NewsCactus Blog

online communications – marketing, public relations and advertising

What Journalists want to see in an online newsroom

Journalists today rely on the Internet to provide research for stories. According to numerous studies, they almost always consult a company’s Web site as an initial, primary source of information.

Although many companies provide basic information or a section for news releases, the best Web sites and those appreciated most by the press, provide access to easy-to-find, in-depth and up-to-date information.

However, making information available on your site is only the first step to developing an effective online media relationship. Just as important is ensuring the information is timely and easily accessible. The best way to do this is to create and maintain a dedicated online newsroom that’s easy to find from your home page.

A newsroom provides journalists with a single location in which to find information. Experience teaches that a newsroom in itself isn’t a magical key to press coverage. Understanding what journalists need and expect to find is paramount when designing an online newsroom.

When journalists visit newsrooms, certain information is considered must-have, including:

Contact Information

This is often considered by many journalists to be the single most vital piece of information on your Web site. Journalists have expressed extreme frustration when direct contact information wasn’t readily available on company Web sites.

Although listing contact information for a public relations representative may lead to unwanted or unimportant calls, it is much more important to provide that information to journalists. Neglecting to add contact information to your Web site creates an obstacle for journalists, which is the exact opposite of what you want. It may also discourage reporters from visiting your site again in the future.

When providing this information, generic e-mail addresses, such as PR@yourcompany.com, instills little in your company. Reporters are weary of such methods since no name is provided for follow-up and they don’t know when they will receive a response. Direct e-mail addresses and phone numbers have proven to be much more effective.

Remember that the online newsroom exists primarily to make it easier for journalists to write about your company or organization.

News Releases

Using the NewsCactus online newsroom, clients have complete control over their news releases. Distribution can be immediate or scheduled for the future and is handled through RSS feed, which has several advantages over e-mail.

Although a newsroom should go beyond merely archiving past press releases, this is still an important step. Many journalists will review old press releases for more information when they research story leads, so it’s important to make them available, and searchable, online.

Research/Study Data

Although it may not seem important to list this information on your Web site, it is an excellent opportunity to provide more information about your company. Including research data, preferably both in-house and third-party findings, not only makes the company seem more transparent and unbiased, but may also help establish your company and its executives as authorities in the industry.

Corporate Background

Even for large and recognizable companies, a corporate background is a great tool to add to your newsroom. Journalists will often use this and corporate financial sheets to fact check stories. Background information you include in your newsroom can be anything that relates to your company, such as an industry background or news stories about events that affect the industry as a whole. Hard information and statistics can go a long way in telling your company’s story.

Executive Team Information

These should include photos and biographies for the entire executive team. Although not as important as contact information, executive biographies and photos are appreciated by journalists who may use the information and photos to add a more human angle to their story.

Photos and Multimedia

This is a basic item every company should be sure to include in its online newsroom. Although several publications have their own photographers, smaller content producers, such as bloggers, often have to rely on company provided photos to illustrate their stories.

Adding product photos, executive photos, downloadable logos, pictures from special events and other images can increase the amount of coverage or visibility your company receives. Be sure to include both low- and high-resolution images and to specify file size so the user knows what to expect.

This is also an excellent opportunity to include sound clips, video, animation or any other pieces of media you have on file.

Links and Related Sources

No matter how much information you provide in your newsroom, you could always provide more. After all, we live in an information age.

When reporters work on stories that require multiple sources, it can be advantageous to help them with their research by pointing them towards other sources of information. Always remember that the easier you make it for the press to write stories about you, the more likely it is that they will.

Archived Coverage

Archive every past news story about your company in your newsroom, including unfavorable news stories. Why, you may ask? This gives you a chance to address any negative issues previously reported. Providing such editorials or linking related stories can lead the reporter to write from a more favorable angle or write an entirely new story if the bad news has already been covered.

Provide a search function to make it easier for journalists to find stories based on subject, headline, news source, date written and any other qualifiers.

Special Events

This is an excellent way to show how that your company is involved with the community. Special events provide great opportunities for news coverage, especially when your company works with local media, other businesses or nonprofit groups. Dedicate a section of your newsroom to special events, future and past.

Upcoming events should include information about the event, times and dates, contact information and a list of partners. Past events should also include follow-up summaries and photos of the events.

White Papers

If your company produces white papers, you should include them in the newsroom. Authoring white papers will lend credibility to your company and again, can position you as experts. White papers can help both new and experienced reporters by providing them more in-depth information on various topics.

Awards and Recognition

Your online newsroom should have a section dedicated to any awards or recognition your company or any of its employees receive. The most obvious benefit of demonstrating recognition by peers, industry or third-party observers is that it adds credibility.

Press Kits

Press kits are still excellent tools for providing more information to journalists writing stories about your company and should always be included in your online newsroom.

Distributing your press kit online can be done easily and economically. Electronic media kits aren’t nearly as resource exhaustive as their physical counterparts.

Information in press kits should be more detailed and work to support news releases. Make sure to include executive biographies, fact sheets, photos, multimedia, downloadable logos or illustrations.

The NewsCactus service allows subscribers to upload as many PDF press kits as desired.

One of the many advantages of an online newsroom is that it frees public relations representatives from fielding unnecessary calls by reporters asking questions that could easily be answered in a Frequently Asked Questions page or elsewhere in your newsroom.

Help the media help themselves by providing a wealth of online information and making it easy to navigate. The more information you provide and the easier it is to find, the more exposure and visibility your company is likely to enjoy.

When creating an online newsroom, the bottom line is to create a reliable source of up-to-date, accurate information for the press. Simply put, it will improve your media relations.

No related posts.

No comments

No comments yet. Be the first.

Leave a reply