Five Things to Avoid When Drafting a Press Release
While some of these may seem basic or obvious, savvy PR and marketing professionals would do well to remember and apply these tips the next time they send a release, regardless of the format.
1. Un-newsworthy releases. Let’s face it, to the company, brand, or organization that generates it, any “news” could be worthy of a press release. While it is perfectly acceptable to add all types of releases to your online press center, where you can optimize them for search, it may not be necessary for every piece to hit the wire — especially if it’s of little value to your audience. If you are crafting and sending a release just so you have something to show or to remain in front of eyeballs, you may want to think twice. Chances are that you’re only diminishing your credibility for when there is something worth announcing. (Keep in mind the story of the boy who cried “wolf.”)
2. Lack of intrigue. If a release doesn’t excite or spark some form of interest, who is going to bother to read it, let alone act on it? With the increasingly shorter news cycle and abundance of content available to readers, it is imperative that you create a piece that draws attention (in a good way) without being over the top. Otherwise, you’re just adding to the clutter and noise. One good way to measure your impact and level of engagement is to include a call to action in your release.
3. Ineffective communication. Audiences want to know that they are more than just commodities and that you truly care about forming relationships with them. If you are merely looking to push out your information, you may want to think twice before sending out that standard release across social media. Lou Hoffman, Ishmael’s Corner, sums up relationship-building between PR and the media by saying, “If the PR profession jumped on this bandwagon, we would go a long way toward resolving what the warden in Cool Hand Luke called, ‘a failure to communicate.’”
4. A boilerplate that is longer than the release. Not surprisingly, the Bad Pitch Blog dedicates a whole category to boiler plates, illustrating how these “gems” can easily run amuck in a press release. Their advice: “So what’s the magic formula for boilerplates? No magic, just brevity. Describe your company in one or two sentences and throw in its URL for more information. Done.”
5. Too much or not enough information. Knowing how much information to include in your release is something of an art. Yet, it is still easily achievable, particularly if you know a thing or two about your audience. “You need to get a sense for when people are saturated with information about your idea and are no longer listening. This needs to become second nature to you and you need to trust this sense explicitly,” says Steve Spalding in a Splitting an Atom post entitled, Six Ways to Pitch without People Hating You.
While there is really no guarantee as to how people will react to your release, following these basic guidelines can help point you in the direction of media success.
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I think a point needs to be made here that what goes out as a press release and what goes out as a social media release are two different things. One release won’t do both jobs effectively as they both have different audiences and different purposes.