Sesame Summit 2026 – application open

Startups Invest in PR: Is it the Right Move for You?

So, you’ve built something remarkable, your startup is buzzing, and you’re thinking: “It’s time for the world to know about this!” Engaging in public relations (PR) may seem like the next logical step. But before you pop the champagne and start drafting press releases, take a step back. Is PR the right move for your startup right now? Like all good things, timing and intention are everything.

The “why” and “when” of PR are two sides of the same coin, making it essential to explore both together. Whether PR will be a game-changer for your startup—or a frustrating drain on resources—depends on understanding your motivations and timing.

Let’s break it down!

Why PR? The Benefits for Startups

Storytelling, Image, and Trust. At its core, PR is about storytelling. You’ve developed something incredible, but it’s not enough for your team to know that—you need your target audience, investors, and the media to know it, too. A well-executed PR strategy builds trust, enhances your brand’s image, and amplifies your message. It shapes how your company is perceived at every customer journey stage.

Good PR also boosts brand awareness. You enter public consciousness by sharing your story through media coverage, speaking engagements, and podcasts. It’s not just about people knowing your name; it’s about them understanding why they should care.

Building Relationships with Key Stakeholders

PR isn’t just about communicating with customers; it’s about establishing relationships with essential stakeholders, including financial regulators, government bodies, and potential partners. Strategic PR positions your startup as a trustworthy and credible player in the market, opening doors to partnerships, hiring opportunities, and other valuable relationships.

Attracting Top Talent

While a competitive paycheck is attractive, today’s top talent seeks more than just financial compensation. PR can help establish your startup as an exciting workplace. A positive media presence builds a reputation that attracts the best minds in the industry.

Fundraising Opportunities

Venture capitalists (VCs) love a compelling story. Can you blame them? PR can generate buzz, craft a narrative around your startup, and help position you as the next big thing. While money talks, media attention speaks volumes—investors are looking for market opportunities and innovative founders capable of scaling their businesses.

Understanding Newsworthiness

It’s crucial to recognize what makes a story appealing to the media. Newsworthiness hinges on relevance, timeliness, and impact. Journalists seek stories that capture their audience’s attention. If your startup solves a real problem, disrupts an industry, or raises significant funding, you’ve got newsworthiness. Conversely, if your startup is still in the idea phase with little to showcase, PR might not be effective yet.

Here’s a quick breakdown of newsworthy stories that journalists typically cover for startups:

  • Product launches that revolutionize an industry
  • Funding announcements that demonstrate market confidence
  • Founders with unique backgrounds that distinguish them from competitors
  • Partnerships with well-known brands or influencers
  • Research offering unique data and insights

Startups that can share compelling stories, statistics, and case studies have a better chance of getting media attention.

Why Not to Start PR (Yet)

It may seem controversial for a PR agency founder to share the downsides of early-stage PR, but we want the work to be effective. Sometimes, it’s simply too soon! Jumping into PR prematurely can backfire.

If you’re pursuing PR solely for vanity—trying to get press coverage without a substantial story—you’ll quickly deplete resources with minimal return. Consider your customer journey: what role could PR play in optimizing your funnel? If you successfully acquire customers through performance marketing and have limited resources, it may be wiser to continue focusing on ads.

When Should You Start Doing PR?

PR isn’t a magic switch you flip on whenever you feel like it. Timing is crucial, and knowing when PR will deliver value for your startup is essential. Here are key questions to consider:

When Is Your Startup Newsworthy?

The answer is straightforward: the bigger and more successful you are, the more newsworthy you become. However, you can maximize your current newsworthiness at any stage.

  • Early Stages: PR works best when you have something tangible—like a product launch or initial funding—to announce. An experienced or expert founder can still gain visibility through thought leadership, especially with compelling insights.
  • Product-Market Fit (PMF) and Scaling: Once you’ve established PMF, PR becomes a powerful tool in various ways. As your startup grows, media outlets may seek you out more. Leverage evidence of your impact to position your startup as an industry leader and attract customers through innovative campaigns.

Is NOT Doing PR Costing You?

You might miss opportunities if your startup is scaling but not engaging in PR. Every unreported newsworthy event means potential customers, investors, or partners miss out on exposure and trust and may turn to competitors instead. Determine when neglecting PR becomes an opportunity cost. Is trust vital in your customer acquisition, hiring, or fundraising efforts?

Does Your Team Have the Bandwidth?

PR isn’t just something you outsource and forget about. It requires input from your team, whether reviewing press releases or providing insights for thought leadership pieces. Ideally, the intellectual overseer of PR should be a founder, preferably the CEO. If you’re too busy building your product or seeking your next round of funding, and no one else can provide strategic input, it may not be the right time for PR.

Budget and Timing Considerations

PR is an investment that requires proper budgeting. Ask yourself: do you have the resources to commit to PR long-term? PR is most effective when consistent; sporadic media attention rarely yields sustained results. If your marketing budget is tight, consider prioritizing other areas, such as sales or product development. However, a well-timed funding announcement or significant news can lay the groundwork for future PR efforts.

When Not to Do PR

PR won’t be effective if you have nothing to say. If you’re too early in your journey, too busy to participate, or not newsworthy yet. You can always return to PR when you have compelling stories to share. Understanding what is newsworthy and what isn’t is crucial, so ensure you study this aspect thoroughly.

Let’s Wrap This Up!

PR can be a powerful tool for startups—but only when executed at the right time and for the right reasons. When your startup is ready—with news to share, a story to tell, and the capacity to support a PR campaign—PR can help propel you to new heights.

With a little self-awareness and the right timing, PR can be the catalyst that takes your startup from unknown to unforgettable!

Startups Invest in PR
📸: Black Unicorn PR
Photo by Gabriela Sokolova

you might also like

blank
Events 4 days ago

AI is reshaping how people discover information. Search traffic, once the lifeblood of websites, is plummeting as AI tools provide answers and context immediately, eliminating the need to browse to websites for answers at all.  Understandably, companies are responding by going down avenues they can control: newsletters, podcasts, memberships and events. This reality is true for startups as well. You simply can’t rely on Google traffic or algorithms to build trust anymore. You need direct channels, and there are few ways to build trust more powerful than  meeting people face-to-face. Welcome to the ‘post-click’ era Startups have long played by the ever-changing rules set by Google and social media platforms, which are more often than not prone to changing their algorithms and leaving everyone scrambling to adapt overnight.  AI is not only accelerating this instability, it’s almost making Google referral traffic obsolete. Companies need to adapt to this new reality with strategies that let them talk directly to their prospective customers. The media industry, one of the most vulnerable to the changes, is proving to be one of the quickest to adapt. Morning Brew, for example, blends its newsletters franchises with events. In a recent interview, Sam Jacobs, TIME’s editor-in-chief, highlighted how the company went from organizing two to three events per year, to holding the same number of events monthly. Even digital-first players are embracing events. Podcasts like Acquired and All-In now host live events to bring their listeners together. Finimize has built grassroots meetups around its newsletter. The new defense tech media title, Resilience Media, born on Substack, is planning events to connect experts in its niche. Alex Konrad’s new Upstarts ecosystem includes live interviews, an upcoming podcast and curated events. These aren’t just extensions of the content; they’re ways to nurture communities. Startups should copy this strategy. They must consider where their credibility and relationships will be built in this new landscape, especially as visibility is no longer about simply appearing on top of search results or burning money with ads; it’s about building lasting trust in the spaces that matter. Events are singularly effective at doing that. Lessons from after the pandemic If the pandemic taught us anything, it’s that being present online is insufficient. Platforms like Hopin promised a future of global, scalable, online events. Even experiments in VR conferences were the subject of occasional hype.  All of that fell short, however. What founders, investors and marketers learned was simple: There is no substitute for shaking someone’s hand, catching their eye, and sharing time in the same space. When the pandemic ended, events came back with a bang. Companies large and small continue to invest in gatherings. Events still carry symbolic weight: just look at Apple’s meticulously choreographed product launches, or how scaleups like Helsing showcase new technologies.  For startups, events can also serve as tools for strengthening internal communications and bonds with their employees and their community. Here’s a great example: Italian travel scaleup WeRoad holds an annual, two-day global gathering of its travel coordinators and staff that strengthens culture and commitment in ways a Zoom call never could. Why startups need to show up Startups live and die on the strength of their relationships. Securing investors, signing first customers, and finding the right partners are all processes that depend completely on trust. These early relationships are crucial. In an AI-driven world where digital discovery is fragmented, saturated and noisy, events cut through the noise. They offer something AI and algorithms never will: human presence. Startups should think of events as essential investments in visibility and credibility. Whether it’s speaking on stage, hosting a breakfast or simply showing up to the right conference — being in the room matters. It’s OK to be selective. It’s OK to pass on events when priorities point elsewhere. And don’t take this to mean the digital realm and AI should be ignored. But in this era where we’re putting AI on a pedestal, founders should not underestimate the power of a physical meeting for establishing contact with investors, talent, or any other important stakeholder.

blank
New Materials 5 days ago

After a successful first edition, JEC Investor Day 2026 is now returning for its second year with expanded ambitions.

blank
Events 1 week ago

TechCrunch Disrupt? Overrated. Web Summit? A $4,700 mistake I’ll never make again. I’ve burned $18K learning which startup events actually matter for B2B SaaS founders trying to close deals—not just collect business cards. Here’s what nobody tells you: the biggest events aren’t where B2B deals happen. Why “Best Startup Event” Lists Are Useless for B2B Founders Every January, tech blogs publish the same recycled garbage: “50 Must-Attend Startup Events!” They rank by size and buzz. What they don’t rank by: where your buyers actually show up with budgets. I learned this after exhibiting at a 70,000-person mega-conference. Spent $4,700 on booth space, flights, and hotel. Had exactly zero conversations with our target market. The attendees? Mostly consumer startups and the press are looking for the next Uber. According to Cvent, 81% of trade show attendees have buying authority—but only at industry-specific events. Generic “startup” conferences are networking theater. If you’re serious about finding the right startup event strategy, you need to think differently. The 5 Best Startup Events Where I’ve Actually Closed B2B Deals SaaStr Annual – Where SaaS Deals Actually Happen 13,000 SaaS professionals in San Mateo every March. APIDays – The Technical Depth You Need If you’re building APIs, this is your room. 2,000-3,000 API architects who can actually read your docs. Paris is the flagship, but they run 10+ cities globally. What makes APIDays different: it’s deeply technical. No marketing fluff. €3,000 gets you in, and European buyers are way less saturated than US markets. Big Data & AI Paris – Enterprise Buyers With Actual Budgets 15,000 enterprise CTOs and data engineers. I closed two partnerships here worth €400K combined—with French banks and telecom companies that had active Q4 budgets. The French government subsidizes AI adoption, so budgets are real. But your networking tactics need to adapt. Less aggressive, more relationship-focused. €800 for a pass and 3,200€ to exhibit as a startup, totally worth it if you’re targeting European enterprises. Track it on Sesamers so you don’t miss early bird pricing. MicroConf – Where Bootstrapped Founders Share Real Numbers 200-300 attendees max. Everyone’s profitable or trying to be. Zero VC hypergrowth bullshit. I’ve learned more in hallway conversations here than at conferences 50x the size. The attendees are other founders who share actual numbers—not vanity metrics. Churn rates, CAC, payback periods. This is how you measure real ROI from events. Worth every cent if you’re bootstrapped. Industry-Specific Trade Shows – The Secret Weapon Here’s the move nobody talks about: skip tech conferences entirely. Go where your buyers congregate. Healthcare SaaS? Hit HIMSS. Fintech? Money20/20. HR tech? HR Tech Conference. I watched a founder close a $400K deal at a healthcare event while competitors were posting selfies at Web Summit. These cost $3,000 avg, but attendee quality is 100x better. According to Statista, B2B trade shows hit $15.78B in 2024. This strategy works because you’re fishing where the fish actually are. The 3-Filter System I Use to Pick Events Filter 1: Who’s actually attending? Can you name 20 people who match your ICP? If not, wrong event. Use Sesamers to check historical attendee data before buying tickets. Filter 2: What’s your actual goal? Raising money? Go to investor-heavy events. Closing customers? Industry trade shows. Different goals need different event selection criteria. Filter 3: What’s the all-in cost? Ticket + flights + hotel + meals. If it’s over $3K, you need $30K in pipeline to break even. Most events don’t hit that unless you’re strategic. Events I Skip (And Why You Should Too) Web Summit: 70,000 people is networking hell. Consumer-focused despite the B2B claims. Pass unless you need Series A+ PR. CES: Consumer electronics show. Your B2B SaaS buyers aren’t here. I see founders at CES every year wondering why they’re not closing deals. Now you know. TechCrunch Disrupt: Great for press and VCs. Terrible for enterprise buyers. Worth it for launch PR, not pipeline. How I Track Everything Without Losing My Mind I track every event in a spreadsheet: cost, conversations, pipeline generated, deals closed. After three years of data, the pattern is crystal clear. Niche beats broad. Quality beats quantity—industry-specific crushes general tech. The best startup events for B2B SaaS are never on TechCrunch’s homepage. For API companies: APIDays and API World are superior to generic conferences. For AI/ML: Big Data & AI Paris provides European enterprise access that’s nearly impossible to achieve otherwise. Geography matters—European buyers at European events are way less saturated than US markets. Stop Wasting Money on the Wrong Events You have limited time and budget. Most founders can hit 3-5 events per year max. Choose wrong and you’ve burned $15K and 15 days for zero ROI. Choose right and one event generates $500K+ in pipeline. Use Sesamers to find events filtered by your industry and target attendees. See which ones similar founders recommend. Track ROI data. Set reminders for early bird pricing. Never waste another $4K on an event where your buyers don’t show up. Because the smartest way to pick events is learning from founders who’ve already tested them—and can tell you which ones actually matter. Ready to find your next high-ROI event? Start tracking on Sesamers and build your calendar based on data, not FOMO.

Subscribe to
our Newsletter!

Stay at the forefront with our curated guide to the best upcoming Tech events.