Ending Soon! Save 33% on All Access

3 Ways Your Startup Can Get PR -- Right Now All angles of press will help your business. Here's how can you get some.

By Peter Daisyme Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Shutterstock.com

I'm a small business owner. And I'm always trying to get press for my business.

Startups need PR for several reasons -- it helps with brand visibility; it lets investors know they can work with press and tell a compelling story; it can bring in new customers; and when customers are on the website, it shows that even reporters are taking note of the product.

All angles of press will help your business. So how can you get some this instant if you don't have a PR firm or you have one, but they're not getting you the results you want -- now.

Related: 7 Must-Do Tips for Startups to Generate Good PR

1. Offer a reporter an exclusive

Get on Twitter immediately, and start following every reporter who covers your industry. Create a list, and start engaging or re-Tweeting these reporters. Once you get one hooked, and they follow you back, direct message them and offer them an exclusive story on something interesting.

2. Try NewsLauncher

NewsLauncher is pretty simple: You pitch a PR person your story, tell them how many people you want to read it, and a writer from that publication takes it on and gets it published. If it doesn't get published, you get a full refund. They have nine A-list publications to choose from to get you noticed.

Related: How to Avoid Journalists' 5 Worst Pitching Peeves

"Visibility is trust. Lack of visibility is conceit. This is what's in the minds of your consumer," NewsLauncher CEO Dave Polykoff says.

3. Create a newsworthy event

This takes some creativity and gusto. Remember the anti-robot protesters at SXSW? All for a dating app.

To make an event newsworthy, you must do something that no one has done before, and do it in a place public enough that people will take notice and post it on social media. Going to events where you know reporters will be is also a smart move -- conferences, conventions, etc.

Related: Pitch Perfect: 4 Steps to Capture the Media's Attention

Peter Daisyme

Entrepreneur Leadership Network® Contributor

Co-founder of Hostt

Peter Daisyme is the co-founder of Hostt, specializing in helping businesses host their website for free for life. Previously, he was co-founder of Pixloo, a company that helped people sell their homes online, which was acquired in 2012.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Travel

Save on Business Travel for Life This Memorial Day with an $80 Deal

OneAir Elite uses AI to search the web around the clock for flight deals.

Devices

Keep Business Private with a Second Phone Number for $20

Hushed offers users a virtual number that can take calls and messages privately from their personal number.

Business News

Apple iPhone 7 Users May Be Owed a Slice of a $35 Million Settlement — Here's How to Claim Your Share

Previous (and current, no judgment) iPhone 7 users may be entitled to up to $349. The deadline to file a claim is June 3.

Business News

A University Awarded a Student $10,000 for His AI Tool — Then Suspended Him for Using It, According to a New Lawsuit

Emory University awarded the AI study aid the $10,000 grand prize in an entrepreneurial pitch competition last year.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.