MediagraphicsPR

Author name: Vvihan Gulati

Vvihan Gulati is the Founder of MediagraphicsPR, a leading PR agency in India. With over 20 years of experience in public relations and digital storytelling, he has built a reputation for crafting powerful brand narratives that drive visibility and credibility. A strategist by passion and storyteller at heart, he has led campaigns for top global brands, startups, and industry changemakers.

Attract Investors Using PR
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How to Attract Investors Using PR

Every founder raising a round knows the feeling. The product is solid. The traction is real. The pitch deck is as good as it’s going to get. But walking into a room full of investors who’ve never heard of you, and trying to build credibility from scratch in 45 minutes, is one of the hardest things a founder has to do. Investor PR changes that dynamic entirely. When the right investors have already seen your name in the right publications, read your founder’s perspective in a business outlet they respect, or noticed your company’s coverage before the intro email landed, the meeting starts differently. The credibility conversation is shorter because it’s already partially done. Here’s how PR for investors actually works and what to do to make it work for your next raise. Why Investors Pay Attention to Media Presence Institutional investors in India—VCs, family offices, and angel networks—see hundreds of companies every quarter. Most look identical on paper. Same market-size claims. Same hockey stick projections. Same founding team credentials. What stands out is a company that shows up consistently in places investors actually pay attention to. A founder quoted in Mint. A product featured in Economic Times. A commentary piece in Inc42 being shared in the investor’s own network. These signals do something a pitch deck can’t. They show that third parties have independently decided this company is worth paying attention to. That’s the core of investor PR. Not about getting famous. About being known, specifically, to the people who write the checks. What Investors Are Actually Evaluating Understanding the investor mindset makes the PR strategy much clearer. What Investors Evaluate How PR Addresses This Founder credibility Thought leadership positions founders as domain experts Market opportunity Coverage that frames the problem your company solves Traction and momentum Milestone announcements, customer stories, growth coverage Narrative clarity Consistent messaging across every media touchpoint Risk assessment What the market says about you publicly Every single one of these gets influenced by what an investor finds when they research your company before a meeting. 1. Build Credibility Before the Raise Starts The biggest mistake founders make with investor PR is starting it when the fundraise begins. By then it’s too late to build anything that compounds. Investors Google you. They check what’s been written about the company. They look at whether the founder has a point of view on the industry. A company with 12 months of consistent media presence walks into that search result very differently from one that has nothing but its own website. Start building investor PR at least six to twelve months before you plan to raise. Not a press release blitz, but a sustained and consistent presence that signals your company is serious. 2. Get the Narrative Right First Before any pitch goes to a journalist, the story has to be clear. And it has to be the same story everywhere. Your investor relations PR narrative answers: What does the company do? (one sentence, no jargon) What problem does it solve and why does that matter right now? What’s the insight that makes your approach different? Where is the company going and why is this the team to take it there? When that narrative is consistent across every touchpoint—press releases, the founder’s LinkedIn, media coverage, and the website—investors encounter the same clear story everywhere they look. Inconsistency creates doubt. Clarity creates confidence. 3. Target the Publications Investors Actually Read Not all coverage works equally for investor PR. A feature in a publication your target investors have never heard of is activity without outcome. Institutional VCs → Mint, Economic Times, Business Standard Early-stage angels → Inc42, YourStory, startup ecosystem media Sector-specific funds → Industry trade publications in your space Global investors → Forbes India, Business Today, ET Tech Build your target publication list around where your specific investor audience pays attention, not where the publication name sounds most impressive in a board update. 4. Turn Founder Expertise Into Investor-Facing Content Investors back founders as much as they back companies. They want to know whether the founder understands the market deeply and has genuine conviction about where things are heading. Thought leadership PR is one of the most effective ways to show this without a pitch meeting: Authored articles in business publications: founder’s perspective on a real industry problem Expert commentary in journalist stories: being quoted on market trends Podcast appearances: longer form credibility with niche investor audiences LinkedIn content: direct reach to investors in your network Conference talks: category positioning and peer credibility A founder who shows up consistently in relevant media with genuine insight becomes someone investors track before they even take a meeting. 5. Handle Funding Announcements as Full Market Moments A funding announcement is not just a press release. For investor PR, it’s a signal, one that tells the next set of investors that smart money has already made a call on this company. Without PR Strategy With PR Strategy Generic press release, mass distribution Targeted pitching to 8–12 relevant journalists Coverage disappears in 48 hours Followed by founder commentary and momentum coverage No pre-built credibility 6 months of media presence behind the announcement Next raise starts from zero Next raise starts with a brand investors already know The companies that get the most from their funding announcements are the ones that treated the previous six months as preparation for this moment. 6. Build Relationships With the Right Journalists Journalists who cover the startup and investment beat in India are well-connected in investor circles. A reporter who trusts your founder as a credible source will write about your company when the story is right, and that coverage reaches exactly the investor audience you need. Building these relationships isn’t about pitching constantly. It’s about being useful by offering genuine insight on industry trends, being available when journalists need a source, and showing up consistently over time. The founders who get called for quotes without pitching are the ones investors see everywhere. That’s the goal. 7. Protect

PR Strategies
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10 PR Strategies That Drive Revenue Growth

Most businesses think of PR as a brand exercise. Something that looks good, feels good, and maybe gets the founder some coverage they can share on LinkedIn. That’s a limited way to look at it. When PR strategies are built properly—around business goals, right audiences, and real media relationships—they drive revenue in ways that are measurable and compounding. Sales conversations start differently. Fundraises close faster. Talent pipelines get stronger. Enterprise deals move quicker. Here are 10 PR strategies that actually connect to revenue growth and how they work in India’s market right now. Build Credibility Before the Sales Conversation Starts Every enterprise buyer, investor, and potential hire Googles your company before responding to anything. What they find, or don’t find, shapes the conversation before it begins. PR strategies that build credibility through consistent earned media coverage mean that by the time your sales team makes contact, the trust work is already half-finished. The prospect has seen your company in a publication they respect. The barrier drops. This is one of the most direct connections between PR and revenue—shorter sales cycles, warmer first meetings, and fewer “we’ve never heard of you” responses. Run Thought Leadership That Opens Doors Your founders and leadership team know things most people in your industry don’t. That expertise sitting unused is a missed revenue opportunity. Thought leadership PR turns that knowledge into authored articles, expert commentary, and media features in publications your target buyers read. When a CTO at a potential enterprise client reads your founder’s perspective on a problem they’re currently facing, that’s a door opening without a single cold email. Thought Leadership Format Where It Works Best Authored articles Trade publications, business media Expert commentary News cycle response, journalist quotes Opinion pieces Business press, industry outlets Podcast appearances Niche B2B audiences Conference talks Category positioning, peer credibility Use Funding Announcements as a Full Market Signal A funding announcement handled without strategy is a press release that trends for 48 hours and then disappears. A funding announcement handled as a PR strategy is a coordinated market signal—the right publications, the right embargo timing, and the right narrative—that changes how investors, buyers, and talent see your company for the next twelve months. The companies that get the most out of their raises aren’t always the ones with the biggest rounds. They’re the ones whose story was already in the right places before the announcement went out. Build a Media Presence That Supports the Sales Team Sales teams in India’s B2B market spend a lot of time establishing credibility from scratch. Every first meeting starts with explaining who the company is and why it’s worth paying attention to. PR changes that. When your sales team can reference a feature in the Economic Times, share a founder article from Mint, or point to consistent industry coverage—the credibility conversation compresses. Prospects come in warmer. Deals close faster. PR strategies that are aligned with sales goals, not just communications goals, are the ones that show up in revenue numbers. Target the Publications Your Buyers Actually Read This is where most PR strategies in India go wrong. Coverage gets chased in publications that sound impressive rather than ones the target audience reads. A feature in a publication your enterprise buyers read every morning does more revenue work than five features in publications they’ve never heard of. Map your PR targets to buyer behavior: Who is your buyer? → What do they read? → Target that publication  Enterprise CTO → TechCircle, ETCIO, Economic Times Tech Institutional Investor → Mint, Business Standard, Inc42, Forbes India D2C Buyer → Business of Fashion, YourStory, mainstream digital HR Head → People Matters, BW People, LinkedIn Build Reputation Before You Need It for a Crisis This one is easy to skip when things are going well. It’s very expensive to regret skipping it when things go wrong. A data issue, a negative review that picks up momentum, a competitor narrative that starts sticking—these things happen. The companies that come out of them without lasting damage are the ones with pre-built credibility. They have journalist relationships, a consistent media presence, and a track record that gives their response weight. The ones without it scramble. And scrambling publicly is almost always worse than the original problem. Crisis PR as a revenue protection strategy—not just a communications one—is how the best companies in India think about it. Use Employer Brand PR to Win the Talent War In India’s competitive tech and business talent market, the best candidates research companies before applying. A company with no media presence, an invisible founder, and no culture coverage loses offers to competitors with stronger employer brands, regardless of which company actually has the better work environment. PR strategies that build employer brands—founder LinkedIn presence, culture stories in startup media, and team milestone coverage—directly affect talent pipeline quality and speed. Better hires build better products. Better products drive better revenue. Turn Customer Success Into Market Credibility Case studies are underused as a PR strategy in India. Most companies produce them for their website and leave it there. The better approach is to pitch those customer success stories to the publications your prospects read. A feature about how your product solved a specific problem for a specific client type does more lead generation work than any product-focused press release. When a prospect sees a case study about a company like theirs in a publication they trust, that’s not just credibility. That’s a pipeline. Build CSR and ESG Narratives That Open Enterprise Doors Large enterprise clients, especially multinationals operating in India, are increasingly evaluating vendors on ESG credentials alongside product capability. A company with a clear, well-communicated sustainability or CSR story has a genuine competitive advantage in procurement conversations. PR strategies that build this narrative (through media coverage, third-party validation, and consistent communication) aren’t just reputation work. In 2026, they’re directly connected to enterprise revenue opportunities that companies without that narrative simply don’t access. Integrate PR With Digital for SEO and Inbound Revenue Every high-authority media

PR Campaign for 2026
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How to Plan a PR Campaign for 2026: 10 Steps to Achieve Impact and Success

Most PR campaigns in India don’t fail because of bad execution. They fail because they were never properly planned in the first place. A press release goes out. Some coverage lands. The team celebrates. Then silence until the next announcement forces another round of activity. That’s not a PR campaign. That’s a series of disconnected moments with gaps in between. Planning a PR campaign properly with clear goals, the right audiences, the right timing, and a strategy that holds together—across months, not just days—is what separates brands that build lasting media presence from ones that just make noise occasionally. These 10 steps are what good PR campaign planning actually looks like in India today. 1. Define What You’re Actually Trying to Achieve Before anything else, get specific about the goal. Not “We want more visibility.” That’s not a goal; it’s a wish. A real campaign objective sounds like: We want to be covered in 3 national business publications before our Series A closes in Q3. We want our founder quoted in tech media as an expert on supply chain automation. We want our product launch covered in 5 publications our enterprise buyers read. Use the SMART framework: SMART What It Means Example for a PR Campaign Specific Name the exact outcome you want “Covered in Economic Times before Series A closes” Measurable You can count it or track it 3 placements, 5 journalist relationships built Achievable Realistic for your stage and budget Not “Forbes cover” in month one Relevant Tied to an actual business goal Fundraise, launch, and enterprise sales push Time-bound Has a deadline attached Campaign runs from April to September 2026 Without this, every activity is justifiable and nothing is accountable. 2. Know Exactly Who You’re Talking To Different audiences need completely different messages and different channels to reach them. Investors: business media, sector publications, LinkedIn Enterprise buyers: trade publications, industry newsletters, analyst reports Consumers: mainstream digital and print media, influencer coverage Talent: LinkedIn, employer brand media, startup ecosystem coverage Industry peers: conferences, niche publications, podcasts Pick one or two primary audiences per campaign. Trying to reach everyone at once usually means reaching nobody properly. 3. Build the Core Narrative First This is the step most brands skip and the one that determines whether the campaign works. Your PR campaign narrative answers three questions: What does your company do? (in one sentence, without jargon) Why does it matter right now? (the market context that makes you relevant today) Why you? (what makes your team or approach genuinely different?) Every piece of content, every pitch, every press release in the campaign should express this narrative in the format suited to that channel. Consistency across months is what builds recognition. Inconsistency is what confuses audiences even when they’ve seen your name before. 4. Map Your Media Targets to Business Goals Not all coverage serves the same purpose. A placement in a publication your target audience never reads is activity, not outcome. Business Goal Right Media Target Investor attention Economic Times, Mint, Business Standard, Inc42 Enterprise sale Sector trade publications, industry media Consumer brand Mainstream digital, national print Talent pipeline LinkedIn content, startup ecosystem media Category leadership Niche newsletters, podcasts, analyst mentions Build a target list of 15 to 20 publications and journalists specifically relevant to your campaign goal. Quality of targeting beats volume of pitching every time. 5. Build Journalist Relationships Before You Pitch This is the step that makes everything else work faster and the one most Indian brands skip entirely. Journalists who know your name before you pitch them are significantly more likely to cover you than ones receiving a cold email from an unknown company. How to build relationships without being annoying: Follow and engage genuinely with journalists covering your space. Offer yourself as a source for stories they’re already working on, no pitch attached. Share their work with a real comment, not a generic one. When you pitch, make it about something they actually cover. Start this three to six months before you need coverage for something important. 6. Choose Your Tactics Based on Your Audience Once you know who you’re talking to and what you’re saying, the next question is simple—how do you actually reach them? Audience Tactics That Actually Work Investors Founder quoted in business press, funding announcement, Inc42 or Mint feature Enterprise buyers Trade publication feature, thought leadership article, case study coverage Customers Mainstream digital media, product reviews, influencer coverage Talent LinkedIn founder content, culture stories, startup ecosystem media Industry peers Conference speaking, expert podcast appearances, niche newsletter features Don’t default to press releases for everything. Match the tactic to the audience, not to what’s easiest to produce. 7. Build a PR Calendar With Real Moments A PR campaign without a calendar is just good intentions. A basic 12-month PR campaign calendar for a growing Indian brand: Month What to Focus On January Founder piece, where your industry is headed this year February Product update or company milestone pitch March Q1 milestone announcement April Reactive commentary: jump on something moving in the news May Data story or mid-year insight piece June Thought leadership article, founder byline in a target publication July Major announcement—funding, launch, or expansion August Podcast or speaking opportunity push September Pre-conference media outreach October Product launch or campaign moment November Year-end industry commentary December Journalist relationship building for next year Plan around your business moments and create newsworthy moments in the gaps. 8. Get the Timing Right Timing in PR is as important as the story itself. Three things to get right: News cycle awareness: pitching into a crowded news cycle means your story gets buried. Pitching on a slow news day means it gets more attention. Good agencies watch this daily. Embargo strategy: for big announcements, give key journalists the story 48 to 72 hours before it goes public. They get time to write something proper, not just a two-line brief that gets buried. Internal coordination: the press release, LinkedIn post, network email, and website update all need

Is PR Worth the Investment in India
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Is PR Worth the Investment in India 2026?

Short answer, yes. But not in the way most businesses think about it. PR isn’t a cost line that produces coverage. It’s an investment that builds credibility, narrative control, and media presence that compounds over time and does work for your business long after any individual campaign ends. The brands that figured this out early in India’s current market cycle are pulling ahead. The ones still treating PR as optional are finding out the hard way what that silence is costing them. Here’s the honest case for why PR investment in India in 2026 is not just worth it; it’s becoming one of the most strategically important decisions a growing business can make. Why 2026 Is a Different Moment for PR in India The context matters. Three things have shifted significantly: 1. Media credibility has become more valuable as content volume explodes AI-generated content is everywhere. Every brand has a blog. Every founder has a LinkedIn post going out three times a week. In that noise, earned media—coverage in publications with real editorial standards—has become more trusted, not less. A feature in Economic Times or Mint carries more weight in 2026 than it did in 2020 precisely because everything else has been devalued. 2. Indian investors and enterprise buyers are doing more research The due diligence bar has risen. Institutional investors research founders and companies across media before taking meetings. Enterprise procurement teams vet Google vendors before responding to pitches. What your brand looks like online—the coverage, the founder commentary, and the narrative consistency—is part of the evaluation now in a way it simply wasn’t five years ago. 3. The competitive landscape has compressed More funded startups, more enterprise SaaS companies, and more D2C brands are competing for the same media, investor, and customer attention. In that environment, the brands with consistent public relations presence have a structural advantage that’s hard to close through product quality alone. What PR Actually Delivers: The Real ROI The mistake most businesses make when evaluating PR ROI is measuring the wrong things. Clip count, estimated reach, and PR value equivalents are easy to calculate and almost meaningless as business metrics. Here’s what PR actually delivers when it’s working properly: What PR Builds How It Shows Up in Business Media credibility Investors and buyers arrive with trust already established Narrative control Your brand story doesn’t get defined by someone else Journalist relationships Coverage compounds, each placement leads to the next Founder authority Leadership becomes a credible industry voice Crisis resilience Difficult moments don’t become lasting reputation damage Talent attraction Strong candidates research and find you before applying Sales support Enterprise buyers reference coverage in early conversations SEO Value High-authority backlinks improve organic search performance Every one of these has a direct business value. Most of them are invisible until you measure them properly, or until you don’t have them and feel the gap. The Compounding Effect Nobody Accounts For This is the part of PR investment that’s hardest to put in a spreadsheet and the most important to understand. The brands that started this compounding cycle two years ago are now the ones journalists call first, investors recognize before the pitch, and enterprise buyers trust before the proposal lands. The brands starting now will be in that position in two years, but only if they start. PR vs. Paid Media—The Honest Comparison Most businesses understand paid media ROI intuitively: spend X, get Y impressions, generate Z leads. PR doesn’t work that way. That difference makes it harder to justify to a CFO but doesn’t make it less valuable. Factor Paid Media PR Cost Model Pay per impression/click Investment in relationships and narrative Credibility Low, as the audience knows it’s paid High due to third-party endorsement Longevity Stops when budget stops Coverage stays online and compounds Trust Factor Declining because ad fatigue is real Growing, earned media is increasingly trusted Sales Impact Direct but short-term Indirect but longer lasting Crisis Value None Significant — pre-built credibility absorbs hits The right answer for most Indian businesses isn’t PR instead of paid media. It’s PR and paid media, each doing what the other can’t. What Happens When You Don’t Invest in PR This is the conversation most brands avoid until it’s too late. The Silent Cost of no PR: ✗ Investors form impressions from incomplete or outdated information ✗ Enterprise buyers choose a competitor they’ve read about over you ✗ A negative story lands with no credibility buffer to absorb it ✗ Strong candidates pick companies with visible, credible employer brands ✗ Your category narrative gets defined by competitors who are investing in PR ✗ Every fundraise, launch, and major announcement starts from zero on credibility The cost of not doing PR isn’t visible on a P&L. But it shows up in harder fundraises, slower enterprise sales cycles, weaker talent pipelines, and market positions that are difficult to recover once a competitor has established them. When PR Investment Makes the Most Sense Not every business at every stage needs the same level of PR investment. Here’s a practical guide: Business Stage PR Priority Primary Focus Pre-seed / Seed Medium Founder thought leadership, narrative building Pre Series-A High Media credibility before investor conversations Post-funding Very High Announcement momentum, category positioning Growth stage High Consistent presence, thought leadership, talent Enterprise / Pre-IPO Critical Consistent presence, thought leadership, talent Crisis moment Urgent Narrative control, media management The pattern is consistent; the moments when PR matters most are almost always the moments when you wish you’d started earlier. How to Measure PR ROI Properly Stop measuring clips. Start measuring outcomes. Questions that actually indicate PR ROI: Are investors mentioning coverage before your pitch meetings? Are enterprise buyers referencing your brand before the first sales call? Are strong candidates citing your media presence in interviews? Is your founder being approached for expert commentary without pitching for it? Are website traffic and branded search volume moving after major placements? Is your company showing up in competitor comparisons without being specifically pitched? If the

Tech PR Strategy
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10 Signs Your Tech PR Strategy Is Actually Working

Most tech companies ask the wrong question about PR. They ask: How many press releases did we send? How many clips did we get? What was the estimated reach? These numbers feel like progress. They rarely are. The real question is whether your tech PR strategy is actually changing how your market sees you—with investors, with enterprise buyers, with the talent you’re trying to hire, and with the journalists who shape your industry’s narrative. Here are 10 signs that it genuinely is. Sign 1. Your Narrative Is Consistent Everywhere This one sounds simple. It isn’t. When your tech PR strategy is working, the story about your company is the same regardless of where someone finds you, whether it’s a journalist’s feature, a founder’s LinkedIn post, your website, a conference talk, or a product announcement. The language, the positioning, and the core message all reinforce each other. When it’s not working, different publications say different things about you. Your website says one thing. A journalist wrote something slightly off. Your founder described the company differently in an interview. That inconsistency creates confusion, and confused audiences don’t convert into customers, investors, or hires. Check: Google your company name. Does every result tell the same coherent story? Sign 2. Journalists Are Coming to You Early in a PR strategy, you’re doing all the outreach. Your team is pitching, following up, and building relationships from scratch. When the strategy is working, the dynamic shifts. Journalists who’ve covered you before come back for comment on industry stories. Reporters covering your space start including you in their source lists. You get inbound requests you didn’t initiate. This doesn’t happen overnight. It typically takes six to nine months of consistent tech PR work. But when it starts, it’s one of the clearest signs that your media presence is compounding. Sign 3. Coverage Is in the Right Publications Not all coverage is equal. A feature in a publication your enterprise buyers, investors, or target audience has never heard of is activity, not outcome. When your tech PR strategy is working, coverage lands in the publications that actually matter to your business goals: Business Goal Right Publications Investor Attention Economic Times, Mint, Business Standard, Inc42 Enterprise Credibility Sector-specific trade media, industry outlets Customer Awareness Mainstream digital and national print Talent Attraction LinkedIn, startup ecosystem publications Category Leadership Niche newsletters, analyst reports, podcasts If your coverage is consistently appearing in places your audience reads, that’s the sign. Sign 4. Sales Conversations Are Starting Differently This is one of the most underrated signals of a working tech PR strategy and one of the most valuable. When enterprise buyers have already seen your company covered in a publication they respect, the first sales conversation starts at a different trust level. The credibility work has already been done by the media. Instead of spending the first meeting establishing who you are, you’re already past it. Signs to look for: Prospects mentioning they read about you before the first call Sales cycles shortening for enterprise deals Fewer “we’ve never heard of you” responses to outbound pitches Inbound inquiries referencing specific media coverage Sign 5. Your Founder Is Getting Quoted Without Pitching When your founder or leadership team starts getting approached for quotes on industry stories, without the PR team initiating it, something important has happened. Journalists have put them on their mental source list. This is what consistent thought leadership PR builds. A founder who shows up regularly in relevant publications, with genuine insight on industry trends, eventually becomes the person journalists call when they need an expert comment. That positioning is worth more than any individual placement, because it keeps generating value without proportional effort. Sign 6. Hiring Is Getting Easier Strong candidates research companies before applying. They Google founders, read coverage, and check LinkedIn. What they find, or don’t find, shapes whether they click apply or move on. The signals of an effective tech PR strategy:  More unsolicited applications from strong candidates Candidates mentioning specific coverage in interviews Fewer offer rejections to competitors with stronger brand recognition A shorter time-to-hire because your employer brand is already doing part of the work In India’s competitive tech talent market, brand credibility built through PR is a real hiring advantage. Sign 7. Your Digital Metrics Move After Coverage PR and digital performance are more connected than most companies track. When a major placement goes live, especially with backlinks from high-authority publications, the downstream digital effects are measurable: If you’re not tracking website traffic, branded search volume, and domain authority changes after major placements—you’re missing half the evidence that your PR is working. Sign 8. Investors Reference Your Coverage For funded startups and growth-stage companies, this is one of the most direct business signals a tech PR strategy can produce. When investors mention in a first meeting that they’ve seen your coverage, when analysts reference your company in sector reports, when a VC associate says they’ve been following your founder’s work before the intro—that’s PR working at exactly the right level. The credibility conversation is partially done before the pitch begins. Sign 9. Your Company Shows Up in Competitor Comparisons When a journalist or analyst writing about your category includes your company in a comparison piece, without being pitched specifically for it, your market position has genuinely shifted. This happens when consistent PR for tech companies has established your brand as a recognized player in the space. You’re on the shortlist journalists reach for when they need to represent the category. That positioning is very hard to build quickly and very hard to displace once established. Sign 10. Your Team and Stakeholders Are Sharing Coverage Organically Internal engagement with PR coverage is an underrated signal. When your team, investors, advisors, and partners are proactively sharing your media placements through forwarding links, posting on LinkedIn, and referencing articles in conversations. It means the coverage is genuinely landing in the right places. It also creates a compounding amplification effect. Every stakeholder share extends the reach of each

In-House PR In India vs PR Agency
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In-House PR In India vs PR Agency: Which One Should You Choose in India

Every growing brand in India hits this question at some point. You’ve decided PR matters. You know you need consistent media presence, a clear narrative, and someone managing journalist relationships. The question is, do you hire someone internally or bring in an agency? Both options work. Both have real limitations. And the right answer depends entirely on where your business is, what you’re trying to achieve, and what kind of PR problem you’re actually solving. Here’s an honest breakdown. First, What Are You Actually Comparing? Before the comparison, get clear on what each option actually means in practice. In-house PR means hiring one or more people internally. They work exclusively on your brand, sit in your office, attend your meetings, and live inside your business. PR agency means partnering with an external team. They bring media relationships, cross-industry experience, and a team of specialists, but they work across multiple clients simultaneously. Neither is inherently better. They’re built for different situations. The Honest Comparison Factor In-House PR PR Agency Brand Knowledge Deep, lives inside the business Builds over time, strong after onboarding Media Relationships Limited, one person’s network Extensive as it built across years and clients Speed of Response Fast, always available Depends on agency structure Strategic Range Narrow, one perspective Broader, cross-industry experience Cost High fixed cost, salary, benefits, tools Flexible, retainer scales with need Crisis Handling Limited, rarely experienced Strong because agencies handle crises regularly Specialization Generalist unless senior hire Specialist teams available Scalability Slow as hiring takes time Fast as agency scales with your needs When In-House PR Makes Sense In-house PR isn’t the wrong choice; it’s just the right choice for specific situations. ✅ You’re a large enterprise with sustained, high-volume PR needs If your business requires daily communications, constant media management, multiple spokesperson coordination, and ongoing crisis monitoring, a full in-house team makes economic sense. At that volume, an agency retainer would cost significantly more. ✅ Your industry requires deep, specialized knowledge Some sectors—defense, certain areas of pharma, and highly regulated financial services—require PR professionals who have spent years building knowledge that can’t be handed off to an agency in an onboarding document. In these cases, in-house expertise is genuinely irreplaceable. ✅ You need someone embedded in real-time business decisions In-house PR professionals sit in leadership meetings, hear strategy before it’s finalized, and can shape communications from the inside. For companies where every week brings potential media moments, that proximity has real value. ✅ You already have a strong agency relationship and need execution support Some of the best PR setups in India combine an in-house manager who owns brand knowledge with an agency that owns media relationships and strategic input. The in-house person manages the agency, not the other way around. When a PR Agency Makes More Sense For most Indian startups, growth-stage companies, and mid-market businesses, an agency is the stronger choice. Here’s why: ✅ Media relationships that take years to build A good PR agency in India has spent years building genuine relationships with journalists across national business media, sector-specific publications, and digital outlets. One in-house hire starts from scratch. The difference in what those relationships can deliver (especially for time-sensitive moments like funding announcements, product launches, or crisis response) is significant. ✅ Cross-industry perspective Agencies work across multiple clients and sectors. That breadth means they spot narrative opportunities, news cycle hooks, and storytelling angles that someone inside one company simply wouldn’t see. The best public relations strategy ideas often come from cross-industry pattern recognition. ✅ Specialized teams without full-time cost A senior PR agency brings strategists, writers, media specialists, and crisis communicators—all under one retainer. Hiring that capability in-house would cost three to four times more, and finding it all in one person is nearly impossible. ✅ Flexibility at different business stages A startup approaching Series A needs different PR than the same startup six months after closing the round. An agency adjusts. An in-house hire’s role is harder to restructure as needs change. ✅ Crisis experience that in-house rarely has Crisis communications is one of the most specialized areas of PR. Most in-house professionals in India have limited crisis experience because most companies don’t face crises regularly enough to build that muscle internally. Agencies handle crises across clients, and that experience compounds. The Hidden Costs Most Companies Miss When comparing costs, most businesses look at agency retainers versus one salary. That comparison misses a lot. True in-house PR cost includes: Salary + benefits + bonuses PR tools and media monitoring subscriptions Training and upskilling Time to hire (typically 2 to 4 months) Management overhead Replacement cost if they leave True agency cost includes: Monthly retainer That’s largely it For most companies spending under ₹30 to 40 lakh annually on PR, an agency almost always delivers more value per rupee than an in-house hire because the retainer buys access to a team, not just one person. The Hybrid Model—What’s Working in India Right Now The smartest PR setups at growth-stage Indian companies aren’t fully in-house or fully agency. They’re hybrid. The in-house person provides brand depth. The agency provides media access and strategic range. Together they cover what neither can do alone. This model works particularly well for companies between Series A and Series C—too complex for agency-only but not yet large enough to justify a full in-house team. How to Decide. A Simple Framework Not sure which direction makes sense for your business right now? Work through these questions: Go agency if: You’re pre-Series B, and PR needs are project or moment-based. You need media relationships that don’t exist internally yet. You’re approaching a funding announcement, product launch, or entering a new market. You want strategic input, not just execution. PR spend is under ₹40 lakh annually. Go in-house if: You’re a large enterprise with daily, high-volume PR needs. You need someone embedded in real-time business decisions. You already have strong agency relationships and need an internal manager. Your industry requires deep specialised knowledge that takes years to build. Go

Brand Awareness Using PR
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How to Build Brand Awareness Using PR (Step-by-Step Guide)

Most brands treat brand awareness like a paid media problem. Spend enough on ads, get enough impressions, and people will know who you are. That works, until the budget stops. Then the awareness stops with it. PR builds brand awareness differently. Slower at first, but compounding over time. A feature in the right publication, a founder quoted in a trusted outlet, a thought leadership piece that gets shared across an industry—these things build credibility that no ad spend can replicate. And unlike paid media, they don’t disappear when the invoice stops. Here’s exactly how to do it, step by step. Why PR Works Better Than Ads for Long-Term Brand Awareness Before the steps, a quick comparison worth understanding: Factor Paid Advertising PR Cost Ongoing, it stops when the budget stops Builds assets that compound Credibility Low, as the audience knows it’s paid High because of third-party validation Longevity Disappears when campaign ends Coverage stays online indefinitely Trust Declining because ad fatigue is real Growing because earned media is trusted Speed Fast but short lived Slower but far more durable Compounding Value None Every placement builds long-term authority PR doesn’t replace advertising. But for brand awareness that actually sticks—the kind that makes investors, buyers, and talent feel like they already know your brand—PR does something ads can’t. The Step-by-Step Framework Step 1. Define What Brand Awareness Actually Means for You Brand awareness means different things for different businesses. Before anything else, get specific. Ask yourself: Who needs to know we exist? Investors? Enterprise buyers? End consumers? Potential hires? What do we want them to think when they hear our name? Where are they currently getting information—which publications, which platforms, which voices do they trust? The answers to these questions shape everything that comes after. A brand building awareness with enterprise procurement heads needs a completely different PR strategy than one trying to reach retail consumers. Step 2. Build Your Core Narrative This is where most companies skip too fast. They jump to pitching journalists before they’ve figured out what story they’re actually telling. Your core narrative answers three questions: What do you do? (in one sentence, without jargon) Why does it matter right now? (the market context that makes your company relevant today) Why you? (what makes your team, your approach, or your insight genuinely different) Every piece of PR—press release, thought leadership article, journalist pitch, or founder LinkedIn post—should be expressing this narrative in a format suited to that channel. Consistency is what builds recognition over time. Inconsistency is what confuses people even when they’ve seen your name before. Step 3. Identify the Right Media Targets Not all coverage is equal. A feature in a publication your target audience has never heard of is activity, not outcome. Here’s how to map media targets to business goals: Business Goal Target Media Investor awareness Economic Times, Mint, Business Standard, Inc42 Enterprise buyer credibility Sector-specific trade publications Customer brand awareness Mainstream digital and print media Talent attraction LinkedIn, startup ecosystem media Industry authority Niche newsletters, podcasts, conferences Regional visibility City-specific business publications Go where your audience actually pays attention, not where the publication name sounds impressive. Step 4. Build Journalist Relationships Before You Need Them This is the step most brands skip, and it’s the one that matters most. Journalists who know your name before you pitch them are significantly more likely to cover you than ones receiving a cold email from a company they’ve never heard of. Building those relationships takes time. Which means starting before you have something to announce. How to build journalist relationships without being annoying: Follow and genuinely engage with journalists covering your space on social media. Share their work when it’s relevant, with a real comment, not a generic one. Offer yourself as a source for stories they’re already working on—no pitch, just value. When you do pitch, make it relevant to what they actually cover. Step 5. Run Earned and Owned Media Simultaneously Waiting for earned media before starting owned content is a mistake. Both should run together from day one. Earned media: pitching journalists, securing features, getting quoted in industry stories Owned media: founder LinkedIn content, company blog, thought leadership articles, podcast appearances, newsletter contributions Each reinforces the other. A journalist who’s been seeing your founder’s content for three months is far more likely to engage with a pitch than one receiving a cold email. A prospect who’s seen your public relations coverage is far more likely to read your owned content. The flywheel only works when both are spinning at the same time. Step 6. Create a PR Calendar Around Key Moments Brand PR doesn’t happen randomly. The brands build a consistent visibility plan around moments and create moments when they don’t exist naturally. A basic PR calendar for a growing brand might look like: January → Founder thought leadership (industry predictions for the year) March → Product update or milestone announcement + media pitch May → Funding announcement or growth milestone coverage July → Mid-year trend commentary, reactive pitching on news cycle September → Speaking opportunity + pre-event media outreach November → Year-end industry wrap-up content December → Relationship building—journalist outreach ahead of next year Planning this in advance means you’re never scrambling for something to say, and you’re always in the conversation. Step 7. The PR Compounding Loop Here’s something most brands don’t understand about brand awareness PR: it doesn’t work linearly. It works in loops. Strong narrative ↓ Right journalist relationships ↓ First placement in relevant publication ↓ Journalist familiarity builds ↓ Second placement gets easier ↓ Audience starts recognizing the brand ↓ Inbound media requests start arriving ↓ Brand awareness compounds without proportional effort increase The brands that dominate their category’s media narrative didn’t get there through one great campaign. They got there by starting the loop early and keeping it running consistently. Step 8. Measure What Actually Matters Clip count is the lazy metric. Here’s what actually tells you whether your brand awareness PR is working: Are investors

Logistics Companies Need PR
MediaPR

Why Logistics Companies Need PR More Than Ever in 2026

Logistics doesn’t get talked about the way it should. It’s the industry that kept India running through a pandemic, that’s being completely rewired by EV fleets and warehouse automation, that’s attracting serious institutional money, and that’s becoming one of the most competitive B2B sectors in the country. And yet most logistics companies communicate like it’s still 2015: a website, a brochure, and a sales team doing all the heavy lifting. That gap between what logistics companies are building and how visible that progress is—that’s exactly the problem logistics PR is built to close. What’s Actually Happening in India’s Logistics Sector Right Now Before getting into why PR matters, it’s worth understanding why 2026 specifically is a different moment for logistics communications. The sector is attracting serious investor attention: logistics tech, cold chain, EV last-mile delivery, and warehousing platforms are all seeing institutional funding at a pace that would have seemed unlikely three years ago. Enterprise procurement has become more sophisticated: large manufacturers, D2C brands, and retail chains are researching logistics partners more carefully than they used to. Reputation and credibility are part of the evaluation now. The workforce conversation has shifted: logistics companies are competing for tech talent, operations leaders, and supply chain professionals who have options. Employer brand matters. Regulation and sustainability are front of mind: companies with a clear, credible story about compliance, EV transition, and environmental responsibility are starting to stand out from those without one. Competition is genuinely intense: funded logistics startups and established players are going after the same enterprise contracts. Differentiation through brand and credibility is real. In that environment, logistics companies that aren’t managing their public narrative are letting someone else manage it for them. Why Logistics PR Is Different From General Business PR Logistics PR has specific requirements that generic communications agencies often miss entirely. The audiences are different—enterprise procurement heads, institutional investors, operations directors, government bodies, and supply chain media all need different messages delivered through different channels. A press release written for a general business audience won’t land with a logistics industry journalist. A thought leadership piece aimed at investors won’t resonate with the warehouse operations team you’re trying to recruit. Getting logistics PR right means understanding: Audience What They Care About Right PR Channel Enterprise Buyers Reliability, compliance, track record Business & trade media, case studies Institutional Investors Growth narrative, tech adoption, market position Business press, funding announcements Government & Regulators Compliance, safety, sustainability Policy media, industry associations Potential Hires Company direction, culture, growth LinkedIn, employer brand content Industry Peers Innovation, partnerships, thought leadership Trade publications, speaking opportunities What PR Actually Does for a Logistics Company 📦 Builds Enterprise Credibility Before the Sales Conversation Large enterprise clients research logistics partners before responding to any pitch. A company with consistent, credible coverage in business and supply chain media—founder quotes, case study features, and industry commentary—walks into those conversations differently than one that’s invisible online. The due diligence has already been partially done by the media presence. 💰 Supports Fundraising and Investor Relations Logistics is capital intensive. Whether you’re raising funds for fleet expansion, warehouse infrastructure, or technology development, the investors writing those cheques are reading business media, tracking sector coverage, and forming impressions of companies long before a pitch deck arrives. A logistics company with a strong media presence is easier to back than one nobody has heard of. 🏆 Positions Leadership as Industry Voices The founders and operations leaders building India’s logistics infrastructure have genuine expertise on supply chain resilience, EV fleet economics, cold chain requirements for pharma and food, and warehouse automation. That expertise is valuable to journalists, to conference organizers, and to the enterprise buyers researching partners. PR turns that expertise into public credibility. 🔒 Manages Reputation When Things Go Wrong Logistics companies face operational challenges: delays, damage claims, and compliance questions. The companies that handle these publicly well aren’t the ones with the fewest problems. They’re the ones with the strongest pre-existing credibility and the clearest communications infrastructure. When something goes wrong, the narrative is managed, not scrambled. 🌱 Builds Sustainability and ESG Narrative In 2026, large enterprise clients, especially multinationals, are increasingly evaluating logistics partners on sustainability credentials. EV fleet adoption, carbon footprint reporting, and warehousing energy efficiency. A logistics company with a clear, well-communicated ESG story has a genuine competitive advantage in enterprise procurement conversations. The Specific Mistakes Logistics Companies Make With Communications Most logistics companies communicate reactively, only when something forces the conversation. Here’s what that looks like: No media presence until a crisis forces a response Funding announcements that go out without pre-built journalist relationships, one news cycle, and then silence Leadership expertise sitting completely unused because nobody is turning it into thought leadership Enterprise sales pitches that rely entirely on the sales deck with no supporting media credibility Employer brand that doesn’t exist, making talent acquisition harder and more expensive than it needs to be Sustainability claims with no media or third-party validation, easily dismissed by sophisticated buyers Every one of these is fixable. None of them fix themselves. What Good Logistics PR Looks Like in Practice It’s not a press release every time a new warehouse opens. It’s not a generic pitch going to every journalist on a list. Good logistics PR looks like a founder being quoted in a Mint piece about supply chain disruption because a journalist already knew their name. It looks like a funding announcement landing in four publications simultaneously because the media relationships were built six months before the close. It looks like an enterprise buyer mentioning in a first meeting that they’d seen the company’s coverage before the sales team had said a word. That kind of presence doesn’t appear overnight. It’s built through consistent strategy, real media relationships, and a narrative that’s been thought through properly from the beginning. A Framework for Logistics Companies Starting PR in 2026 If you’re a logistics company that hasn’t invested in PR before, here’s where to start: Step 1. Get the narrative right What does your

Tech Startups
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The “Earned Media” Trap: Why Tech Startups Need a Hybrid PR Strategy in 2026

Most tech startups get told the same thing when they start thinking about PR. Chase earned media. Get journalists to write about you. Build credibility through coverage you didn’t pay for. And that advice isn’t wrong; earned media is genuinely valuable and genuinely hard to fake. But in 2026, treating earned media as the only PR lever worth pulling is leaving serious ground uncovered. The startups winning the visibility game right now aren’t choosing between earned and everything else. They’re running a hybrid strategy, and the difference in outcomes is significant. What Earned Media Actually Is—And Why It’s Not Enough Alone Earned media is coverage you get because a journalist decided your story was worth telling. A feature in Economic Times. A founder quote in Inc42. A product review in a tech publication your buyers read. It’s credible, it’s trusted, and it compounds in a way paid coverage never does. The problem is the timeline and the control. Earned media moves slowly. Building the journalist relationships that lead to consistent coverage takes months. News cycles are unpredictable. A story that was perfectly timed last week gets bumped by something bigger today. And even when coverage lands, you have limited control over the angle, the framing, or what gets emphasized. For new tech startups trying to build market presence fast—before a raise, before a major launch, before a competitor takes the category narrative—waiting exclusively for earned media to do the work is a real risk. What’s Changed in 2026 Three things have shifted the PR landscape significantly for tech startups this year: AI-generated content has flooded every channel Journalists are receiving more pitches than ever, most of them AI-written, generic, and immediately recognizable as such. Getting a pitch read properly now requires either an existing relationship or a genuinely distinctive story. Cold outreach conversion has dropped. Relationship-led PR has become more valuable, not less. Founder-led content has become a serious credibility signal LinkedIn has become one of the most powerful B2B credibility channels in India. A founder with a consistent, thoughtful presence on LinkedIn reaches investors, enterprise buyers, and potential hires directly, without needing a journalist to intermediate. The best tech startups building in India right now treat founder content as a core PR channel, not an afterthought. Niche digital publications and newsletters have overtaken general business media for specific audiences The CTO of an enterprise company doesn’t get their industry information from the same place they did five years ago. Sector-specific newsletters, podcasts, and digital communities are where many of the most valuable B2B audiences are actually paying attention. A hybrid PR strategy reaches these channels directly. What a Hybrid PR Strategy Actually Looks Like A hybrid strategy combines earned media with owned and shared channels, each doing a different job, all pointing in the same direction. Channel What It Does Timeline Earned media Builds third-party credibility Slow: 3 to 6 months to compound Founder LinkedIn content Direct credibility with key audiences Fast: immediate reach to relevant network Thought leadership articles Owned authority content in relevant publications Medium: builds over time Podcast appearances Deep credibility with niche audiences Medium: relationship dependent Newsletter features Targeted reach to specific industry segments Fast: once a relationship is established Speaking opportunities Category leadership positioning Medium to slow: conference cycles None of these work in isolation. All of them work together. The Trap Most Tech Startups Fall Into Here’s what the earned media trap actually looks like in practice. A startup decides PR is important. They hire an agency or bring someone in-house. The brief is “get us coverage.” Press releases go out. Journalist pitches get sent. Some coverage lands. The team celebrates. Then the coverage dries up because the news cycle moves on and there’s nothing new to pitch. Three months in, the startup has a handful of clippings, no sustained media presence, and no real change in how investors or buyers perceive them. PR gets written off as not working. It wasn’t that PR didn’t work. It’s that a single-channel approach to a multi-channel problem never does. Building a Hybrid Strategy—The Right Way Here’s how new tech startups should think about structuring their PR approach in 2026: Start with narrative, not channels Before anything goes out on any channel, the core story needs to be clear. What does this company do? Why now? Why this team? What’s the market insight that makes this approach different? Every piece of PR—earned, owned, or shared—should be telling the same story in a format suited to that channel. Run earned and owned simultaneously Don’t wait for earned media coverage before starting owned content. Founder LinkedIn posts, thought leadership articles, and podcast pitches should be running at the same time as journalist outreach. Each channel reinforces the others; a journalist who’s been seeing your founder’s content for three months is significantly more likely to engage with a pitch than one receiving a cold email. Think in campaigns, not individual placements The best PR moments for tech startups aren’t single placements. They’re coordinated campaigns where a funding announcement, a product launch, or an industry trend gets covered across earned media, amplified through owned channels, and reinforced through founder content—all within the same week. Build relationships before you need them This applies to journalists, podcast hosts, newsletter writers, and event organizers equally. The startups that get the most out of PR are the ones that built relationships with media before they had something to announce, not the ones scrambling for coverage the week before a launch. What This Looks Like for Different Startup Stages Stage Primary PR Focus Secondary PR Focus Pre-seed / Seed Founder thought leadership, niche media Journalist relationship building Series A Funding announcement, earned media push Owned content momentum Growth Stage Category leadership, earned + owned Speaking, podcasts, newsletter features Pre-IPO National business media, investor-facing PR Consistent multi-channel presence The approach changes as the company grows. What doesn’t change is the need for both earned and owned working together. The Measurement Problem One reason startups get

PR agency for funding announcement
MediaPR

Why You Need a PR Agency for Your Funding Announcement

You’ve closed the round. The hard part is done. Now comes the part most founders underestimate: telling the world about it in a way that actually does something for the business. A PR agency for funding announcement work isn’t a luxury. It’s the difference between a moment that builds momentum for the next twelve months and a press release that gets three LinkedIn likes and disappears by Thursday. Most startups walk into their funding announcement completely unprepared. Here’s why that matters and what to do differently. What a Funding Announcement Actually Does Most founders think of a funding announcement as a press release. It’s actually three separate communications happening simultaneously—each to a completely different audience, each needing a different message. Audience What They’re Looking For What Good PR Does Investors Narrative consistency, market signal Shapes the story that validates their bet Enterprise buyers Credibility, stability, seriousness Turns funding news into a trust signal Potential hires Momentum, ambition, future Makes your company the one people want to join Media A story worth covering Gets you into the right publications Competitors Market positioning Establishes you as the category leader One announcement. Five audiences. One shot to get it right. What Happens When You Do It Without a PR Agency A lot of founders send out a press release themselves, post on LinkedIn, and call it done. Here’s what that usually looks like in practice: Coverage lands in the wrong publications, ones your investors and buyers have never heard of. The narrative is product-focused, not market-focused: journalists don’t care about your features; they care about what your raise means for the industry. The moment passes in 48 hours. No follow-up coverage, no journalist relationships built, no momentum that carries forward. The LinkedIn post gets likes from friends, but the institutional investors and enterprise buyers you needed to reach never saw it. The next raise is harder because the credibility-building that should have happened around this round didn’t. A funding announcement handled without PR expertise isn’t just a missed opportunity. It’s groundwork that doesn’t get laid for everything that comes after. What a PR Agency Actually Does for Your Funding Announcement Here’s the real work, section by section: 📋 Before the Announcement Develops the core narrative, not just “we raised X,” but why it matters, what it signals, and where the company is going Identifies the right publications for your specific round size, sector, and target audience Builds or activates existing journalist relationships so the announcement lands with people who already know your name Prepares embargo pitches: sharing the story with key journalists before the public announcement so they can write a proper feature, not just a brief mention Works as tech PR experts India trusts for high-stakes moments—prepping your founder for media interviews, what to say, what not to say, and how to handle difficult questions 📣 On Announcement Day Coordinates simultaneous release across all channels—press release, owned media, social, and investor communications Manages journalist queries and follow-up requests in real time Ensures the story goes out to the right outlets at the right time because timing matters more than most founders realize Handles any unexpected coverage or narrative that needs to be corrected quickly Maintains strong B2B media relations, so responses from key outlets come faster and carry more weight 📈 After the Announcement Follows up with journalists who showed interest in deeper features Uses the announcement as a launchpad for thought leadership—founder commentary, industry pieces, expert quotes Builds on the momentum so the company stays in the conversation for the months that follow Tracks coverage quality and audience reach, not just clip count The Difference Between a Good and Bad Funding Announcement Here’s what separates funding announcements that compound from ones that disappear: ❌ What bad funding PR looks like: Generic press release sent to a mass journalist list No embargo strategy—everyone gets the story at the same time Founder quotes that say nothing specific Coverage in publications nobody reads Zero follow-up strategy ✅ What good funding PR looks like: Targeted pitching to 8 to 12 journalists who cover your specific sector Embargoed advance briefings with top-tier publications A founder quote that takes a genuine position on the market Coverage in publications your investors and buyers actually read A 3-month plan for what comes after the announcement Why Timing Is Everything The window for a funding announcement to generate momentum is short, usually 72 hours from the first story going live. After that, the news cycle moves on, and the opportunity to build on initial coverage shrinks fast. A PR agency for funding announcement work knows how to compress maximum impact into that window. The right embargo strategy, the right journalist sequence, and the right coordinated push across channels. Without that structure, most of the potential value of the announcement goes unrealized, and there’s no getting it back. What to Look For When Hiring Not every PR agency is equipped for funding announcement work. Here’s what matters specifically: ✅ Existing relationships with journalists who cover your sector, not a cold outreach list ✅ Experience with funded startups at your stage—pre-Series A, Series A, and growth stage each need different approaches ✅ Senior people doing the actual pitching as junior team members cold-calling business editors doesn’t work ✅ A narrative-first approach because the story has to be built before anything goes to a journalist ✅ A post-announcement plan because the round is the starting gun, not the finish line When you hire a startup PR firm for a funding announcement, the question isn’t just whether they can place a story. It’s whether they can build the kind of pre-announcement credibility and post-announcement momentum that makes the round actually work for your business. The Pre-Announcement Work Most Startups Skip The biggest mistake isn’t bad PR on announcement day. It’s doing nothing in the three to six months before the close. The startups that get the best results from funding announcements are the ones that spent that pre-close period building journalist familiarity, shaping

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