Use Internet Press Releases to Obtain Recognition and Higher Search
Rankings
by Suuzen Ty Anderson, Esq.
Online press releases offer a fast, low-cost shortcut to achieving
higher website search engine rankings. Issuing them repeatedly can establish
you with the press as a quotable legal expert. They work whether you're
an experienced specialist or a brand-new graduate with no clients. Here's
how to use them.
Step 1: Find a newly-reported event
or trend you can use as an excuse
to give legal advice to the ordinary consumer or business person.
First, watch print newspapers, Google
News, and Yahoo
News for a just-reported event or trend you can use as a springboard
to offer general legal advice to the public. Reporters are paid to
write stories that sell newspapers, which means your advice should
appeal to the widest possible audience. If you are a specialist in
an esoteric field, work from your knowledge in the broader legal discipline
that includes your practice area. New attorneys: this is your chance
to put your law-school training to practical use.
Step 2: Write a 1-2 page release giving your advice
and tying it to the news.
A celebrity divorce can be used as a stepping stone to give divorce
legal advice to ordinary couples. A fictional episode of a popular TV
series can support legal advice on injury risks, fraud, or handling
business disputes. A change of seasons can merit advice about tax strategies.
Stock upticks and downticks can be fodder for advice on buying or selling
a business, or protecting oneself from stock broker fraud. A story about
the rising costs of car repairs could be an excuse to remind consumers
about Lemon Law protections.
You simply restate the news briefly and say that it illustrates, demonstrates,
serves as notice, should be a wake-up call, or other tie-in language "for
[business owners] [employers] [landlords] [car-buyers] [families] [etc.]."
For example:
Separated Spouses Should Avoid Copying Spoiled
and Selfish
Los Angeles, Apr. 1, 2006 "The public break-up
battle between Spoiled Moviestar and Selfish Teeveestar yesterday
illustrates why separated spouses should interact through a
neutral third person or their lawyers when dividing property,"
says California divorce lawyer Jacy B. Esquire.
The two celebrities, during a "friendly" meeting to discuss
divvying up their automobile collection, began taking out their frustrations
by raining blows on each other's favorite cars with a piece of garden
statuary (her) and a golf club (him). By the time the police arrived,
the estimated auto body damage was over $200,000.
Esquire says, "A good way to divide personal property in a divorce
is for you and your spouse to each make two lists. One ranks
your expensive possessions, and the other your sentimental possessions,
from most favorite to least. Your lawyers then spend an hour
or so alternating choices on the "expensive"
lists and then on the "sentimental"
lists until everything is divided. No hard feelings, no property
damage, no arrests."
[note: add two more paragraphs of advice; keep tying it back
to the news]
A list of simple, no-fireworks ways to divide property is on Esquire's
website at www.esquiredivorcelaw.com/divide-property.htm.
For more information, contact Jacy B. Esquire at (888) 555-1212 or
email esquire@www.esquiredivorcelaw.com.
About Jacy B. Esquire
Jacy B. Esquire is a certified family law specialist practicing
in Abagado, California. [two-line background, contact info
details here]
(See Press Release
Tips at PRWeb.com for
a good press release template and tips for release-writing.)
Timeliness is crucial, so in this case, the enemy of
"good" is "better."
You have a greater chance of publication if you send a good release
on the day the story first appears rather than send an even better-written
release on the day after.
After you write the release, go to http://www.prwebdirect.com/catalog.php and
pay PR Web/EMediawire $249 for the "advanced user service" to
distribute and archive your release that day. You must choose
this option to have a link to your website included in your press
release. (The cheaper $119 choice has no link, and so won't
help your search engine ranking to the same degree; the $350 search-engine
optimizing choice causes an unacceptable two-day delay.)
PRWeb/EMediaWire will immediately distribute your release by automatic "RSS
feed"
to subscribing reporters at newspapers and magazines all over
the United States. If any of the publications publish your release
online, or quote you in an online story written from your release,
there is a good chance they will also reprint the link to your
website.
PRWeb/EMediaWire will also send your release to all major search engines,
where it will show up in the searchable
"news" sections in about three days. Google will move your
release into its main "web" section in about thirty days.
PRWeb.com will then archive your release on its site, making it permanently
available to search engines and the press.
Step 4: Enjoy search engine rankings improvement
& reputation as expert
Your search engine rankings depend mainly on how many
popular sites link to your website. Links from the media have
the greatest ability of all "inbound
" links to improve your search engine rankings; next in line are
links from popular information resources, such as PRWeb.com.
So long as your site has
"search engine friendly"
programming - meaning, at the minimum, that there is plenty
of readable text on your home page, that each page in your site
has its own name, and no page has a ? as part of its name --
the link to your website from your release archived in the well-known
PRWeb.com will help improve your search engine rankings across
the board.
If any online news media then reprints your release
or writes a story based on your release and includes a link to
your website, your search engine rankings will improve even more.
So long as the news story remains available to search engines
(i.e., is not moved into a subscriber-only access area), your
rankings will stay up. The more "permanent" (publicly available)
links you can obtain from online newspapers and magazines, the
higher your website rankings will be.
If you send out a release every month, and even a few of these are
reprinted or rewritten as stories in online newspapers or magazines,
you will begin to gain name recognition among reporters covering
popular culture or business. With enough releases, multiple reporters
will come to see you as a dependable commentator who can be called
upon to
"translate" events into legal advice for their readers. And
being frequently quoted in the press will enhance your
professional reputation and make it even easier for you to obtain
good clients.
-- Best regards, Suuzen Ty Anderson, Esq.
How to Contact Suuzen Anderson:
You can reach me in San Diego at (619) 460-7700, or e-mail me at
. If you prefer, you may use the form below to contact me. Thank you for considering
me; I look forward to helping you.