For many small business owners, solopreneurs, and experts, the traditional press release (PR) feels like a relic of the past. Why bother with a formal document when you can just post the news on LinkedIn?
The truth is, the press release isn’t dead—it has evolved. It’s no longer just an announcement; it’s a structured, professional pitch to a journalist or industry influencer. A well-crafted PR is still the single most effective way to communicate legitimate news to the people who can amplify it.
Here is a breakdown of the three modern pillars that ensure your press release (or “media alert”) delivers maximum exposure for your brand:
1. 🥇 Make It Genuinely Newsworthy
The media doesn’t care about your sales figures; they care about what their audience cares about. Before you hit “send,” apply the classic journalistic filter:
Question | The SMB/Expert Focus |
Who? | Who are the people affected by this news (your clients)? |
What? | What specific problem does this new service solve? |
Where? | Where does this news matter (local community, global industry)? |
When? | Is this timely (related to a trend, policy change, or season)? |
Why? | Why is this significant for the journalist’s reader? |
How? | How can the journalist tell this story (interview, data, visuals)? |
Actionable Tip: If your story doesn’t directly connect to an industry trend, a consumer pain point, or a significant local achievement, reconsider whether it warrants a press release. Relevance is the new currency.
2. 👀 Make It Immediately Eye-Catching (Visuals are Non-Negotiable)
Gone are the days when a block of text was enough. Journalists are flooded with hundreds of emails daily. Your release must be visually appealing, scannable, and ready-to-publish.
- Branding and Headshots: Always include your logo prominently. If the story features you as the expert, attach a professional, high-resolution headshot. This builds credibility instantly.
- High-Quality Imagery: Attach high-resolution images of your product, your team, or your premises. If your news is data-driven, incorporate a clean, branded infographic.
- Visual Processing: Since our brains process visuals up to 60,000 times faster than text, providing great visuals makes the journalist’s job easier, dramatically increasing the chance they will use your story.
3. 📞 Sell the Story (The Pitch is Everything)
A brilliant press release poorly delivered is worthless. The final challenge is selling the story to the journalist within the crucial first 30–60 seconds of your email pitch (or brief call).
- Prepare the Pitch Script: Don’t just paste the whole release into the email. Craft three or four punchy bullet points that summarize the reader benefits of your story in the email body.
- Support Your Pitch: Be prepared to instantly follow up with facts, figures, and data that back up your claims. Credibility comes from supporting evidence.
- Tailor and Personalize: Never send a mass email. Research the journalist’s recent work and explain clearly (in the opening sentence) why this story is relevant to their specific audience and column.
- Offer Multimedia Support: Think about what a journalist needs for a quick piece: offer a video soundbite, an interview slot, or a custom quote. Making their work effortless is the best way to secure coverage.
By making your press release newsworthy, visually engaging, and delivering it with a strategic, compelling pitch, you maximize your chances of turning a simple company announcement into a valuable feature story that boosts your brand profile.
Would you like me to help you brainstorm three different angles (news hooks) for a hypothetical new service or product launch?
Keep reading and learning

From Broadcast to Business: Louise Chandler’s Media Journey
Read more ➞
Back to Basics: My Essential Toolkit for In-Person Networking
Read more ➞
6 Reasons to Love Business marketing made simple!
Read more ➞

