to more than one public bashing and frustration all around. In the last few weeks, this drama has yet again manifested during New York Fashion Week (I won’t go into details!) and the discussion has come to light again.
So, What constitutes appropriate blogger behavior and what is simply expecting too much? On the other hand, what key mistakes PR firms continuing to make with bloggers that perpetuate this love-hate relationship? In my experience , a lot of the problems come from the evolution of traditional media relations online; the old PR/Journalist rules and unwritten codes of conduct/expectations don’t always apply. As a fashion PR pro, how do you effectively work with top fashion bloggers to secure powerful online media coverage for clients, and how do bloggers get on the lists of coveted fashion PR firms and showrooms? Here are my tips for both fashion PR agencies and bloggers to help support this potentially lucrative relationship, looking at it from both sides of the coin.
As a Fashion PR Pro:
As a Fashion Blogger:
If you’re a blogger or a PR pro with a question or feedback about this post, leave a comment below and I’ll do my best to reply ASAP!
[Photo by Sarah Conley]
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