Complete Guide

Digital PR for Link Building: Earn Media Coverage and Backlinks

Master digital PR for link building. Learn to create newsworthy campaigns, pitch journalists effectively, and earn high-authority backlinks from media coverage.

Sarah Chen - Senior SEO Strategist
7 min read
Updated 20 December 2024

Digital PR combines public relations with link building to earn high-quality backlinks from journalists and publications. When done well, it delivers some of the most valuable links possible—editorial mentions from authoritative media sources.

What Is Digital PR?#

Definition#

Digital PR creates newsworthy content and stories that journalists want to cover, resulting in media mentions and backlinks. Unlike traditional PR focused on brand awareness, digital PR specifically targets link acquisition.

The Value Proposition#

For journalists: Fresh angles, data, and stories for their coverage For publications: Engaging content for their audience For you: High-authority backlinks from editorial coverage

| Traditional Link Building | Digital PR | |--------------------------|------------| | Direct outreach for links | Create stories journalists want to cover | | Any relevant site | Media and publications | | Relationship building | Newsworthy content creation | | Steady, predictable | Campaign-based, potentially viral |


Why Digital PR Works#

Media links are exceptionally valuable:

  • High authority: Major publications have strong domains
  • Editorial context: Natural mentions in articles
  • Genuine endorsement: Journalist chose to cover you
  • Traffic value: Real referral visitors

Scalability Potential#

One campaign can earn many links:

  • Multiple publications cover the story
  • Syndication spreads coverage
  • Ongoing references continue
  • Social amplification extends reach

Digital PR delivers additional value:

  • Brand awareness
  • Thought leadership
  • Credibility building
  • Direct referral traffic
  • Sales/lead generation

Types of Digital PR Campaigns#

Data-Driven PR#

Create newsworthy data that journalists cite.

Approaches:

  • Original research and surveys
  • Data analysis and insights
  • Index or ranking creation
  • Trend reports

Why it works: Journalists need data to support stories. Original data is inherently newsworthy.

Example: "Annual Report: How [Industry] Is Changing" with survey data from 1,000 professionals.

Full guide: Data Studies →

Reactive PR (Newsjacking)#

Insert your brand into current news stories.

Approaches:

  • Expert commentary on breaking news
  • Rapid-response data or insights
  • Trending topic contributions
  • Seasonal relevance

Why it works: Journalists working on stories need sources and angles quickly.

Example: When industry news breaks, providing expert analysis within hours.

Full guide: Newsjacking →

Creative Campaigns#

Develop shareable creative content with news hooks.

Approaches:

  • Interactive tools or visualizations
  • Unusual data presentations
  • Surprising insights
  • Entertainment-meets-information

Why it works: Creative, engaging content gets shared and covered.

Example: Interactive map showing [interesting data] by region.

Full guide: Creative Campaigns →

Product and Company News#

Leverage genuine company developments.

Approaches:

  • Product launches with news angle
  • Company milestones
  • Industry-first innovations
  • Partnership announcements

Why it works: Genuine news is genuinely newsworthy.

Note: Only works when there's actual news value—not just promotional announcements.


The Digital PR Process#

Step 1: Ideation#

Generate campaign ideas that combine:

  • Relevance: Connects to your brand/industry
  • Newsworthiness: Journalists would want to cover
  • Timeliness: Fits current context or upcoming events
  • Uniqueness: Different from what's been done

Ideation questions:

  • What data could we create that doesn't exist?
  • What questions do journalists frequently explore?
  • What upcoming events or seasons could we tie into?
  • What surprising angles exist in our industry?

Step 2: Creation#

Develop the campaign content.

For data campaigns:

  1. Design research methodology
  2. Collect data
  3. Analyse for interesting findings
  4. Visualize results
  5. Create shareable assets

For creative campaigns:

  1. Develop concept
  2. Create content/tool
  3. Design visual assets
  4. Prepare promotional materials

Step 3: Story Development#

Craft the narrative journalists will use.

Elements:

  • Headline angle: What's the story?
  • Key findings: Main takeaways
  • Visual assets: Images, graphics, charts
  • Expert quotes: Commentary on significance
  • Context: Why this matters now

Step 4: Media List Building#

Identify journalists who might cover your story.

Finding relevant journalists:

  • Past coverage of similar topics
  • Beat reporters in your industry
  • Publications reaching your audience
  • Freelancers covering your space

Building relationships:

  • Follow on social media
  • Engage with their content
  • Understand their interests
  • Note what they cover

Step 5: Pitching#

Reach out to journalists with your story.

Pitch elements:

  • Compelling subject line
  • Brief story summary
  • Key findings/hook
  • Relevant assets
  • Your credentials

Pitch best practices:

  • Personalize to their coverage
  • Keep it concise
  • Lead with the news
  • Make action easy
  • Follow up appropriately

Full guide: Journalist Outreach →

Step 6: Coverage Tracking#

Monitor and document results.

Track:

  • Mentions and coverage
  • Links acquired (followed vs nofollow)
  • Traffic from coverage
  • Social amplification
  • Ongoing pickup

Creating Newsworthy Content#

What Makes Something Newsworthy#

News values:

  • Timeliness: Current and relevant now
  • Impact: Affects many people
  • Prominence: Involves notable entities
  • Proximity: Relevant to audience
  • Conflict: Tension or debate
  • Novelty: Unusual or surprising
  • Human interest: Emotional connection

Content That Journalists Use#

Data and statistics:

  • New information they can cite
  • Numbers to support stories
  • Trends and patterns

Expert commentary:

  • Authoritative perspective
  • Quotable opinions
  • Context for news events

Visual assets:

  • Charts and graphics
  • Infographics
  • Interactive elements

Avoiding Common Content Mistakes#

Don't create:

  • Thinly-veiled advertisements
  • Content without clear news hook
  • Data that's obvious or expected
  • Campaigns requiring too much explanation

Measuring Digital PR Success#

Campaign Metrics#

Coverage metrics:

  • Number of placements
  • Publication authority
  • Audience reach
  • Feature vs mention

Link metrics:

  • Total links acquired
  • Follow vs nofollow ratio
  • Domain quality
  • Anchor text

Traffic metrics:

  • Referral traffic from coverage
  • Duration and engagement
  • Conversions from traffic

Success Benchmarks#

Expectations vary widely by campaign:

Modest success: 10-20 placements, 5-10 quality links Good success: 30-50 placements, 15-30 links Excellent success: 100+ placements, 50+ links Viral success: 500+ placements, hundreds of links

Most campaigns fall in modest-good range. Viral is rare and unpredictable.

ROI Calculation#

Campaign cost ÷ Links acquired = Cost per link
Link value × Links acquired = Total link value
Total link value ÷ Campaign cost = ROI

Example:

  • Campaign cost: £10,000
  • Links acquired: 40
  • Average link value: £500
  • Total link value: £20,000
  • ROI: 200%

Common Challenges#

"Not Newsworthy Enough"#

Challenge: Campaign doesn't generate interest

Solutions:

  • Stronger news angle
  • Better data/story
  • Different timing
  • Alternative publications

Competitive Landscape#

Challenge: Many companies doing digital PR

Solutions:

  • More creative approaches
  • Better data quality
  • Faster execution
  • Stronger relationships

Resource Requirements#

Challenge: Digital PR requires significant investment

Solutions:

  • Start with smaller campaigns
  • Leverage existing data
  • Partner with agencies
  • Focus on quality over quantity

Explore This Hub#


Summary#

Digital PR earns high-quality links through media coverage:

Why it works:

  • Creates genuinely newsworthy content
  • Delivers value to journalists
  • Earns editorial (not solicited) links
  • Can scale through coverage spread

Key elements:

  • Newsworthy content creation
  • Strong story development
  • Targeted journalist outreach
  • Relationship building

Campaign types:

  • Data-driven research
  • Reactive/newsjacking
  • Creative campaigns
  • Company news with angle

Success factors:

  • Genuine news value
  • Quality execution
  • Right journalist targeting
  • Timing and relevance

Digital PR requires more investment than many tactics but delivers some of the highest-quality links available.


Measure Your PR Results#

Track your campaign performance with our free tools:

Turn This Research Into Links

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