In the digital marketing world, we often talk about “going viral” as the ultimate prize. For many small to medium-sized business owners, public relations (PR) is viewed through a similar lens: a high-stakes, one-time event designed to generate a sudden explosion of attention. You launch a product, you hire a firm for a “blast,” you get a few mentions, and then… silence.
At DMX Marketing, we’ve seen this cycle play out hundreds of times. We call it the “PR Sugar Crash.” It feels great in the moment, but the long-term nutritional value for your brand is nearly zero.
If you want to build a brand that lasts, you have to unlearn the transactional mindset of “big announcements” and embrace the compounding power of the “Slow-Burn” PR strategy.
ShapeThe Mistake: Treating PR as a Transaction
The most common mistake we see is treating public relations as a series of isolated “blasts.” When a client approaches PR with a transactional mindset, they only engage with the media when they have something to sell—a new location, a product launch, or a major award.
While these milestones are important, treating them as the only time you speak to the media creates a “noisy” relationship. Journalists are inundated with thousands of pitches every day. If you only show up in their inbox when you want a favor (coverage), you aren’t a source; you’re a solicitor.
The result? Your results erode over time. You might get a hit here or there, but you aren’t building “Brand Equity.” Between those peaks of coverage, your brand falls into a valley of irrelevance. The algorithm of human memory is just as fickle as the Instagram algorithm—if you aren’t consistently present, you are forgotten.
The Science of “Micro-Touchpoints”
Why does the “Slow-Burn” approach work so much better? It’s rooted in the Effective Frequency theory. In marketing, it’s long been understood that a consumer needs to see a message multiple times before they take action. PR is no different.
When you provide consistent, non-promotional value to the media, you are creating “micro-touchpoints.” You aren’t asking for a full-page feature every time; you are offering a quote, sharing a data point, or providing a unique perspective on a trending industry topic.
As shown in the graph above, while transactional PR leads to “peaks and valleys,” the Slow-Burn strategy creates a steady upward trajectory. Over time, the baseline of your brand’s authority rises, making it significantly easier to get coverage for those “big announcements” when they finally do happen.
How to Unlearn the “Hit-or-Miss” Mindset
Coaching clients to move away from the “Big Bang” theory of PR requires a shift in how they define success. Here is the framework we use at DMX Marketing to help professionals and SMBs pivot:
1. Become a “Source,” Not a “Subject”
The biggest hurdle is ego. Most clients want the story to be about them. However, the most sustainable PR comes from being a source for stories about the industry.
- The Shift: Instead of pitching “Why my bakery is great,” pitch “3 ways the rising cost of flour is changing local business.”
- The Result: You become the go-to expert for journalists covering the economy, food trends, or small business—keeping your name in print month after month.
2. The 80/20 Rule of PR Pitching
We coach our clients to follow a strict ratio: 80% of your media outreach should be “Gives,” and only 20% should be “Asks.”
- A “Give” is a piece of data, an introduction to another expert, or a response to a journalist’s query (using tools like HARO or Featured.com).
- An “Ask” is a press release about your new service.
When you “give” 80% of the time, your “asks” are almost always answered because you’ve built a reservoir of goodwill.
3. Leverage the “Expert Commentary” Loop
In the age of 24-hour news and constant social media scrolling, journalists are under immense pressure to produce content quickly. They don’t always need a 2,000-word feature; they often just need a “gut check” from a professional.
By positioning yourself as a responsive, reliable expert who can provide a 3-sentence quote on a moment’s notice, you earn “quiet” results that build massive authority over time. These small mentions in Forbes, Business Insider, or local news outlets act as permanent digital breadcrumbs that lead back to your website.
The Compounding Interest of Authority
The reason we advocate for this approach at DMX Marketing is simple: Authority compounds. When a potential client Googles your name or your company, they shouldn’t just see one article from three years ago. They should see a consistent trail of expertise. This “authority trail” does the heavy lifting for your sales team. It shortens the sales cycle because the trust has already been established by third-party media outlets.
Quietly eroding results happen when you let your media presence go dark. Steady growth happens when you treat PR like a marathon, not a sprint.
Final Thoughts: The Media is a Relationship, Not a Megaphone
If you are a professional or a small business owner, stop waiting for the “perfect” moment to engage with the media. There is no perfect moment—there is only the consistent moment.
Start by identifying three journalists in your niche. Follow them. Read their work. Offer them a piece of insight without asking for a link or a mention. Unlearn the need for the “Big Splash” and start lighting the “Slow-Burn.” Your long-term ROI will thank you.






