Markowitz Communications
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Markowitz Communications
The Markowitz staff has a well-earned reputation among its many national and local media contacts. Reporters know and respect our work, which has proven to be a valuable asset for our clients. We have a lot of resources at our disposal when compiling effective media lists for our clients. We combine online databases with our own proprietary research in key markets.

We are constantly evaluating and customizing our media tracking based on specific client needs, using both national and regional resources. We sit down with our clients to listen carefully to their needs and help them establish goals and objectives. When we set up media monitoring, we don't just simply watch out for our clients, we intensely search news resources for our clients' competitors - large and small - as well as other industry keywords.
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Since opening our doors in 1997, we have worked with a wide variety of clients on a vast amount of projects. From restaurant openings to art festivals and press conferences, we have done it all. Check out a sample of our work to get to know us better and see what we can do for you. Saul Markowitz has always been a storyteller.
The Pittsburgh Cultural Trust was creating its third installment of the International Festival of Firsts with one 40-foot, yellow addition - Studio Florentijn Hoffman's The Rubber Duck Project. The festival itself featured the U.S. premieres of an eclectic mix of theater, dance, music, and visual arts from around the globe, all staged in Downtown Pittsburght.
For nearly five years, Markowitz Communications was the one and only public relations agency for PetSmart. Throughout that time, our overriding goal was to position PetSmart and its corps of veterinarians, trainers, groomers, nutritionists, fashion consultants, and toy and rawhide specialists as the experts in all things pet related.
We never really thought of ourselves as salespeople-that is, until Wentworth Gallery gave us a call. We were hired by the national fine art retailer to build excitement for a series of artists touring Wentworth's locations across the East Coast. Our job was to create a buzz by securing press for the artists, market by market.
Since 1968, when Mister Rogers' Neighborhood made its national public television debut, Fred Rogers began each episode with hits signature question in song: "Won't You Be My Neighbor?" In 2008, we were asked to make the first-ever "Won't You Be My Neighbor?" Days (WYBMND for short) special. Because the show was filmed in Pittsburgh, we believed the local and regional media would be predisposed to feeling neighborly about the WYBMND celebration.
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