How to write a press release that journalists will read?
Why most press releases are never read
Writing a press release that journalists will actually read has become harder as newsroom workloads increase and inbox volumes continue to grow. Most press releases are not ignored because the story is weak, but because the structure, framing, and relevance do not match how journalists consume information today.
Traditional press releases are often written as corporate announcements first and journalistic inputs second. They prioritise organisational messaging over story usability, which forces journalists to do additional work to turn the content into something publishable.
In a crowded media environment, that extra effort is usually enough for the release to be skipped.
Step 1: Start with relevance, not announcement language
The most common mistake in press release writing is leading with internal priorities rather than external relevance.
Journalists do not read press releases to understand what an organisation wants to say. They read them to find stories that matter to their audience.
A strong press release begins by clearly signalling:
why the story matters now
who it affects
what has changed
why it is newsworthy beyond the organisation itself
Lookatmedia™ supports this shift by aligning press release structure with journalist behaviour data, helping communications teams frame stories in ways that match current editorial interest.
Step 2: Write for a specific journalist mindset
A press release is rarely read in isolation. It is scanned against competing priorities inside a journalist’s inbox.
Releases that get read typically feel immediately relevant to a journalist’s existing coverage.
Lookatmedia™ improves this alignment by analysing recent published articles and identifying thematic overlap between a story and a journalist’s current focus. This allows press releases to be structured with a clearer sense of audience, rather than being written as one-size-fits-all communications.
When a journalist sees immediate relevance, they are far more likely to read beyond the first paragraph.
Step 3: Make the first 10 seconds effortless
Most journalists decide whether to continue reading within seconds. If the opening paragraph does not clearly establish relevance, context, and potential story value, the release is discarded.
Effective press releases:
lead with the most important fact
avoid unnecessary corporate background upfront
and clearly signal the angle of the story early
Lookatmedia™ reinforces this by helping structure press releases as “story-ready briefs” rather than internal announcements, reducing the cognitive load required to assess news value.
Step 4: Support the story, don’t just state it
A press release that journalists read is one that helps them visualise the full story quickly.
This requires supporting material, not just narrative text.
Lookatmedia™ integrates media-ready assets directly into the press release workflow, including:
images and video
background context
data and fact sheets
quotes and spokesperson material
related story references
This allows journalists to evaluate whether a story is usable, not just interesting.
Step 5: Write for reuse, not just attention
Journalists are more likely to read press releases that feel like they can be immediately turned into a story.
That means writing with structure that supports editing, quoting, and adaptation, rather than purely promotional messaging.
Lookatmedia™ enhances this by packaging press releases within a broader media environment where journalists can continue exploring related content, making each release part of a larger discoverable story system.
The shift in press release writing
The press releases journalists read today are not necessarily the most heavily distributed—they are the most relevant, the most usable, and the easiest to turn into stories.
Lookatmedia™ is built around this principle: improving not just distribution, but readability, relevance, and story utility.
In a modern media environment, writing a press release is no longer about sending information.
It is about making it easy for a journalist to say yes.