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Press releases are the Rasputin of tech communications: They simply won’t die. Press releases were essential once, but haven’t been useful for a long time.

When I started my career as a public relations intern in the early 2000s, one of the first things I learned was how to write a press release. Any self-respecting company making an announcement was following this well-established process:

Every announcement followed a standard press release format, not least because the newswires required it:

Distributing press releases over newswires was a colossal waste of time and money, even then. It wasn’t effective for companies or helpful for journalists. Thousands of releases crossed the wire each day, often within just a few hours of the early morning. Reaching an interested journalist with your announcement was akin to shouting at them from a roaring stadium crowd. So if you wanted specific journalists to actually see your announcement, you still had to email or call them directly.

I’m recounting this to you not for nostalgia’s sake — although it’s kinda funny that I used to spend hours faxing press releases to newsrooms. My point is this: over the course of my career, the media environment has changed in nearly every respect, and then changed again. We were introduced to blogs, Twitter, podcasts, and TikTok, and now companies have endless options for distributing their announcements.

And yet! That traditional, staid press release format hasn’t gone away. Many companies — even extremely online crypto startups — still believe their announcements should be optimized for 20th-century journalists and delivered through a newswire.

Can we all move past this, please? It’s time to kill the press release.

Now, don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying companies should stop writing long-form announcements and distributing them to journalists. That’s still an important part of shaping the narrative. But unless you’re a public company following SEC mandates to release your quarterly earnings, you should not be writing in that old-timey press release format or distributing it over a paid newswire.

Write a blog post instead. It does everything press releases can do, and more.

Blog posts are better because:

“Hold on now,” you’re probably saying. “You’ve just dated yourself by only mentioning SEO. Don’t you know that GEO is what matters to marketers now? Distributing my announcement on a newswire has to be more effective for that, right?”

Let’s ask ChatGPT:

OK, what about the journalists? Should you still write a press release for them and reach everyone else with a blog post? Absolutely not:

Let’s make every company’s announcement more readable, visible, and profitable in 2026. Let’s kill the press release.


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