Copyright 2014 – Eric Bobrow
All rights reserved – do not reproduce or distribute
Thank you for visiting the Internet Marketing for Architects Course website. The video lessons and certain other materials are available for members only. If you would like to watch the training video on this page, please login to the website. If you are not already a member, please visit the following page for more information and to sign up for the Internet Marketing for Architects Course Eric Bobrow, Creator of the Internet Marketing for Architects Course |
Thank you for visiting the Internet Marketing for Architects Course website. The video lessons and certain other materials are available for members only. If you would like to watch the training video on this page, please login to the website. If you are not already a member, please visit the following page for more information and to sign up for the Internet Marketing for Architects Course Eric Bobrow, Creator of the Internet Marketing for Architects Course |
Press Release Marketing is one of the fastest and most effective ways to improve the ranking and visibility of your website. It is one technique from the general category of “off-site” or “off-page” optimization: things you can and should do outside of your own website itself that will boost the Search Engine Optimization for your site.
Results from press release submissions can often be seen within days! A series of several press releases can create a powerful wave of backlinks to raise the rankings of your site, and the press releases themselves can often show up in the search engine results, increasing your visibility and branding.
The strategies presented in this lesson are adapted from time-honored traditions that have been updated and customized for online usage.
Press Releases leverage several powerful ideas:
1. News
2. Stories
3. Credibility
4. Backlinks
It’s part of our culture – we pay attention to the news
It gives a reason to talk about something and feature it
It doesn’t have to be “earth-shaking” or a world record
Think about local newspapers – they need news to report every day
Modern equivalent – personal news – “status updates” & Twitter
From the dawn of human language, we’ve learned to love stories
Stories make information more personal and compelling
Take a routine job and make it a story of triumph or accomplishment
Example: a remodel of an old house – an “eyesore” that had potential, both the client and the designer “believed in it” – “good bones” – turned into a beautiful home that adds to the neighborhood
Press releases are best written as news stories in the third person, somewhat neutral (no hyperbole or promotional words)
However – it’s common to have one or more quotes, written from your point of view or of a client or another person – and these can be very “direct” and state opinions emphatically
The combination works well to explain facts yet allows you to have your say
One of the most important factors in a website being ranked
Press releases can be submitted through a variety of online services that provide widespread distribution
These online references can contain links to your website
“Google approved”
Can improve ranking of your site very quickly
The press release itself can appear in search results, adding to branding
Headline
Short description of the story
300 to 700 words for the body text
Include one or more quotes
Ending section with contact info
Optional – pictures with captions, other file attachments
Participation in an event – e.g. presentation to students, Habitat volunteer
Recent project completed
Project in process
New project awarded
New initiative – e.g. new or reworked website or blog or newsletter, new office
New focus – e.g. sustainable design, online marketing, branding
Education – learning about important topic; teaching or speaking about topic
Response to code changes or other news related to building design or use
Use of innovative technology – e.g. 3D modeling, web portal for clients
What would you tell a friend who asked you – “what’s new?”
See the samples on the Internet Marketing for Architects website
Make the title a clear, short statement that attracts interest
Put your company name in the title for extra branding
Make the description interesting enough to draw visitors
Include several reference links to different pages of your website
Use “anchor text” that matches or coordinates with your target keywords
Examples: “Los Angeles modern architect”, “Costa Rica luxury custom homes”, “basement remodels”
One of these can go to your home page, others can go to portfolio or other resource pages
General rule of thumb – up to one link per 100 words
In the Contact section, include “naked” URL link for balance
Free PR sites – list will be posted in member area
Low cost distribution through web services – do a search for “[free] online press release distribution service”
Cost-effective widespread distribution through OnlinePRNews and PRWeb
Monitoring the effectiveness of your distribution – search for word string
— Show this inside OnlinePRNews and PRWeb for Bobrow PR —
Syndication – “full page reprints” with live links – vs. RSS or “headline feed”
Link Juice is the term used to describe how a large number of backlinks to a specific page will add “juice” or power to that page. This makes the links on that particular page more authoritative, and they will pass along that “juice” to the pages that are referred to in those backlinks.
Increase the “Link Juice” of your press release by referencing it in your second press release with an appropriately worded link
Create a third press release and reference the first two
This builds up tremendous “authority” and can dramatically improve rankings
Do a Google search for “SEO Press Release” or “Press Release Marketing”
Sign up for free info from OnlinePRNews
Browse PRWeb and PRNewsWire sites
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I’m not sure how I feel about internet press releases. I’m familiar with the idea of press releases sent to print newspapers, where there is someone at the paper determining its newsworthiness and there is no charge for the printing of it. Internet press releases sound a little like paid advertising that is masquerading as news.