Press Releases: Not Dead, Just Evolved
by Harry Hoover
Published on this site: July 1st, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

Mark Twain once said the rumors of his death had been greatly exaggerated.
The same may be said for the press release. It's not dead, but its
mission has evolved.
Those PR practitioners who are spreading these death rumors would
have you believe that press releases should never be written, nor
distributed. I take issue with this old-school thinking.
Now, inundating the media with press releases has not been a good
practice since shortly after Edward Bernays opened the first PR
firm in 1919. Any competent PR person has known for years that garnering
media coverage almost never directly happens due to a press release.
However, that is fodder for another article.
Let's talk about the evolution of the press release into a solid
tool for helping organizations deliver key messages to multiple audiences
in the digital age.
In the not-so-distant pre-Internet past, press releases were aimed
solely at trade and consumer media outlets. The media acted as the
gatekeepers, taking your information and making decisions about
how, or if, to use it. Organizations today are able to bypass the media
filter in a number of ways, thanks to the net.
Consider this: both journalists and consumers use the web for
research. More than 550 million searches are done daily via the
web. And, every month, US web-users conduct 27 million searches at Yahoo!
News, Google News or other news search engines. According to recent
surveys by Middleberg/Ross and the Pew Internet Project, we learn
that:
98 percent of journalists go online daily
92 percent do it for article research
76 percent to find new sources and experts
73 percent to find press releases
68 million Americans go online daily
30 percent use a search engine to find information
27 percent go online to get news
But you need to think differently about writing your releases in
this new age. You can extend the power of your press releases beyond
the media by positioning them for search engine pick up. In effect,
your press releases become a long-lasting, online, searchable database
about your organization.
Once properly written with both readers and search engines in mind,
you need to distribute the release. PR Web and PR Newswire
are my two favorite ways to get the message out. Both services help
you reach into the newsroom and beyond.
PR Web emails press releases daily to between 60,000 - 100,000
global contacts points. Journalists, analysts, freelance writers,
media outlets and newsrooms, as well as your average web users are signed
up to receive this information. Also, it distributes releases via
FTP, XML feeds and through a network of its own websites. PR Web-related
sites are in the top 2,500 most visited sites. Every release sent
out through PR Web is optimized for search engines, and PR Web guarantees
your release will be picked up by Yahoo!, which is the number one
most visited website on the Internet.
Does it work, you ask? Let me provide a recent example. I used
PR Web to send out a release about my client Brent Dees and his
Focus Four training for entrepreneurs. The editor of Leadership
Excellence emailed me after seeing the release and asked Brent to write an
article for his magazine.
The granddaddy of press release services is PR Newswire, which
distributes directly into the central editing computers at daily
newspapers, newsweeklies, national news services, trade publications
and broadcast newsrooms. It reaches a total of 22,000 media points
in the US alone. All releases are distributed to and archived in
more than 3,600 web sites, databases and online services. Additionally,
PR Newswire's website is in the top 2,000 most visited sites on the
Internet.
Finally, let's take a look at the online media room. Its primary
purpose is to provide journalists with easily accessible data about
the organization, such as executive bios, earnings figures, key
contacts and other solid, factual information. An organization also
should place news releases here, particularly those aimed at key
stakeholders like employees, strategic allies, and investors. Technology
savvy consumers often visit online media rooms for the same reason
journalists do: they expect to find factual information there.
Churning out releases and dumping them willy-nilly on the media
is a dumb practice. But using releases as a strategic weapon to reach
key audiences across the digital divide is smart PR. Practitioners who
believe the news release is dead need to evolve, or they will be
the moribund ones.

Harry Hoover is managing principal of Hoover ink PR. He
has 26 years of experience in crafting and delivering bottom line messages that
ensure success for serious businesses like Brent Dees Financial
Planning, Focus Four, Levolor, New World Mortgage, North Carolina
Tourism, Ty Boyd Executive Learning Systems, VELUX and Verbatim

|