How to create newsworthy content to secure publisher coverage

The concept of newsworthy content is one that every brand should be chasing. The phrase “great content” is a widely used one but by its nature it’s extremely difficult to actually qualify as it’s rather subjective and extremely broad! In a lot of cases I much prefer to use the term newsworthy as it identifies with the ideas behind the content rather than the production value and delivery. There’s no reason why any brand can’t create newsworthy content on a relatively low budget, something that can be shown in the examples given throughout the presentation.
The components of newsworthy content
In order to be able to classify content as newsworthy we can distil the concept into 5 separate areas – timing, emotion, impact, attention & credibility. In order to have a content piece that can be classed as newsworthy it needs to fulfil at least 3 of these areas:
- Timing – Is the information contained in the article fresh? Or does it relate specifically to a fresh event?
- Emotion – Does the piece invoke some kind of emotion within the user? Be it happy, sad, angry or joyful, does it make the user feel something?
- Impact – How does the information impact the user? Is it relevant to their everyday lives or will they behave differently having read and understood the information?
- Attention – Does the content grab the user’s attention? Is the subject and information sufficient to pull them away from what they are doing to focus their attention on the piece?
- Credible – Should the user trust the information contained in the piece? Does it contain statistics to back up the content and are these statistics reliable? Or does the piece have involvement from someone who is sufficiently qualified or recognised to talk about the subject?
How a brand can become newsworthy
Publishers and newspapers create tons of fantastically newsworthy content on a daily basis but that is largely because they are built to do so – that is the core part of their business. Whilst there’s a great deal more going on with a brand, understanding that the creation of newsworthy content requires ingrained processes is the first step to being able to continuously do it! The Marketing management process is something that is taught at business and marketing schools as a tool to manage campaigns in a structured format. This is broken down into 5 steps:- Analysing market opportunities – understanding the audiences out there, how they behave and what they want
- Selecting target – deciding which audience segment to target
- Designing the market strategy – Formulating a strategy to engage with that target segment
- Plan & implement marketing programs – conceive & produce the campaigns that targets the segments
- Manage marketing efforts – Ensure that the campaigns are properly promoted and managed according to the KPIs and business goals
How do we create newsworthy content?
So understanding what newsworthy content is and the need for processes in order to create it, is an important step to take but tactically what can we do to enable the marketing team to start continuously creating content that is newsworthy? Here are some tips to get started, check the presentation for examples on each of these: Stop thinking copywriters – think influencers Too many companies are still using copywriters to create all of their content when really users want to see knowledgeable influencers imparting information to them. There are different kinds of influencers that fit different kinds of content campaigns, these can be categorised into 4 types:- Brand marketers – These are marketers who are there to illustrate data and updates from the brand. They represent the brand itself.
- Brand journalists – These are the frontline journalists who keep their ears to the ground to provide commentary on industry news and trends. Their job is to find the stories and relate them back to the brand’s audience.
- Customers – if you’re not seeing your customers as influencers then you are definitely missing a trick! These are people who experience the products and are ingrained in your industry so listen to them and enable them as story tellers.
- Influencers – your influencers are your experts. They may live external to your business but their job is to be utilised as brand advocates, writing content and inspiring your audience to your brand.