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The 2024 Cision and PRWeek Global Comms Report

Find out how 400+ PR and comms leaders worldwide are approaching the way they work in today’s media landscape.

State of the Media 2020: Key Takeaways

Our 2020 State of the Media Report is our biggest one yet and we are so excited that it's finally time to share it with you! 

For our 11th report, we surveyed more than 3,200 journalists from 15 countries in North and South America, Europe, and Asia. Additionally, once COVID-19 was declared a global pandemic, we reached back out to journalists to see how it was affecting them and received 114 responses that are highlighted in a special section of the report. 

1. COVID-19 changed everything, but also highlighted everything that hasn’t changed for the media. 

Journalists still prefer to be pitched via email, and the volume of pitches they're receiving now- paired with increasingly tight budgets and reduced resources- only emphasised that. 

You should still research a journalist's work before pitching them, particularly as entire staffs have been moved over to cover the pandemic. 

2. Distrust in the media continues to decrease in the eyes of journalists, but there is still work to be done. 

For the fourth year in a row, journalists said they saw distrust in the media decreasing. Trust, once lost, is difficult to rebuild, but we've seen the public turning to mainstream media as one of the first places to get news on the novel coronavirus, per the 2020 Edelman Trust Barometer Special Report on Trust and the Coronavirus

While that same report showed that trust was higher in employers than the media, turning to the media as a first choice for updates on the virus is a sign that things are moving in a positive direction. The full report discusses this more in-depth. 

3. Bias is unavoidable in humans and journalists are humans; we examine this relationship between bias and reporters (and what it means for PR pros). 

As journalists grapple with bias in their industry and in their own work, we discuss how PR and communications professionals can address this difficult topic. 

We also look at responses on bias in journalists' own words, including this one, which sums things up pretty well: 

“All media is biased because it's run by humans.”

The report also examines the relationship between bias and technology, especially when it comes to social media algorithms. 

4. Social media continues to be complicated while the heady promise of AI continues to fade. 

In 2019, 38% of journalists agreed that social media algorithms will change the way they work the most. Now, in 2020, 41% of journalists believe this to be the case.

That puts journalists in the difficult position of balancing two competing priorities: Accuracy in their reporting vs. the speed valued by social media algorithms. 

Meanwhile, only 15% see AI/machine learning as the most important technology to affect the industry, down from 19% last year. The promises of AI continue to fade. 

5. PR outreach needs to be more targeted and relevant than ever before to stand out. 

If you take nothing else away from our 2020 State of the Media Report as a PR professional, journalists hope that it's this: Sending a mass email out to a list won't get you the kind of coverage you want for your brand. 

Pitches need to be well-researched and personalised. They should be concise, but contain everything a journalist needs to craft the story, and follow-up should be limited. 

Want more pitching tips? They're in the full report. You can also catch up on our State of the Media: Revealed webinar to hear a panel of industry experts share their insights on pitching, along with discussions around the themes found in the report.

2020 has already been a challenging year to navigate — and it's only April. Let's all work better together, especially in these uncertain times.

Charlie Gooddy

Charlie Gooddy is the Content Marketing Manager at Cision UK. You can reach her on charlotte.gooddy@cision.com