Optimizing Press Releases to Show Up in Search Engines Getting invaluable media coverage is a process I described in my 1994
book, Six Steps to Free Publicity. Although a lot of the basics in the
process of pursuing publicity remain the same, many of the finer points
have changed since then. If you've begun using online publicity
distribution services to disseminate your releases to the media, or even
if you merely post press releases on your own site, you'll get a much
greater publicity return when you modify releases so that they show up
in online searches performed by your target audience.
The lightbulb went off for me when I was searching for very specialized
software and came upon a press release for such a product rather than
the company's regular marketing copy at its Web site. Links in the
press release led me to the software manufacturer's Web site. It
occurred to me that in addition to the audience of journalists, editors
and producers who had opted to receive releases in their areas of
interest, press releases could address the needs of a second group, the
target market itself who were using search engines to find specialized
products, services and information. I researched techniques that would
make a difference in the findability of releases through search engines,
and here are the steps that I discovered.
Search Engine Optimization for Press Releases
1. Decide on a keyword phrase that ties in to the product or service
you are promoting and that people actually search for. You can research
this conveniently at Wordtracker.com. For example, some authorities
claim that "media release" is preferable to "press release." Yet since
more people search for the latter term, that's the term I use for
publicity purposes.
2. Place this phrase into your press release headline and repeat it
around three times within the body of your press release. Make sure you
also write out a properly formed link to your own Web site (i.e., write
"http://www.mydomain.com" rather than "mydomain.com") within the text of
the release.
3. Unless the proper name of your product or service is already
well-known, emphasize its generic description rather than its name. For
instance, write "proposal writing software" rather than "PropWritePro."
4. Likewise, substitute keyword phrases for pronouns like "it" or "its"
to increase their overall frequency in the release.
5. Include a subhead, which in turn includes your keyword phrase, if
your release goes on for more than three paragraphs. If you would
normally finish off with a subhead like "About TurboHeadIsland," where
TurboHeadIsland is the name of your company, lengthen the subhead so
that it includes your keyword phrase, for example, "About Proposal
Writing Software Maker TurboHeadIsland."
6. Post your release at your own Web site on its own page, linked from
your home page, in addition to submitting it to your favorite press
release distribution service.
Applying Press Release Optimization
Although these steps may appear simple, they are not intuitive or
natural for anyone with experience in writing traditional press
releases. Let's suppose you were launching a rental boat service in
Truro, Massachusetts, which is on Cape Cod. Tourists would be much more
likely to use "Cape Cod" as a search term than "Truro," so the former is
what should be repeated. And particularly if you happen to know Cape
Cod, if you were not consciously writing for search engines, you would
probably use "Cape Cod" only once and then revert to "the Cape," which
wouldn't help enough when people are typing in "Cape Cod boat rental."
A similar dilemma can come up when you refer to your topic by another
name than the general public uses. For example, a site offering advice
on a rather common problem of young children calls it by its scientific
name, "enuresis" and by the term preferred by psychologists,
"sleepwetting," rather than by the term used by most parents --
"bedwetting." Result: next to no search engine traffic. Both in its
press releases and at the Web site, this company has to bow to the
categories in greatest circulation and call the phenomenon what the
public does.
Assuming you've chosen your keyword phrases wisely, enjoy increased
visibility from Internet users finding your press release through search
engines for months and even years to come!
|  |
|