If you ask both a journalist and a PR pro, “What makes something newsworthy?”. . .
. . . there’s one answer the PR pro will never give, yet it’s the same one the journalist might say most often.
Conflict.
Journalists might also call this “tension” or “drama.”
We on the PR side naturally lean toward positive news. But journalists know that audiences tend to prefer something with an edge to it.
We usually ignore that preference because our bosses and clients don’t pay us to air dirty laundry.
But you can introduce a bit of conflict that accentuates your organization’s strengths. You present the problem or “bad news,” and then show how your org is resolving it.
Here are a few examples of this “positive conflict” in action, courtesy of my Inner Circle members:
In the Inner Circle, we call the first two bullets “hardship stories” and the last two “shortage stories.” It’s not rocket science, just a way to think like journalists and create the kind of angle that appeals to them.
All of these pitches resulted in standalone coverage in outlets including the Washington Post, Forbes and major dailies. These otherwise routine announcements – a med school graduation, new product launch, new psych degree and new medical device – wouldn’t have merited much coverage at all.
Want to see the exact pitches these pros used to land this coverage – and more examples of hardship and shortage stories? They’ll be waiting for you inside your Vault if you join the Inner Circle. Register here to be notified when membership reopens.
Best wishes finding “positive conflict” in some of your future stories :).
This article was originally published on January 30, 2025
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