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Tips & Advice
Writing Tips - Small business advice Being Newsworthy
For an announcement to be considered newsworthy it
must have a broad, general interest to the target
audience and a strong news angle (e.g. material
information, new development,drama, human
interest, local angle, consequence, etc.). In addition,
your release needs to be written in a journalistic,
rather than marketing style. It should be objectively
written as though a reporter were writing the story
for you. Most importantly, your release needs to
"inform" people, NOT just sell them something.
Headline Formats
In most cases your headline is the first thing an editor
sees when reviewing your release. An effective
headline can make the difference between an editor
covering your story or hitting the delete button. To
create an effective headline consider the following
points:
- Limit your headline to no more than one line. Many newsrooms have a limit on how
many characters they can receive in a headline and their systems are programmed
to reject releases that exceed this limit.
- The headline should provide an editor with a tantalizing snapshot of what the news
release is about. This is critical as many journalists view releases over their
wire system by headline only, then pick and choose when they want to view the full
text of the release.
- The headline should include the name of the company issuing the release.
- Do not include the terms "Company", "Incorporated" or "Limited" or their abbreviations
unless they are necessary to clearly identify the organization, i.e. Tandy Corporation
vs. Tandy Brands.
- Do not use exclamation points or dollar signs.
- Attribute all potentially critical, controversial, or judgmental statements.
Writing Style Requirements
Writing a professional and effective news release can
be difficult. Here are a few guidelines to consider
when crafting your release:
- Get to the point quickly and back it up with quotes and evidence.
- Use proper grammar and punctuation. Check for typos, and don't just rely on spell
check!
- Address who, what, when, where, why and how in the news release.
- Double check phone numbers and URLs.
- Read your release aloud to see if it makes sense.
- Include quotes to convey opinion or affiliation.
- Don't forget to put your contact name, release date, dateline, web site URL and
phone number in your release. Also make sure you are available for phone calls after
sending the release out.
- Your release should be written objectively, as if the writer has no affiliation
with the company.
- Do not use pronouns such as I, we, us, our, your, etc. except in direct quotes.
Write in third person.
- Do not use puffery statements or hype (i.e. we make the best widgets East of the
Rockies), but do inform the reader of your status in your industry.
- Always include standard boilerplate information about your company in the last paragraph.
The headline for this section should read "About (insert your company's name here)."
Length Requirements
Your release should be concise and to the point. You
should be able to convey your message in two pages
or less. Releases that are less than 50 words in
length tend to be advertisements and cannot be run
as a news release.
Bullet Points
Yes, but sparingly.
Writing Tips for Multicultural Releases
If you're trying to target the Hispanic market, make
sure to "Hispanicize" - adapt your release for this
market. Incorporate appropriate market quotes, and
have a spokesperson available that speaks fluent
Spanish.
Remember news is news, so any news story can be
related to multicultural markets.
Writing tips for Feature Releases
If your news release does not contain breaking news,
you may want to consider submitting your release as
a feature distribution. Feature releases often get play
in the "lifestyles" or "living" section of newspapers
and are designed for verbatim pickup. When writing a
release as a feature, there are some additional tips
you should take into consideration.
Click here for more information on features as well as
general guidelines and paragrahs specific tips for
writing an effective feature story.
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