Two
hundred and thirteen journalists participated in our recent
survey. They came from all media types, with newspaper (46%)
and magazine (34%) journalists most prevalent. We found
many similarities with the responses
we received last year.
However, this year, in addition to questions about how they wanted
to receive press releases and what they like included in them,
we asked about how new media is changing the landscape of newsrooms
across the country. Here is what they told us…
How they want it
Email is clearly the preferred
method of receiving releases with a whopping 85% saying that
email is how they “prefer” to
receive releases. About 11% said they prefer regular mail
but all other delivery options (fax, wire service, RSS feed,
in person delivery) ranked under 2%.
What they want
We also asked journalists what they wanted in
releases. The
most important component was graphics with 82% of journalists
responding that graphics were very important or important. Verbiage
from releases also ranked high with 73% noting it was (very)
important. And, 80% of journalists said that biographies,
backgrounders and other related data was (very) important. Audio,
video and logos, on the other hand, were deemed unimportant (although
it must be noted that the survey is highly tilted towards print
media and if you narrow responses to radio and TV then audio
and video become much more important to our respondents).
Since many of our clients are interested in adding animation
to their electronic press kits (a habit we try to avoid since
it causes delivery problems), we asked journalists how they feel
about animated emails. About 10% of journalists
said they were “very likely” to open an electronic
press kit with animation and 31% said they were “likely.” However,
45% of journalists said they were “unlikely” to open
an animated email and 14% said they would “never” open
one.
How they use new media
We wanted to know how new media was changing
the work habits of journalists so we asked what new media resources
they used when researching stories. Electronic
press kits received via email were the most popular resource
by far, with 80% of journalists saying they used EPKs in researching
stories. Blogs also
ranked high, with 51% of journalists reporting they were useful
followed by social media sites which are used by 26% of journalists. Fewer
journalists are using RSS feeds, only 20%, and videocasts and
podcasts, 16%.
Additional comments
Finally, we asked a single open ended question: “Please
tell us if you have any comments on how you receive press releases.” Most
respondents noted that they really like email as long as it doesn’t
include attachments. There
is a strong preference for links to images and background info
since those emails don’t clog up the inbox. Many
journalists told us that faxed or mailed releases are useless
since they now need information in a digital format. Some
journalists offered advice to PR professionals. In a nutshell,
the advice was target your lists, keep it concise and newsworthy,
don’t call too much
and timing matters. You can read the unedited responses here.
To see the responses to last year's survey, click
here.
We are planning follow up calls to many of the journalists who
responded. We
will release a podcast of our conversations at a later date. If
you have questions you would like us to pose please let
us know. |