<b>One national survey, fifty local headlines</b>
A home-insurance brand commissioned a survey on which household disasters scare people most. Run nationally, it was a shrug — "Americans fear floods," so what. The national desks passed.
The angle was geography. We cut the same dataset by state and city, then built fifty tiny pages, each leading with the local figure: "Phoenix homeowners fear wildfire 3x more than the national average." Same study, fifty different lead sentences. We pitched regional papers individually, each with their own number, their own quote-ready stat.
The pitch was almost lazy in its simplicity — subject line was just the city name and the scary percentage. Local editors love a story that's already localized; we'd done their angle for them.
Result: 41 regional placements, 67 referring domains, and because each local outlet linked to its own data page, the link profile looked organic rather than campaign-driven. Organic traffic to the survey hub climbed 38% over two months.
A Tampa reporter wrote back: "Finally, a survey that's actually about us."
<b>Lesson:</b> National data is a quarry, not a finished statue. The same numbers, cut local, multiply your coverage and spread your links across dozens of domains instead of one.
The Press Hook
@ThePressHook
<b>One national survey, fifty local headlines</b>
Этот пост опубликован в Telegram-канале The Press Hook. Подписаться можно по ссылке: @ThePressHook.