- 1Advice
- 1Beginners Blogging
- 1blog
- 2Blogging
- 1Blog Mistakes
- 10blogs
- 1Canada
- 1Common Mistakes
- 9communication
- 6communications
- 3Current Affairs
- 47E-Newsletter Archive
- 4email
- 1Environment
- 9facebook
- 3fundraising
- 1GMT Blogging Series
- 1GMT members
- 1Good Reads
- 1Google
- 1hiring
- 1hr
- 2intern
- 9job
- 1Keystone XL Pipeline
- 1listening
- 1Map
- 2marketing
- 3media
- 5media relations
- 2mobile
- 2News
- 2nonprofits
- 1nonprofit survival
- 1Oil
- 5ongoing learning
- 2online communities
- 1online resource
- 13outreach
- 1philanthropy
- 1posting
- 2press release
- 2press rooms
- 1promotion
- 1Protests
- 1radian6
- 1radio
- 1recycling
- 1rss
- 1Search Engine Optimization
- 2SEO
- 12social media
- 1source
- 2strategies
- 1techonolgy
- 1television
- 18tips
- 14twitter
- 1United States
- 4video
- 2vocus
- 1volunteerism
- 1Washington
- 1website
- 1working with reporters
Should you send your press releases to blogs?
Flickr has a great blog post from plasticbag.org. The author explains his distaste for receiving press releases when his blog is a personal one and he has no desire to help market other people's or company's agendas.
This post made me think about how groups are now using the opportunity to get covered by progressive blogs. If you are going to send a press release to a blog, it shouldn't come across like a press release. And the blog you are sending it to should have a keen interest in what your organization is doing. Does your event or mission go along with the theme of the blog? Can it help the blog author? If it is a personal blog, and you are unsure as to whether the blogger will care, then don't send it. It's also better to know the blogger - and offer to promote their blog in exchange.
-Yvonne Archer
Recent comments
1 year 43 weeks ago
1 year 51 weeks ago