Archive for the ‘PR measurement’ Category

PRWeb vs. Marketwire — Which Delivers More Web Traffic? Better Coverage?

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

We’ve been using PRWeb for different clients for quite some time now — we like the ease of use, the multimedia capabilities, and ability to add search-friendly links. There’s another thing our agency likes: the web traffic.

Traffic Spikes From Press Releases on PRWeb

Traffic Spikes From Press Releases on PRWeb

PRWeb lives up to its direct-to-consumer model by sending a good amount of traffic to our client’s sites, which we use in our reporting back to them.

Using Tealium Social Media, we track both “click-throughs,” direct clicks on embedded links in the press releases, and “view-throughs,” which counts the number of visits from people who read the releases on PRWeb.com and come to the site without the benefit of a direct link.

For one particular client, we received an average of 121 visits (click-throughs + view-throughs) per release on PRWeb during the first quarter of this year. Those numbers will slowly increase over time due to the long tail of PR.

One thing we don’t like about PRWeb, however, is the coverage and distribution. Unless you upgrade to the Business Wire option, it just doesn’t seem like PRWeb releases get picked up by many outlets.

In March, we decided to use a different service, Marketwire, and analyze the difference in traffic.

Our first Marketwire release generated only five click-throughs, but 54 view-throughs for a total of 59 visits. Not bad, but much less than PR Web. We did a second release and the results were worse: one direct click and eight view-throughs for a total of nine visits. However, anecdotally, it seems like Marketwire did a better job of distributing the release to different blogs and news outlets, including MSNBC. Read the rest of this entry »

Erik BrattErik Bratt is a social media enthusiast, former newspaper journalist, and recovering Microsoft marketing manager. He is currently Vice President of Communications at TelCentris, creator of VoxOx.

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