Press release tactics designed to resonate with online audiences and drive measurable PR results are the topic of this deck, and the associated webinar. If you missed the original event, you can listen for free right here: http://budurl.com/PR2014
2. Introduction & Overview
What we’ll cover:
• Today’s digital
media realities
• Real world
examples with
tactical highlights
• Extreme press
release makeover!
• Q&A
3. Is your PR content:
Published in a responsive
design environment?
Created with small
screens in mind?
Useful for journalists who
are developing content
their audiences (who are
also demonstrating these
characteristics?)
11. Digital media realities:
1. Your messages are competing
with people’s coworkers, spouses and
the Internet’s cutest kittens baby
animals for attention. [But we are
consuming more digital media
throughout the day, so you have a
better shot at getting our attention.]
2. Content that isn’t read won’t have
a shot at conveying branding or
building awareness.
3. Social media popularity dictates a
lot of what we see.
12. Some other things we need to re-think:
•
•
•
•
•
Timing
Objectives
Visuals
Measurement
Timelines
17. The role of the visual is myriad:
• Visuals get people to
read your story
• Good visuals can drive
news coverage
• Fuel social sharing
• Increase visibility on
search engines & social
networks
• Find audiences where
text alone cannot
(Pinterest, YouTube,
Instagram)
CNN ran b-roll from CVS on its web site.
18.
19. Press releases can do more than generate media. They
can generate leads. You just have to pay attention.
22. An experiment
In November, I issued a handful of press
releases to promote blog posts published
on Beyond PR
(http://blog.prnewswire.com.)
The objective: Develop a better understanding of
how links functioned in press releases.
Method: One unique, trackable URL was
embedded in the second or third paragraphs of
the press releases.
Here are the results.
26. Since November, the press releases issued to
promote blog posts tallied 1,500 clicks on the
trackable URLs embedded in each.
These are new readers we otherwise would not
have reached.
29. Provocative headline
draws readers in.
Subhead adds more detail
Lead paragraph starts with
an interesting statement,
not boilerplate.
Bold font and provocative
section heads draw
readers’ eyes in, and build
more attention.
Restrained use of links
directs readers to a
specific call to action.
30. All boilerplate
material, event
information and
branding (except the
mention in the subhead)
are moved to the
bottom of the release.
The higher-value realestate at the top of the
message is solely
devoted to gaining
and keeping reader
interest.
31. Readers’ eyes move over a web page in an F-shaped pattern
Source: Nielsen Norman Group
32.
33. F the press release!
By which I mean this: structure your
content to fit the path your readers’
eyes naturally take as they scan a
page.
(Not that any other thought popped into your
heads. Certainly not.)
34. Every element of your message needs to drive to your objective, e.g. driving
traffic to a web site, getting people to register, or inspiring media coverage.
35. Ask yourself why you’re using each
word and phrase in the news
releases you write …. and be sure
the answer is “To gain and keep
reader attention and direct them
toward a specific action.”
36. Headlines
Write the headline you want
to see on the article in a
target publication.
Write a headline that is
interesting enough to tweet.
Is Chip and Pin the Answer to
Retail Security? SecureState
Offers Advice for Industry
After Massive Target and Neiman Marcus Breaches,
Retailers Look to Tech to Solve their Woes
CLEVELAND, Jan. 16, 2014 /PRNewswire/ -- In the days
following news that Target's compromise was much larger than
originally reported, affecting 110 million customers opposed to
70 million, retailer Neiman Marcus announced that they too
were hacked. What followed was a rash of security and retail
experts offering up chip and pin technology as a solution to this
problem.
37. Links:
No extraneous links. You don’t need a link to
your company home page in the first sentence.
Employ links strategically. Links should not
dilute the reader’s attention away from the
message’s mission.
Never ever ever link to the same URL more than
once within your message. Never.
Links are a reader service, not an SEO trick or
means to drive traffic to a web site.
38. Structure your message to keep and retain interest.
• Don’t put anything that could slow down your reader
between the headline and the action you want.
– Dump the speed bump! Keep boilerplate where it belongs!
• Use bold text to highlight and set off paragraph heads
within the message. Be sure the paragraph heads call
attention to specific, interesting information.
– Tip: use them to highlight different topic angles or facts.
– Another tip: envision them as tweets.
• Use bullet points or a numbered list to highlight related tips,
facts, etc. and to break up endless blocks of text.
• Embed a link to a video or other interesting asset two/thirds
of the way down (after your original call to action) to refresh
reader interest if it’s flagging, and to provide more relevant
information.