How to Write a Press Release (for School Students)

Start putting together your press release., Summarize the answers to these questions., Include your most interesting and quotable material in the second and third paragraphs., Provide more detail in the rest of the release., Remember that news...

9 Steps 1 min read Medium

Step-by-Step Guide

  1. Step 1: Start putting together your press release.

    A press release should answer the following questions:
    Who was / is involved? What happened / will happen? When did it / will it happen? Where did it / will it happen? How did it / will it happen? ('How?' is not always relevant.)
  2. Step 2: Summarize the answers to these questions.

    Do this in one or two sentences of the first paragraph. , This will be the material which reporters can use in an article. , Also provide some brief background information about your group: who you are; what your objectives are; and what you have already accomplished. , So press releases are most effective when they announce something new, deal with something that is topical, or provide 'human interest' — personal stories that will get people’s attention. , This is so that reporters can get in touch with you to find out more if they want to. , Find out the name of the news editor, producer or specialized correspondents and gather contact information and other details.

    This will mean you can ‘issue’ your press release to the right people. , Give reporters as much notice as you can, and then remind them the day before the event.
  3. Step 3: Include your most interesting and quotable material in the second and third paragraphs.

  4. Step 4: Provide more detail in the rest of the release.

  5. Step 5: Remember that news outlets are looking for news

  6. Step 6: and for stories that grab people's attention.

  7. Step 7: Make sure your press release contains contact information.

  8. Step 8: Call the media outlet you want to reach before an event or the launch of a project.

  9. Step 9: Find out what the deadlines are for each media outlet.

Detailed Guide

A press release should answer the following questions:
Who was / is involved? What happened / will happen? When did it / will it happen? Where did it / will it happen? How did it / will it happen? ('How?' is not always relevant.)

Do this in one or two sentences of the first paragraph. , This will be the material which reporters can use in an article. , Also provide some brief background information about your group: who you are; what your objectives are; and what you have already accomplished. , So press releases are most effective when they announce something new, deal with something that is topical, or provide 'human interest' — personal stories that will get people’s attention. , This is so that reporters can get in touch with you to find out more if they want to. , Find out the name of the news editor, producer or specialized correspondents and gather contact information and other details.

This will mean you can ‘issue’ your press release to the right people. , Give reporters as much notice as you can, and then remind them the day before the event.

About the Author

J

Jack Nguyen

Jack Nguyen specializes in educational content and has been creating helpful content for over 1 years. Jack is committed to helping readers learn new skills and improve their lives.

39 articles
View all articles

Rate This Guide

--
Loading...
5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

How helpful was this guide? Click to rate: