Lessons From Years of Digital Marketing and Communications Experience
For a long time, PR was treated as a side function—something separate from “real” digital marketing. SEO teams optimized pages. Media teams chased coverage. Paid teams chased scale. Each worked in isolation.
That separation is one of the biggest reasons brands struggle to build lasting authority online.
After years of working across digital marketing, communications, and growth, generating online coverage for brands in multiple industries, I’ve learned this: PR isn’t a channel anymore. It’s infrastructure.
When PR is done properly, it strengthens search visibility, accelerates trust, and compounds growth in ways that few other tactics can.
PR Has Changed. Most Brands Haven’t
Traditional PR focused on outputs:
- Press releases
- Media mentions
- One-off spikes in attention
Modern PR focuses on outcomes:
- Discoverability
- Authority
- Trust
- Long-term demand generation
Search engines now function as reputation engines. They evaluate not just what a brand says about itself, but what others say about it, link to, and reference over time.
I explored this shift in depth in When SEO and PR Became One: The New Reality of Digital Influence, because this convergence is no longer optional. It’s how visibility is earned.
Why Online Coverage Still Outperforms Most Marketing Tactics
One strong piece of editorial coverage can quietly do more for a brand than months of advertising.
Here’s why:
1. Coverage Builds Authority Search Engines Can’t Ignore
Editorial mentions and links from credible publications signal:
- Relevance
- Trust
- Topical authority
These signals don’t disappear when budgets pause.
2. Coverage Accelerates Human Trust
When someone encounters a brand for the first time, external validation matters more than messaging. Media coverage shortens the trust gap instantly.
People don’t ask, “Is this brand good?”
They ask, “Who else already believes in them?”
3. Coverage Compounds Over Time
Unlike ads, coverage:
- Continues driving referral traffic
- Supports rankings across multiple keywords
- Strengthens every page on the site indirectly
PR is one of the few growth levers that improve with age.
How I’ve Approached PR as a Digital Marketer, Not a Publicist
The biggest mistake I see is treating PR as publicity instead of strategy.
My approach has always been grounded in digital outcomes, not vanity metrics.
1. Start With Positioning, Not Pitching
If a brand’s narrative isn’t clear internally, media won’t clarify it externally.
Good coverage comes from:
- Clear positioning
- A strong point of view
- A reason for the brand to exist right now
2. Think in Angles, Not Announcements
Editors don’t cover announcements. They cover stories.
The strongest PR angles usually involve:
- Insight, not promotion
- Context, not claims
- Value to the reader, not the brand
This is where most PR efforts die quietly—brands talk about themselves instead of the world around them.
3. Build Systems, Not One-Off Wins
Consistent coverage doesn’t come from luck or relationships alone. It comes from:
- Knowing which publications matter
- Understanding what each outlet actually publishes
- Timing outreach to relevance cycles
- Following up intelligently
PR is closer to sales than most people admit.
Why PR Fails Without Execution Discipline
Even the best strategy collapses without follow-through.
This ties directly into a principle I expanded on in Execution Is Not the Problem.
Most brands don’t fail because they can’t execute.
They fail because they execute fragmented tactics without alignment.
In PR, this shows up as:
- Inconsistent outreach
- Weak assets
- No feedback loops
- No integration with SEO or content
Execution matters—but only when it’s pointed in the right direction.
Integrating PR Into a Modern Digital Marketing Strategy
PR works best when it’s embedded, not isolated.
In practice, that means:
- Coverage supporting keyword strategies
- Editorial links pointing to strategic pages
- PR themes reinforcing content clusters
- Media mentions reused across owned channels
When PR and SEO reinforce each other, both become easier.
The Brands That Win at PR Understand This One Thing
They don’t try to be louder.
They try to be more referenceable.
Referenceable brands:
- Are easy to cite
- Offer clear insights
- Provide context that editors can reuse
- Contribute to conversations already happening
That’s what makes coverage sustainable.
TLDR;
PR today isn’t about exposure.
It’s about authority, credibility, and long-term visibility.
Brands that treat it as decoration fall behind.
Brands that treat it as infrastructure build leverage.
That difference is everything.

