Marketers have been writing off the press release for years. Too old-school, too one-way, nobody reads the wire. Here's the problem with that thinking: the press release didn't get less valuable. It picked up a second reader, and that reader is the machine your buyer now asks.
The Revenue Engine starts with sharing good news. That's the foundation of the whole framework. A press release is one of the most durable ways to share it, because it's earned media that lives on third-party domains, carries outside validation, and gets indexed across the web. That was always the value. What changed is who's reading.
A press release reached reporters and the slice of your audience who saw the pickup. Your own messaging reaches as little as 1 to 2 percent of your audience, so you repeated it across channels and hoped for a trade pickup.
When a shipper asks ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Gemini who the best 3PLs are for their lane, the model answers from authoritative, indexed, third-party content. Your earned media is exactly what it reaches for. Or your competitor's is.
"Good news cannot be you virtually patting yourself on the back. There's no better value endorsement than one bestowed by the market: an analyst, journalists, or your customers."
The Revenue Engine -- Kara Smith BrownBefore you can earn a citation, you need something worth citing. The book is clear on what qualifies as good news. It has to meet four criteria, and they're the same criteria that make content credible to a machine.
Old news is no news. Tie your good news to what's top of mind when the news cycle is cresting. A reefer capacity crunch this quarter beats an evergreen explainer every time.
Speak your ICP's language. Every freight and logistics buyer has acronyms and metrics that matter to them. Generic content reaches no one and gets cited by nothing.
There's a big difference between advice and a point of view. A list of tips shares nothing. Your read on what a market shift means is the thing both reporters and models reach for.
It must help the reader, ideally validated by a respected third party. Winning an award for best logo is good news for you. Helping a customer cut downtime is good news to share.
This is the difference between PR and Commercial PR. Traditional PR is about reputation and sentiment. Commercial PR takes market-specific news, an economic index, a capacity crunch, a port strike, and turns it into content your ICP wants to read, anchored by your point of view. That's the kind of good news worth putting on the wire, and it's the kind a model will cite.
Good news isn't a single post. The Revenue Engine campaign framework moves one piece of good news across four channels. The press release lives in Earned, and Earned is where third-party authority is built.
Why this matters for citations: a single mention on your own site is weak. The same good news appearing as a press release on a wire service, picked up by a trade publication, referenced in an executive byline, and corroborated across multiple domains is what builds entity authority. Corroboration across domains is what answer engines reward. The four-channel model isn't just good distribution. It's how you become a source a machine trusts.
Here's the part most teams miss. You don't need a separate strategy to get cited by LLMs. The exact discipline the Revenue Engine already teaches for good news is what makes content citation-worthy.
AEO stands for Answer Engine Optimization. It's what SEO was ten years ago. Where SEO was about ranking on a results page, AEO is about being the source a model cites when it composes an answer for your buyer. And the criteria for getting cited map almost perfectly onto the good news criteria you just learned.
Models favor specific, verifiable facts. A release built on a number or a market data point beats vague positioning. This is good news with value, made concrete.
A quote from a named executive with a title carries attribution weight. It signals a real organization stands behind the claim. This is your point of view, sourced.
One mention is weak, corroboration is strong. The Earned channel puts your good news on third-party domains where it gets indexed and cross-referenced.
State your company, category, and specialty the same way every time, and keep a steady cadence. Answer engines weight recency and consistent entity signals.
Put simply: a release that says "spot rates in the Southeast reefer corridor rose 14 percent in Q2, here's our read on why" is citation gold. A release that says "we're excited to announce" is not. The first one is relevant, timely, market-specific, data-anchored, and carries a point of view. It's good news done right, and that's exactly what a machine cites.
Pick one piece of good news your team could put on the wire this quarter. Then map it across the four channels and pressure-test it for citation readiness.
What's the story? Anchor it on data and a point of view, not an announcement. Think back to your Index strategy from Exercise 3.
The same story, expressed for each channel. The Earned row is your citation fuel.
Check every box your good news already hits. The more you check, the more citation-worthy it is.