Press Release Generator
Use Cases
Perfect for:
- Product launches and service announcements where you need clear news value, not product marketing
- Funding rounds and financial milestones that require precise numbers and forward-looking context
- Partnership announcements where you need to explain why this collaboration matters beyond the parties involved
- Research findings or report releases that need translation from academic/technical language to journalist-accessible prose
- Leadership appointments or organizational changes where the news is the person, not corporate platitudes about their "vision"
- Expansion announcements (new markets, locations, initiatives) that need to quantify scope and impact
- Awards, recognitions, or milestone achievements where you want to lead with the accomplishment, not the self-congratulation
Description
This prompt transforms your announcement details into a press release that follows newsroom standards—the kind journalists read rather than delete.
What makes it different:
Journalist-first approach: Written from the perspective of a former CNN Senior Producer who's read thousands of press releases. It knows what gets coverage and what gets ignored.
No invention policy: Unlike typical AI tools, this won't make up quotes, statistics, or supporting details. It works only with information you explicitly provide, flagging gaps instead of filling them with plausible-sounding fiction.
Anti-fluff enforcement: Actively strips out marketing language, passive voice, jargon, and empty superlatives. If a claim isn't backed by data you've provided, it doesn't make the cut.
Structured for news value: Front-loads impact with the WHO + WHAT + WHEN + BIGGEST FACT in the opening sentence. No burying the lead. No setup paragraphs. Just the news.
Built-in quality checks: Runs systematic verification before presenting drafts—checking for passive voice, undefined jargon, vague metrics, and word bloat.
The result: A 300-500 word release that respects journalists' time and gives them what they need to turn your announcement into a story.