Writing a Press Note
1.
Start with an attention-grabbing headline in bold font.
2. Begin the body with the date and city.
3. Summarize the subject in the lead sentence.
4. Describe the important details of your story for the rest of the body.
5. Include your contact information at the end of the press release.
2. Begin the body with the date and city.
3. Summarize the subject in the lead sentence.
4. Describe the important details of your story for the rest of the body.
5. Include your contact information at the end of the press release.
Making
it Pop
1.
Write a genuine headline. It should be brief, clear and to the point: an ultra-compact version of
the press release’s key point. Plenty of PR professionals recommend writing
your headline at the end, after the rest of the release is written. If you
follow that instruction, continue on and come back to writing the headline once
the rest is done. The headline is known as the eye-catcher and is very
important to the whole release.
·
wikiHow recognized as most reliable information source. See how that works? Now you
want to know more! News release headlines should have a "grabber" to
attract journalists, just as a newspaper headline is meant to grab readers. It
may describe the latest achievement of an organization, a recent newsworthy
event, a new product or service.
·
Headlines written in bold! A bold headline also typically uses a larger
font size than the body copy. Conventional press release headlines use the
present tense and exclude "a" and "the", as well as forms
of the verb "to be" in certain contexts.
·
First word capitalized. As are all proper nouns. Most headline words
appear in lower-case letters, although using a stylized "small caps"
font style can create a more graphically news-attractive look and feel. Do not
capitalize every word.
·
Extract important keywords. The simplest method to create the press release
headline is to extract the most important keywords from your press release.
From these keywords, try to frame a logical and attention-getting statement. If
including a summary sentence after the headline, the same rules apply. Using
keywords early will give you better visibility in search engines, and it will
be simpler for journalists and readers to get the idea of the press release
content. Look at the actions in this first step, and notice how every one of
them could be a press release headline.
2.
Write the body copy. The press release should be written as you want it to appear in a news
story. And remember this: most journalists are very busy, and don't have time
to research your company's big announcement, so much of what you write for your
press release will be what the journalists use in their writeup of your big
event. Whatever you want them to say, this is where you put it.
·
Start
with the date and city in which the press release originates. The city may be
omitted if it will be confusing –– for example if the release is written in New
York about events in the company's Chicago division.
·
The lead,
or first sentence, should grab the reader and say concisely what is happening.
For example, if the headline is "Careen Publishing releases new WWII
novel," the first sentence might be something like, "Carpren
Publishing, Ltd., today released their first World War II novel by celebrated
writer Darcy Kay." It expands the headline enough to fill in some of the
details, and brings the reader further into the story. The next one to two
sentences should then expand upon the lead.
·
The press
release body copy should be compact. Avoid using very long sentences and
paragraphs. Avoid repetition and overuse of fancy language and jargon. Strive
for simplicity, and no wasted words.
·
The first
paragraph (two to three sentences) should sum up the press release, and the
additional content must elaborate it. In a fast-paced world, neither
journalists, nor other readers, would read the entire press release if the
start of the article didn't generate interest.
·
Deal with
actual facts –– events, products, services, people, targets, goals, plans,
projects. Try to provide maximum use of concrete facts. This is news.
A simple method for writing an effective press release is to make a list of
following clarifications: Who, what, when, where, why, and how.
3.
Communicate the "5 W's" (and the H)
clearly. Who, what, when, where, why ––and how–– should tell
the reader everything they need to know. Consider the checklist in context with
the points below, using the example above to generate our press release:
·
Who is
this about? Carpren Publishing.
·
What is
the actual news? Carpren Publishing is releasing a book.
·
When does
this even happen? Tomorrow.
·
Where
does this even take place? In all major markets, tomorrow.
·
Why this
is news? It was written by renowned author, Arcy Kay.
·
How is
this happening? The main event is at a book signing in Chicago, followed by a
book tour to all the major metropolitan areas.
·
With the
basics defined, fill in the gaps with information about the people, products,
items, dates and other things related with the news.
·
If your
company is not the main subject of the news, but is the source of the press
release, make it clear in the body.
·
Keep it
short and to the point. If you are sending a hard copy, the text should be
double-spaced.
·
The more
newsworthy you make the press release copy, the better the chances of it being
selected by a journalist for reporting. Find out what "newsworthy"
means to a given market and use this knowledge to hook the editor or reporter.
4.
Make it clean, crisp, and applicable to your
audience. Odds are whoever you sent your press release to has a
dozen just like it in his/her inbox just waiting to be ignored. If you want
yours to be chosen, it's got to be good. Not only does it have to be good, but
it has to be as close to "ready for press" as possible.
·
When an
editor looks at your piece, he/she is thinking, from the first second, about
how long it's going to take them to get it to print. If your work is full of
errors, lacking content, or just needs to be revised, they're not going to
waste their time. So make sure you have good grammar, all the basics, and have
something to write about.
·
Why
should these people care what you have to say? If you're sending it to the
right audience, it'll be obvious. If you're not, well, why are you wasting your
time? Give the right people a piece of news (news, not advertising) and you're
on the right track.
·
They'll
care more if you send it in the morning. That gives them time to pad your piece
into what they're already working on. Be considerate.
5.
Tie it together. Provide some extra information links that support your press
release. Does the company you're selling have additional information online
that readers may find useful? Great. Add it in.
·
If you're
nervous about what you've got, do some research on what's already out there.
Someone probably wrote something on an event just like the one you're covering.
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