Get to Know Senior PR Specialist Mike Madry

Public relations is about relationships—the people behind the stories. That’s why periodically offer blog content about our team members who work with and represent our clients. This isn’t about our professional accomplishments but who we are as people. We hope you have as much fun reading along as we do interviewing each other.

What got you interested in public relations?

Since middle school, I knew I wanted to be a broadcast news reporter or anchor. While studying journalism in college, I landed a full-time role as a reporter at News 13 Hazleton, an independent cable news station, where I worked for a year. During that time, I had the opportunity to collaborate with several public relations professionals. Those interactions sparked my interest in the field.

That curiosity led me to realize many of my newsroom skills were transferable and that PR offered a wider range of opportunities while still aligning with my skills and interests in journalism. Because I was still in college, I made the decision to switch my major to public relations and fully commit to pursuing a career in the field.

Tell us about your favorite movie and what appeals most to you about it?

My favorite movie is Dunkirk, which tells the true story of over 338,000 Allied soldiers trapped on the beaches of France during World War II, surrounded by the German army. I’m a huge history buff, so I’m naturally drawn to films based on real events.

The movie also resonates with me on a personal level. My grandfather was a Purple Heart recipient and a WWII veteran. So, watching Dunkirk gives me a deeper appreciation for what he may have experienced during his service.

What was the last, best book you read and what about it spoke to you?

The last book I read was The Millionaire Next Door. As someone who is passionate about financial literacy, I found it incredibly engaging from start to finish. The book highlights how many American millionaires are not flashy spenders, but rather disciplined individuals who live below their means, budget carefully and prioritize saving and investing over status symbols like fancy cars and big houses.

I especially appreciated that the book is grounded in extensive research and data, which made the insights feel both credible and practical.

Tell us about a meaningful hobby or “outside of work” commitment that is important to you?

One of my most meaningful hobbies is exercising. Whether it’s going for a run or doing a strength training workout, it’s my go-to way to clear my head and relieve stress after a long day. It helps me stay both physically and mentally sharp.

Share a fun fact about you.

A fun fact about me is that I still play ice hockey competitively in an adult league. This game, which I started playing when I was 5 years-old, has given me so much, including lifelong friends and great memories. I feel very fortunate I can still play the game I love, even as I get older.

Beyond the Fridge Magnet: Leveraging Media Placements in 2026

When I was in grade school, it was cool to see your name in the local newspaper—whether you were mentioned for good grades, sports, a musical achievement or the like. If my name made it into print, we would head straight to the 7-Eleven to pick up the latest issue. I would page through the newsprint scanning for my name, then proudly show it to my mom. She would grab the scissors, clip the article and pin it to the fridge, where it would live out its days, seen only by whomever happened to pass through the kitchen.

Many of us have similar stories. In those days, unless the article was physically mailed to grandma, posting it on the fridge was the extent of our abilities to leverage our “coverage.”

Things have changed.

Today, media placements are destined for much more than life under a fridge magnet. With the right amplification, one placement can be shared, repurposed and extended across multiple channels to reach far beyond its original audience and continue to deliver value.

At Kimball Hughes Public Relations, we are securing meaningful media placements in key B2B trade and Tier One media outlets targeting our clients’ core audiences. Once these articles or broadcast interviews featuring our clients’ quotes, commentary or contributed content are published, we don’t stop there. We work to leverage those placements to ensure they create lasting impact.  

A good public relations partner knows individual opportunities should never be one-and-done opportunities. Those partners will consider amplifying the article through the following:

  • Social media: LinkedIn and other relevant social channels can serve as excellent platforms to gain extra attention on a media placement. Consider posting a brief teaser or summary of the article with relevant tags and hashtags along with a link to the article on the company’s LinkedIn page as well as on executive profiles. This practice not only puts original content from your company in front of followers, clients and prospects showcasing third-party validation, it also encourages engagement and drives additional interest in your company.
  • Email signatures: Encouraging executives and other employees to reference and link to the article in their email signatures can also serve as a credible endorsement or proof point for clients and prospects.
  • Website press rooms: A press room on a company website serves as a home for media placements and press releases. Housing materials here will help draw people to the company website where they can learn more about your company and the services it offers, while supporting discoverability.
  • A blog post: A blog post housed on your website can serve to draw more attention to your article and its third-party validation, as well as allow the SMEs to take a deeper dive on the topic or even provide additional information on how the company can provide solutions related to what was discussed in the article.
  • A LinkedIn newsletter article: Similar to a blog, the LinkedIn newsletter article could be something written to tease out the media placement and offer additional insight. LinkedIn articles are delivered directly to LinkedIn newsletter subscribers and encourage engagement and sharing broadening the article’s reach considerably.
  • Employee communications: Media placements can also be leveraged to generate company pride and excitement. Internal comms teams can distribute media placements with commentary to staff members to build company loyalty, foster company culture and encourage more to participate in media opportunities.
  • E-newsletters or direct mail: Weaving mentions of the placements and links into e-newsletters and direct mail to clients and prospects can serve as another touchpoint to highlight that objective validation provided by a media placement, helping to instill reader confidence in the brand.
  • Sales materials: Sales teams can take great advantage of the independent validation media placements provide when making a pitch or in a prospect conversation. It can be valuable to include publication mastheads, article summaries and links in sales decks, proposals and the like. Again, doing so showcases third-party validation supporting claims made by the sales team, reinforcing trust in the brand.

With these suggestions for amplification, it is critical to keep copyright in mind. Even if a company SME authored the piece, the company likely no longer owns the collateral. Often, once an article is published it becomes the property of the publication. Any posting of the article in its entirety could violate copyright laws. Media placements should always be properly attributed and should never be copied and pasted in part or in their entirety without permission from the original publishing outlet.

A strategic multi-channel approach leveraging a media placement can result in lasting meaningful impact for sales, the brand and company morale. So don’t just frame that article on your office wall, leverage it.

Are You Ready for PR? Questions to Ask Yourself Before Engaging

Water is a necessity of life. It sustains us. Public relations serves a similar purpose for reputations, as it builds trust and keeps individuals and organizations top of mind. PR sustains good business. It can also protect your business when things go wrong.

But unlike water, believing you can turn the PR faucet on and off is to misunderstand how PR works. Reputations aren’t built on the occasional press release. Executives don’t find themselves interviewed by the media on the strength of a single pitch. Impactful public relations requires sustained engagement. For PR to work, you have to commit to it.

Because when you hire a PR professional or agency, you aren’t delegating work. You’re forming a partnership and understanding that related expectations and responsibilities matter.

Public relations can serve as a business development resource—strong media coverage can build credibility, open doors and reinforce a reputation among prospective clients. But PR is rarely effective when treated as a direct sales engine. Those who expect media coverage alone to drive immediate revenue are often disappointed. PR works best as part of a broader strategy that includes marketing, relationship-building and sales execution.

It’s important to gut-check whether an organization can use PR as a growth accelerator or if it risks becoming an exercise in frustration. That gut-check largely follows a series of basic-yet-important questions.

Do we have capacity to support public relations?

PR requires access to leadership, subject-matter experts and decision-makers who can provide insight quickly. Journalists work on tight deadlines and often need executive perspectives on short notice. If leaders are rarely available or approvals take days or weeks, quality media opportunities will disappear and become increasingly rare as the organization’s reliability with media fades.

Can we dedicate consistent time to the process?

Public relations is not a set-it-and-forget-it resource. Developing story angles, reviewing messaging, preparing interviews and responding to media requests requires ongoing collaboration between an organization and its agency. If internal teams don’t have time to engage regularly, even the best PR strategy will struggle to gain traction.

Are we telling important stories or just promoting ourselves?

The media is rarely interested in covering company news that doesn’t significantly impact markets. Strong PR depends on substance—innovation, new approaches to solving problems, deep industry insights or meaningful perspectives on emerging trends. If the most important part of your story is about you, your organization, your event or products or services, you likely don’t have a story the media will be interested in covering.

Do we have something important/interesting to say?

Executives who want to be seen as thought leaders must do more than comment on the news cycle. Real thought leadership requires informed opinions and a willingness to engage with the trends shaping the industry. It also requires getting out of one’s comfort zone. That doesn’t mean being controversial. But it does mean having a clear perspective on what comes next, what companies are getting wrong and forming opinions on what leaders should be considering for the future. Absent this approach, thought leadership descends into little more than a cacophony of bland, homogeneous opinions of interest to no one.

What does successful PR look like?

Public relations can support many business goals: building credibility, attracting talent, strengthening investor visibility, positioning executives as experts or helping a company stand out in a crowded market. Absent a shared understanding of what must be achieved and what success looks like, PR efforts can feel scattered and difficult to evaluate, impacting perspectives on the ROI of the engagement.

A Partnership is Required

Public relations works best as a partnership with shared goals, language and vision. Agencies bring media relationships, strategy, creativity and storytelling expertise. Organizations and their leaders bring insight, access and the spark of ideas that lead to stories worth telling. When both sides contribute the results compound over time and help sustain and grow the business.

Like a tall glass of cold water, leaders who answer these gut-check questions long before bringing in the PR pros often find themselves both refreshed and satisfied with their investment. 

For those attempting to evaluate where or how strategic communications might fit into their broader business goals, a thoughtful conversation with the team at Kimball Hughes PR can be a useful place to start.