The other day, I posted a news release for the Illinois Association of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine on Triblocal.com.
The release (“Acupuncture & Oriental Medicine: Not All Providers Are Created Equal”) joins dozens of other Inside Edge PR news releases (written, as all my work is written, in journalistic style) on the site. Soon, many more Inside Edge PR releases will be on the site, as the Tribune expands its reach to include Oak Park, River Forest and Forest Park–right in the heart of so much of my client roster.
Though its focus on western and southern suburbs has typically been beyond most of my clientele’s reach until now, Triblocal has been a solid go-to resource for nearly a year. The site is easy to use, has a broad reach and, of course, is connected to the top newspaper in the region.
Reach Unlike That of Flagship Tribune
Make no mistake–the site does not draw anywhere near the traffic that flocks to the flagship paper’s site at Chicago Tribune.com.
But clients report receiving visits to their site from the Triblocal pages, and the pieces also frequently pop up on Page 1 of Google searches for various organizations, businesses and individuals that I’ve publicized. That all has a real, if difficult-to-measure, impact on a company or organization’s bottom line.
One quick case in point: during the recent dog wedding in Oak Park that I promoted (I Do, Doggone It!), I asked a gentleman who trekked from Glen Ellyn to Oak Park how he learned of the event.
He first replied, “The Tribune.” When I mentioned that I’d not seen it publicized there, he clarified that he meant Triblocal.com.
Rarely will I develop a news release with Triblocal in mind–it’s simply one of many spots where I send or, in the user-generated website’s case, post it. However, at bare minimum, tapping into the site provides an online home for stories that might otherwise not get published anywhere else.
In that regard, it becomes a kind of online adjunct to an organization’s website and overall marketing effort.