Public Relations & Reputation Management

Crafting a Newsworthy Press Release

A press release still earns coverage when it is genuinely newsworthy and easy to work with. Test the essentials: headline craft, datelines, quotes, boilerplates, multimedia, and smart distribution steps.

Which headline approach is most effective for a press release?

All‑caps hype without facts

Clear, specific summary of the news and value

Vague teaser that hides the news

A pun that omits the key announcement

Newsworthy headlines state what happened and why it matters. Teasers and hype reduce clarity and pickup.

What belongs in the first paragraph (the lead) of a news release?

The core facts answering who, what, when, where, why

Quotes as the opening line

Background history before any news

Boilerplate first

Reporters expect the lead to convey the essential news quickly. Context and quotes should follow the lead.

Which dateline choice is correct for standard press releases?

CITY only after the boilerplate

A timezone code without a city

Month Day, Year — at the very end

CITY, Month Day, Year — before the first sentence

A precise city and date appear in the dateline before the opening sentence. This orients readers and supports accurate pickup.

How should an embargo be indicated on a press release?

Hide the embargo in the last paragraph

Only mention embargo in the email subject

Rely on verbal agreement without notation

Place “EMBARGOED UNTIL [date and time] [timezone]” prominently at the top

Clear, prominent labeling prevents confusion and helps outlets schedule publication. Consistency reduces the risk of accidental early posting.

What makes for useful quotes in a release?

They include unsubstantiated superlatives

They stuff keywords for SEO only

They repeat the headline verbatim

They add context or insight beyond the facts in the lead

Quotes should humanize and explain why the news matters. Redundant or promotional quotes add little value.

Where does the company boilerplate belong?

At the end of the release under a boilerplate section

In the headline

As the second sentence of the lead

Inside the media contact line

The boilerplate is a standard closing paragraph about the organization. It should not interrupt the news itself.

Which element helps reporters act on your news immediately?

A generic contact form only

A media contact with name, email, and phone

A postal address only

An unmonitored inbox

Direct contact details speed follow‑ups and fact‑checking. It reduces friction for busy newsrooms.

How can multimedia best support a release?

Avoid visuals entirely

Embed huge files as attachments to every email

Use watermarked assets only

Provide links to images, logos, or b‑roll with usage guidance

Accessible assets increase pickup and accuracy. Links avoid deliverability issues caused by large attachments.

What is a sensible way to use AI when drafting a release in 2025?

Skip editorial standards because AI wrote it

Use it to inflate claims

Let it publish automatically without review

Use it for first drafts or summaries, then fact‑check and edit before sending

AI can accelerate drafting but humans must verify accuracy and tone. Responsible use improves speed without sacrificing quality.

Which option improves discoverability without hurting readability?

Use concise keywords and links where natural, not stuffed

Repeat the same keyword ten times in a row

Write for bots, not people

Hide links in images only

Clarity first, with light optimization for search and AI discovery. Over‑optimization degrades trust and usability.

Starter

You’ve got the outline. Focus on a clear lead, dateline, strong quotes, and a helpful boilerplate with contact info.

Solid

Solid newsroom‑ready structure. Sharpen headlines, tighten copy, and attach accessible assets to speed pickup.

Expert!

Masterful. Your releases are clear, verifiable, and easy to use—embargoes labeled, assets linked, and purpose evident.

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