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A lot of what's on the front pages of a newspaper is information that needs to be told right away, or it will be dated and lose its relevance. Not so with a feature story. A feature is meant to be evergreen. It can have an indefinite shelf life to enable it to be used when needed by the media, and is not reliant on when it is sent out. Features are often about how we live, love, and learn. Items on food, travel, pets, home improvement and health, for example, are among the many topics that lend themselves well to features. However, features can also be used by small businesses and entrepreneurs for business-to-business messages or when a consumer focus is not applicable. Many trade and technical magazines look for features that tell a compelling story and do not read like an advertisement. Indeed, a feature needs to emphasize information over outright promotion. You achieve your promotion by being a source of good information. Below you will find general guidelines and paragraph specific tips for writing an effective feature story.For more detailed information download the PR Newswire Guide to Writing a FeatureGeneral guidelines
Headlines
Write a two-line headline that tells the story. This will be all editors will
have to go on to decide whether they will open up the story and consider it for
publication or broadcast. The aim is to have copy used verbatim. If it reads
like an ad, it won't get used.
First paragraph
Expand upon the same story told in the headline in 30 words or less. Keep all
your paragraphs short, using simple, declarative sentences. Don't digress. If
you use adjectives, make them count.
Second paragraph
Third paragraph
Use a humanizing or compelling quote from a spokesperson you want interviewed
and who can lend authority to the story.
Fourth paragraph
Transition into details and explain how the product works or provide tips and
advice.
Fifth paragraph
Support the story with a third-party endorsement or a quote. Alternatively, you
can provide additional details or biographical information, if necessary.
Sixth paragraph
Provide context to your story by including the fact or statistic that
demonstrates the importance of the story.
Last paragraph
Tell them how to get what you're selling. Repeat purchase information such as
toll-free number or web address.
Editors note
Interviews, photos, video, b-roll product demo materials available.
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