Press Release Writing Tips Portland OR

A press release is an announcement of a newsworthy item that is issued to journalists and other media representatives. And it is a document that is generally formatted in a basic manner across the publishing industry for quick, efficient handing across the board of your news by media professionals. With regards to the basics of press release writing, here are seven basic elements that every press release should contain:

Local Companies

Dayton Communication Inc
(503) 233-9352
107 Se Washington St
Portland, OR
Lad Communications
(503) 827-6564
812 Sw Washington St
Portland, OR
OnPR, Inc
503 802.4400
720 SW Washington St
Portland, OR
Coates Kokes
(503) 241-1124
34 Nw 1st Ave
Portland, OR
B Sinclair Advertising & Public Realtions
(503) 226-0129
1423 Sw Hall St
Portland, OR
McClenahan Bruer Communications
(503) 546-1000
1500 Sw 12th Ave
Portland, OR
Maxwell Communications
(503) 231-3086
1600 Se Bybee Blvd
Portland, OR
Locke Marketing Public Relatio
(503) 546-7811
8311 Se 13th Ave
Portland, OR
Pipeline pr + marketing
503-546-7811
8311 SE 13th Street
Portland, OR
Sally Murdoch Media Relations
503 735 5943
11725 SW 35th
Portland, OR

A press release is an announcement of a newsworthy item that is issued to journalists and other media representatives. And it is a document that is generally formatted in a basic manner across the publishing industry for quick, efficient handing across the board of your news by media professionals.

With regards to the basics of press release writing, here are seven basic elements that every press release should contain:

  • FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: These words should appear in the upper left-hand margin and you should capitalize every letter.

  • Contact Information: Insert this after the release statement above and list the contact information of the company spokesperson.

  • Headline: This should be written after the contact information.

  • Dateline: List the city of origin for your press release.

  • Lead Paragraph: The first paragraph needs to grab the reader's attention and should contain the relevant information to your message such as the five W's (who, what, when, where, why).

  • Text: Next comes the main body of your press release where your message should develop fully.

  • Last Paragraph: Make sure to alert the reading audience where to turn for more information; i.e. a postal address, phone number and website link. Plus offer something free for them; a report, newsletter or other gift.

    To learn what's hot and what's not in your particular industry, check out PRWeb(r) at PRWeb.com for current press releases. No need to re-invent the wheel. See what's working there and treat the information as a general guideline for your own news format and presentation.


    You can also head to Content Propulsion Lab. It's the place for "Do It Yourself" companies who would love the benefits of a high-end Public Relations firm but lack the budgets, online at http://www.ContentLabInfo.com , a Division of Content Desk, available at http://www.ContentDeskInfo.com .

    Copyright: Copyright c 2006-2008 Diana Barnum

    About the Author:
    By Diana Barnum, president of Moving Ahead Communications.


    Article Source: thePhantomWriters Article Submission Service

  • Featured Local Company

    Dayton Communication Inc

    (503) 233-9352
    107 Se Washington St
    Portland, OR

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