How to Work with a PR Agency: What Drives Success โ and Where Brands Go Wrong
Working with a PR agency can accelerate visibility, sharpen your narrative, and strengthen your reputation, but only when the partnership is built on clarity, discipline, and shared accountability. The most successful engagements arenโt the ones with the biggest budgets or the flashiest announcements; theyโre the ones where the brand understands how PR works, what PR can realistically influence, and how to empower their agency to deliver results.
Start With the Business, Not the Press Release
A PR partnership begins long before the first pitch goes out. Strong results depend on the brand being clear about:
- The business goals PR must support
- The audiences that matter most
- The internal priorities and non-negotiables
- The timing, approvals, and access the agency will have
Brands fail when they hire PR to โget coverageโ without tying that work to real business objectives, from pipeline acceleration, executive visibility, to market repositioning. As Harvard Business Review notes, communications is most effective when directly connected to strategic priorities, not treated as an add-on function.
Be Honest About the Story and Its Market Relevance
One of the biggest misconceptions brands have is believing that all company updates are inherently newsworthy. They arenโt. Editors are under-resourced, over-pitched, and making harder decisions than ever. The New York Times reported that newsroom staffing continues to shrink while the volume of pitches rises.
Brands succeed when they:
- Involve their PR agency early in shaping the narrative
- Separate internal importance from external relevance
- Align announcements with industry trends, policy shifts, data, or broader industry themes
- Stay open to reframing their message for actual reader value
Brands fail when they push their agency to pitch stories that simply arenโt news โ leading to strained reporter relationships, frustration, and wasted cycles.
Give Your Agency Access…Real Access
A PR agency canโt generate meaningful coverage if it doesnโt have access to:
- Executives
- Subject-matter experts
- Product owners
- Data
- Customers or early adopters
- Context around challenges, failures, and learnings
Brands who limit access or โsanitizeโ information create thin stories that journalists wonโt care about. Successful brands share openly, trust their agency with the full picture, and understand that transparency drives stronger messaging.
Speed Matters More Than Most Brands Realize
PR moves fast; news cycles move even faster. The brands who win:
- Approve quotes and drafts quickly
- Provide real-time guidance
- Respond within hours, not days
- Allow their PR team to capitalize on newsjacking opportunities
Where brands fail: slow approvals, endless internal loops, and overthinking every line until the moment is gone. As PR Daily often emphasizes, delay is the biggest PR momentum killer.
Respect the Process and the Boundaries
Brands succeed when they:
- Trust the expertise they are paying for
- Focus on business alignment, not vanity metrics
- Give space for creativity and strategic counsel
- Understand that PR is not advertising โ itโs earned, not bought
Brands fail when they micromanage pitches, rewrite quotes to be overly sales-driven, or expect guaranteed placements (which no ethical PR agency can promise).
Set Expectations That Match Reality
PR is powerful, but it is not magic.
Brands succeed when they define success around:
- Message pull-through
- Thought leadership
- Analysts and ecosystem influence
- Quality of reporter conversations
- Strategic placement in the right publications
Brands fail when they measure success purely on:
- Number of articles per month
- Guaranteed top-tier coverage
- Forcing a story where none exists
A long-term strategic partnership will outperform short-term transactional thinking every time.
The Bottom Line
A PR agency isnโt a megaphone โ itโs a strategic function. When brands approach the relationship with openness, speed, clarity, and business alignment, PR becomes one of the most valuable growth levers available. When they donโt, results stall.
Great PR is built, not bought and the strongest brands understand that.