6 Reasons Why Your Press Release Will Get Trashed
First, Editors
receive around 200-300 Press Releases a week.
That is 10,000 to 15,000 a year. Just to let you know.
Leading
business magazines are heavily targeted. Many get more than
500 a week. Editor’s employ assistants just to wade through them.
Editors reveal
there are six main reasons why most Press Releases get
binned (or not paid attention to), and often not even read.
1.
Irrelevant to their interests
Every day, Editors receive Press Releases which have no conceivable relevance
to the subjects they cover. It is clear those sending them have made no attempt
to target. They probably have not even looked at the publications. They
adopt a scatter-gun approach of sending Press Releases to every e-mail address
they can find. In the good old days when they arrived by snail mail,
at least PRs had to pay for the postage and take
the trouble of stuffing them into envelopes. Now those cost and work
constraints have disappeared. Because those who do take care to target
carefully are rare, editors tend to look much more closely at what THEY send.
2.
No story or weak story
A Press Release ought to contain some intrinsically interesting information
that an Editor would want to pass on to readers. Those who do understand the
kind of material a publication uses score because they look for relevant ideas,
then tailor their release in a way which makes an editor sit up and take notice. Editors
apply the so-what? test to Press Releases – so what would happen if we did not
run this story? If the answer is “not much”,
the release goes in the bin. If you believe a Press Release wouldn’t pass
the test, it shouldn’t be sent – or the story should be strengthened so
that it will pass muster.
3.
Self-promotion or puffery
Too many people who send out Press Releases do not seem to understand the
difference between news and advertising. Editors hate having to
wade through pages of boastful hype extolling an organization and all its
works. Even Press Releases which do contain the germ of a story sometimes get
killed off because they are wrapped up in exuberant puffery. I am not
surprised that some Editors pass Press Releases straight to their advertising
departments as sales leads.
4.
Poor English
A significant proportion of Press Releases contain spelling, grammar, or
punctuation errors. Most Editors are turned-off, but a few forgiving souls do
not mind correcting the English. Even so, howlers such as wrong use
(or non-use) of the possessive apostrophe and failure to make the verb agree
with the subject – two of the most common mistakes – undermine
a release’s (correct use of possessive apostrophe) credibility.
5.
Confusing jargon
Some Press Releases seem to have been written by computer. They start with the
latest management-speak (“pushing the envelope” is a current favorite), add a
layer of baffling jargon, and sprinkle in plenty of those impenetrable acronyms. The
finished result reads like a secret code.
The most skilled writers know that stories are best told in simple English
which can be read and understood quickly. Editors do not have the time
to decode jargon or play guessing games with unknown acronyms.
6.
Too long
Many Press Releases combine the twin faults of being too long – but
not providing enough information. That is because the information they
do provide tends to be irrelevant background about the company, while
key facts about the story – the value of the contract, the date of the
product launch, the job title of the newly appointed individual – are
left out. Skilled writers judge the “weight” of a story. Most stories can
be told in a page. Some may need two. A story must be pretty close in
importance to the Second Coming to warrant three.
A final word
of good news. Editors and journalists do admit from time to time, that they got
a “really good” story from a Press Release. J
Irrespective
of your business goals, vision, or content, Press Release distribution
is indispensable to flag a successful growth curve in the salient years to come
within your organization. Press Release distribution has opened the scopes of Small
Business Owners especially who can participate in the digital movement of
audience engagement and market visibility without the liability of too great of
an investment. Marketing Consultants and Business Coaches and their Press
Release services stand as a major initiation to something bigger in terms of
capturing market and consumer demands. It definitely should not be overlooked.