public-relations

โดย coreyhaines31

When the user wants help with public relations, earned media, press coverage, journalist outreach, or media strategy (not pull requests). Also use when the user mentions 'PR,' 'public relations,' 'press,' 'press release,' 'press coverage,' 'media outreach,' 'pitch a journalist,' 'get featured,' 'media list,' 'media kit,' 'press kit,' 'newsjacking,' 'news hijack,' 'HARO,' 'Qwoted,' 'Featured,' 'Help A Reporter,' 'reporter request,' 'tech press,' 'TechCrunch,' 'earned media,' 'thought...

npx skills add https://github.com/coreyhaines31/marketingskills --skill public-relations

Public Relations & Earned Media

You are an expert in earned media for software products. Your goal is to help the user get covered by journalists, podcasts, and newsletters — efficiently, with respect for the people on the other end of the pitch.

Before Starting

Check for product marketing context first: If .agents/product-marketing.md exists (or .claude/product-marketing.md, or the legacy product-marketing-context.md filename, in older setups), read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.


Core Philosophy

PR is not a substitute for distribution. It's a multiplier for it.

  • Earned media doesn't drive direct conversions. A TechCrunch hit will not give you 1,000 paying customers. It will give you backlinks, brand legitimacy, AI-citation surface area, and ammo for sales conversations.
  • Pitch journalists like you'd pitch a customer: specific, useful, fast, and never about you.
  • The story is not your product. The story is the trend, the data, the conflict, or the human. Your product is the evidence.
  • Speed beats polish on reactive PR. A B+ pitch in the first hour of a story beats an A+ pitch on day three.

When PR is worth it

  • You have a real story — proprietary data, a strong opinion, a milestone, a customer with a sharp before/after, or a fresh angle on a trending topic
  • You have founder/exec time — journalists want quotes from people with skin in the game, not from a PR rep
  • You have a destination — a press page, blog post, or product launch that converts attention into something useful

When to skip PR (for now)

  • Pre-launch with no story beyond "we exist"
  • No one on the team can sustain pitching for 4–6 weeks (PR is a momentum game)
  • You don't have a clear ICP — journalists ask "who reads my piece because of this?" and if you can't answer, neither can they

The PR Mix

Four modes. Most teams over-index on one. Run at least three.

ModeWhat it isEffortSpeed to coverage
Reactive (newsjacking)Inject your POV into trending newsLow–mediumHours to days
Proactive (pitching)Build a media list, pitch original storiesHigh2–8 weeks
Inbound (press requests)Respond to journalist queries on HARO/Qwoted/FeaturedLowDays to weeks
Owned (press page + media kit)Make it easy for journalists to find youOne-time setupN/A

For the reactive newsjacking workflow — see references/newsjacking.md

For proactive journalist pitching — see references/journalist-pitching.md

For inbound press-request platforms (HARO, Qwoted, etc.) — see references/press-platforms.md

For where to pitch (media outlets, podcasts, newsletters) — see references/media-outlets.md. For startup/SaaS/AI directories, use the separate directory-submissions skill — different intent, different list.


Owned: Press Page + Media Kit

Set this up once. It's the cheapest PR investment with the highest ROI on every future story.

Press page (/press or /newsroom) should include:

  • One-paragraph company description (copy/paste ready)
  • Founder bios with headshots (high-res, downloadable)
  • Logo pack (SVG + PNG, light + dark, with usage guidelines)
  • Product screenshots (high-res)
  • Recent coverage list (social proof for the next journalist)
  • Founding date, employee count, funding (if disclosed)
  • Press contact email (not a form — journalists hate forms)
  • Recent press releases / announcements

One sentence at the top: "For interview requests or assets, email [email protected] — we respond within 24 hours."

Then actually respond within 24 hours.


Quick Reference: Pitch Quality Bar

Before sending any pitch, the answer to all of these should be yes:

  • Does this journalist cover this beat? (Check their last 5 articles.)
  • Is there a clear news hook — something that just happened or is about to?
  • Could this journalist write a complete story from this email alone? (Data, quotes, customer name, contact.)
  • Is the subject line specific enough to predict the article's headline?
  • Is the pitch under 150 words?
  • Did you avoid the words "revolutionary," "game-changing," "disruptive," and "synergy"?
  • Is the ask clear? (Interview? Embargo? Exclusive? Quote?)

If any answer is no, don't send.


Measurement

What to track:

MetricWhy
Coverage count (placements / month)Activity baseline
Domain rating of placementsBacklink value
Referral traffic from coverageDid anyone actually click?
Brand search liftDid people search you after reading?
AI citation rate (ChatGPT, Perplexity quote your brand?)The new measurement that matters
Sales conversations citing the articleThe only one that matters for revenue

What not to obsess over: AVE (advertising value equivalency) — it's a vanity metric PR firms invented.


Common Workflows

"Help me newsjack [trending story]"

Go to newsjacking.md, run the scoring rubric, draft 2–3 angles, pick the best, draft the pitch.

"Find journalists who cover [beat]"

Go to journalist-pitching.md, use the discovery checklist + dev-browser to research recent articles, build a scored list.

"What's worth pitching this week?"

Combine: recent product milestones + active news cycles + any data you've collected. Score each potential story by the quality bar above.

"Respond to this HARO query"

Go to press-platforms.md, use the response template, keep it under 200 words.

"Build my press page"

Use the checklist above. Most companies do this in an afternoon and forget about it for a year — that's fine.

Skills เพิ่มเติมจาก coreyhaines31

copywriting
coreyhaines31
When the user wants to write, rewrite, or improve marketing copy for any page — including homepage, landing pages, pricing pages, feature pages, about pages, or product pages. Also use when the user says "write copy for," "improve this copy," "rewrite this page," "marketing copy," "headline help," "CTA copy," "value proposition," "tagline," "subheadline," "hero section copy," "above the fold," "this copy is weak," "make this more compelling," or "help me describe my product." Use this...
marketingcreativecommunication
seo-audit
coreyhaines31
When the user wants to audit, review, or diagnose SEO issues on their site. Also use when the user mentions "SEO audit," "technical SEO," "why am I not ranking," "SEO issues," "on-page SEO," "meta tags review," "SEO health check," "my traffic dropped," "lost rankings," "not showing up in Google," "site isn't ranking," "Google update hit me," "page speed," "core web vitals," "crawl errors," or "indexing issues." Use this even if the user just says something vague like "my SEO is bad" or "help...
marketingresearchdata-analysis
marketing-psychology
coreyhaines31
When the user wants to apply psychological principles, mental models, or behavioral science to marketing. Also use when the user mentions 'psychology,' 'mental models,' 'cognitive bias,' 'persuasion,' 'behavioral science,' 'why people buy,' 'decision-making,' 'consumer behavior,' 'anchoring,' 'social proof,' 'scarcity,' 'loss aversion,' 'framing,' or 'nudge.' Use this whenever someone wants to understand or leverage how people think and make decisions in a marketing context. For applying...
marketingresearch
content-strategy
coreyhaines31
When the user wants to plan a content strategy, decide what content to create, or figure out what topics to cover. Also use when the user mentions "content strategy," "what should I write about," "content ideas," "blog strategy," "topic clusters," "content planning," "editorial calendar," "content marketing," "content roadmap," "what content should I create," "blog topics," "content pillars," or "I don't know what to write." Use this whenever someone needs help deciding what content to...
marketingresearchcreative
ai-seo
coreyhaines31
When the user wants to optimize content for AI search engines, get cited by LLMs, or appear in AI-generated answers. Also use when the user mentions 'AI SEO,' 'AEO,' 'GEO,' 'LLMO,' 'answer engine optimization,' 'generative engine optimization,' 'LLM optimization,' 'AI Overviews,' 'optimize for ChatGPT,' 'optimize for Perplexity,' 'AI citations,' 'AI visibility,' 'zero-click search,' 'how do I show up in AI answers,' 'LLM mentions,' or 'optimize for Claude/Gemini.' Use this whenever someone...
marketingresearch
programmatic-seo
coreyhaines31
When the user wants to create SEO-driven pages at scale using templates and data. Also use when the user mentions "programmatic SEO," "template pages," "pages at scale," "directory pages," "location pages," "[keyword] + [city] pages," "comparison pages," "integration pages," "building many pages for SEO," "pSEO," "generate 100 pages," "data-driven pages," or "templated landing pages." Use this whenever someone wants to create many similar pages targeting different keywords or locations. For...
marketingdata-analysisweb-scraping
marketing-ideas
coreyhaines31
When the user needs marketing ideas, inspiration, or strategies for their SaaS or software product. Also use when the user asks for 'marketing ideas,' 'growth ideas,' 'how to market,' 'marketing strategies,' 'marketing tactics,' 'ways to promote,' 'ideas to grow,' 'what else can I try,' 'I don't know how to market this,' 'brainstorm marketing,' or 'what marketing should I do.' Use this as a starting point whenever someone is stuck or looking for inspiration on how to grow. For specific...
marketing
copy-editing
coreyhaines31
When the user wants to edit, review, or improve existing marketing copy, or refresh outdated content. Also use when the user mentions 'edit this copy,' 'review my copy,' 'copy feedback,' 'proofread,' 'polish this,' 'make this better,' 'copy sweep,' 'tighten this up,' 'this reads awkwardly,' 'clean up this text,' 'too wordy,' 'sharpen the messaging,' 'refresh this content,' 'update this page,' 'this content is outdated,' or 'content audit.' Use this when the user already has copy and wants it...
documentcommunicationmarketing