By Kevin Newcomb, Editor, Internet Marketing Institute
Press release optimization, once the buzzword-du jour four or five years ago, has been abandoned by many marketers as ineffective. But press release optimization has gotten a bad rap, and can still be an effective tool for both business-to-consumer (B2C) and business-to-business (B2B) marketing.
Greg Jarboe, president of SEO-PR and an early pioneer in combining search engine optimization (SEO) and public relations (PR), explained the new reality of online PR to a group of B2B marketers in Los Angeles last month at the B2B Search Strategy Summit.
According to Jarboe, his firm had been optimizing press releases for clients from 2003 until 2007 using largely similar tactics. And then those tactics began to be less effective, both for Jarboe and for the thousands of B2B companies that were using them.
“The biggest factor was that a huge group of people who were not optimizing news content before 2006 or 2007 began doing it. The press began using SEO on their own articles,” Jarboe said.
With reporters and editors at various newspapers, TV stations, and other news outlets now vying for placement in news search engines like Google News, press release optimization suddenly became infinitely harder, he said.
When that happened, many marketers concluded that press release optimization was no longer effective. But for Jarboe, it just meant it was time to change tactics.
“News search optimization didn’t stop working, it just got more competitive,” he said. “We need to develop new techniques to compete in a much more cluttered age.”
According to Jarboe, there are three important ways to make the most of news search optimization:
1. Recognize the importance of social media. Social media, while just one factor among many, can play an important role in today’s PR. Marketers need to realize that sites like Facebook or YouTube are not just for kids, but are tools used by both consumers and business buyers.
More than 3 billion searches are made on YouTube each month, placing it second only to Google in terms of query volume. And many of those queries are business- or product-specific, Jarboe said.
2. Keyword research needs to be refined. With more competition in news search, it’s necessary to do what your counterparts in pay-per-click (PPC) and SEO must do all the time: improve keyword research. Finding relevant keywords with less competition is key to success in those disciplines, and it is now essential to news search optimization as well.
3. Recognize the value of news search optimization. Success in news search is short-lived. Even in the best-case scenario, your content will only stay on top of the results for a few weeks. It’s not like performing SEO for a Web site, where a marketer plans to achieve results that can last for several years, in some cases.
That doesn’t mean news search optimization is not worth doing, but it does mean that marketers should accept that reality and use it for short-term gains. For example, news search optimization can be very effective for a new product launch, or announcing seasonal promotions. Whatever the topic, it needs to be timely, Jarboe said.
“People don’t go to a news search engine for generic product information. They’re looking for something new,” he said. “It’s not worth trying to optimize non-news for news search. Even if it works, it can lead to a bad user experience, and it probably won’t generate any leads.”
To learn more about news search optimization and other online marketing strategies, check out the upcoming PPC Summit Presents…Search Marketing and Social Media Success, coming to Los Angeles in September 2010.







