Budget-Friendly PR
Free tools, public data sources, and scrappy techniques that earn national coverage
⌚ 11 min read · 2,566 words
budget required
“You don’t need a budget to run a data-driven PR campaign. You need curiosity, a spreadsheet, and the willingness to look at public data in ways nobody else has.”
— Salva Jovells, Presslei
$0 budget → real media coverage
Free data sources, proven campaign formats, and a step-by-step process to go from raw data to press coverage in one day.
I’ve seen agencies quote £5,000–£15,000 for a single data-driven PR campaign. Most of that goes to “proprietary research” — surveys, panels, custom datasets. And sure, those can work. But here’s what nobody tells founders and small marketing teams: some of the best-performing PR campaigns I’ve worked on used data that cost exactly nothing.
Zero. Free. Already sitting on government websites, waiting for someone to turn it into a story.
After analysing over 5,200 PR placements, I can tell you that the story angle matters infinitely more than how much you paid for the data. A boring survey you spent £3,000 on will get ignored. A clever re-analysis of free census data with a sharp headline? That gets picked up.
Let me show you exactly how this works.
In This Article
The Myth: You Need Budget for PR Data
This idea persists because agencies have every incentive to sell you expensive research. Custom surveys, consumer panels, Freedom of Information requests — they all sound impressive in a proposal. And they all pad the invoice.
But journalists don’t care where your data came from. They care about three things:
- Is the finding surprising or useful?
- Is the methodology credible?
- Can I write this story in 20 minutes?
Free government data scores perfectly on credibility. It’s literally official statistics. And because most people never bother to analyse it properly, surprising findings are everywhere.
The real skill in digital PR isn’t buying data. It’s asking the right question of the right dataset.
10+ Free Data Sources You Should Bookmark Right Now
These are the sources I come back to again and again. Every single one is free and publicly accessible.
General / Multi-Sector
- eurostat” target=”_blank” rel=”noopener”>Eurostat — The EU’s statistics office. City-level data on cost of living, wages, transport, health, environment. Absolute gold for rankings and comparisons across European cities.
- ONS (UK Office for National Statistics) — Wages, housing, crime, population, inflation. Incredibly detailed and updated regularly. Great for UK-focused campaigns.
- US Census Bureau — Demographics, income, housing, business data for every US state and city. The foundation of countless viral data stories.
- BFS (Swiss Federal Statistical Office) — If you’re targeting Swiss or European outlets, this is a goldmine. Wages, cost of living, quality of life — all meticulously maintained.
- World Bank Open Data — Global indicators on everything from GDP to internet access to CO2 emissions. Perfect for international comparison pieces.
- OECD Data — Cross-country comparisons on work-life balance, education, healthcare, taxes. Ready-made for “best country for X” stories.
- Statista Free Tier — Limited free access, but enough to find key stats to anchor a story. Useful for quick industry benchmarks.
Trend & Social Data
- Google Trends — Search interest over time and by region. Perfect for spotting rising topics and building trend analysis campaigns. I’ll show you a full example below.
- TikTok Creative Center — Trending hashtags, songs, and creators. Increasingly useful for lifestyle, fashion, and consumer PR angles.
- Reddit Trends & Subreddit Stats — Track what communities are growing and what topics are exploding. Surprisingly powerful for finding stories journalists haven’t covered yet.
Cost of Living & Lifestyle
- numbeo.com/” target=”_blank” rel=”noopener”>Numbeo — Crowd-sourced cost of living data by city. Rent, groceries, transport, restaurant prices. The backbone of every “cheapest cities to live in” ranking you’ve ever seen.
Pro Tip
Always lead with the most surprising finding. Journalists are drawn to data that challenges conventional wisdom.
Step-by-Step: Raw Data to Pitchable Story in One Day
This is my actual process. Not theory — this is how I’ve built campaigns that landed coverage in national outlets. The whole thing takes about 6–8 hours if you’re focused.
Morning: Find the Angle (2 hours)
Step 1: Pick your audience. Who do you want to reach? UK millennials? European expats? US remote workers? This determines which datasets and outlets matter.
Step 2: Browse 2–3 data sources. Don’t go in looking for a specific number. Go in looking for surprises. Download a dataset, sort by different columns, look for outliers. What cities are weirdly cheap? What countries have unexpected trends?
Step 3: Write the headline first. Before you do any deep analysis, write the headline you want a journalist to run. If you can’t write a compelling headline, the data isn’t a story. Move on.
Example headlines that work:
- “The 10 cheapest European cities for remote workers in 2026”
- “Google searches for ‘career change’ hit a 5-year high”
- “Swiss residents spend 3x more on groceries than neighbouring Germans”
Afternoon: Build the Story (3 hours)
Step 4: Do the analysis. This doesn’t need to be complicated. Rankings, comparisons, percentage changes, year-over-year trends. A spreadsheet is all you need. No Python, no R, no fancy tools.
Step 5: Create a methodology section. This is where most people fail. Write 3–5 sentences explaining exactly what data you used, where it came from, when it was collected, and how you analysed it. Journalists need this to justify running your story.
Step 6: Build one visual. A simple table, chart, or map. Something a journalist can embed or screenshot. Canva or Google Sheets is fine. Don’t overthink it.
Late Afternoon: Pitch (2 hours)
Step 7: Write the pitch email. Lead with the finding, not your company. Link to the full data. Make it easy for them to say yes. If you don’t have a journalist list yet, here’s how to build one from scratch.
Step 8: Send to 20–40 relevant journalists. Not 200. Twenty to forty people who actually cover this topic. Quality over volume, always.
That’s it. One day. Zero budget.
3 Example Campaigns Built Entirely from Free Data
These are campaign formats that consistently work — city rankings, cost comparisons, and trend analysis — all executed without spending a penny on data.
Campaign 1: “Europe’s Best Cities for Digital Nomads”
Data sources: Eurostat (broadband speed, co-working density), Numbeo (cost of living, rent), World Bank (safety index)
Process: Downloaded data for 50 European cities. Created a weighted index combining internet speed (30%), monthly living cost (30%), safety (20%), and social life score (20%). Ranked all 50 cities.
The angle: Lisbon wasn’t #1 — a smaller city nobody expected took the top spot. That surprise factor is what makes it newsworthy.
Outlets that cover this: Travel sections of national newspapers, expat publications, remote work blogs, city-specific outlets.
Estimated link value: 8–15 placements at $500–$2,000 each = $4,000–$30,000. Data cost: $0.
Campaign 2: “The Real Cost of a Date Night Across Europe”
Data sources: Numbeo (restaurant prices, taxi fares, cinema tickets), TripAdvisor (average attraction pricing)
Process: Calculated the cost of a standardised “date night” (dinner for two + two cinema tickets + taxi home) across 30 European capitals.
The angle: The price gap between the cheapest and most expensive city was 8x. That’s a stat that writes itself.
Outlets that cover this: Lifestyle sections, dating publications, travel outlets, city guides. Every city in the list is a potential local story.
Campaign 3: “Is Your Industry Dying? What Google Trends Says About Career Anxiety”
Data sources: Google Trends (search volume for “career change,” “is [industry] dying,” “learn to code,” “quit my job” across 5 years)
Process: Exported data for 15 career-anxiety search terms. Mapped spikes to real-world events (layoffs, AI announcements, economic downturns).
The angle: Searches for “is my job safe from AI” increased 340% in 18 months. That’s a reactive story that rides an existing news wave.
Outlets that cover this: Business press, HR and recruitment publications, career sections of national media, tech outlets.
Free Data Source Finder by Industry
Not sure which free sources fit your niche? Here’s a quick reference. Use these to find PR ideas for your brand.
Key Takeaway
Raw data is not a story. The story is what the data reveals about a trend or gap that matters to real people.
The Math: $0 Data, Real Link Value
Let’s be honest about the economics. A single placement in a decent online publication — a DA 50+ news site or industry blog — has a link value somewhere between $500 and $2,000. That’s what you’d pay an agency or a link-building service for an equivalent backlink.
A well-executed data PR campaign typically generates 5–20 placements. Even at the conservative end:
$2,500
5 placements × $500
Conservative estimate
$15,000
15 placements × $1,000
Realistic estimate
$0
Data cost
Your only investment is time
Your only investment is time. One focused day of work. Compare that to the $5,000–$15,000 agencies charge for a single campaign, and the ROI becomes absurd.
This is exactly why data PR is the great equaliser for startups trying to get their first media placements. You don’t need a budget. You need a story.
5 Mistakes That Kill Free Data Campaigns
I’ve made all of these. Learn from my failures.
Mistake #1: Using data without a story angle.
A spreadsheet isn’t a story. “Average rent in 30 cities” is a spreadsheet. “This overlooked city is now cheaper than Lisbon for remote workers” is a story. Always lead with the finding, not the data.
Mistake #2: Skipping the methodology.
Journalists will ask how you calculated your rankings. If you can’t explain it in 3–5 clear sentences, they won’t run it. Write the methodology before you pitch.
Mistake #3: Pitching too broadly.
Don’t send a cost-of-living story to a tech journalist. Don’t send a Google Trends analysis about fashion to a finance editor. Relevance beats volume every time.
Mistake #4: Overcomplicating the analysis.
You don’t need regression models or machine learning. Percentages, rankings, and year-over-year changes are enough. Simple analysis with a sharp angle beats complex analysis with a dull one.
Mistake #5: Forgetting to localise.
If your data covers 30 cities, you have 30 potential local stories. Pitch the London finding to London journalists. Pitch the Berlin finding to Berlin journalists. One dataset, dozens of angles.
DO
- Mine your existing company data for surprising, newsworthy findings
- Use free tools like Google Trends and Google News for story research
- Build a 25-40 person targeted media list using manual research
- Offer embargoed exclusives to increase your placement probability
- Track which angles and journalists produce results for future campaigns
DON’T
- Assume you need a budget to run effective PR campaigns
- Skip the data packaging step — raw findings aren’t stories
- Send the same pitch to every journalist regardless of their beat
- Expect results from your first campaign if your list is untargeted
- Give up after one campaign — PR compounds with consistent effort
Frequently Asked Questions
Is free data credible enough for journalists?
Yes — if it comes from credible sources. Government statistics (ONS, Eurostat), Google Trends, and established databases (Numbeo, Statista) are sources journalists already trust and cite regularly.
How long does a zero-budget campaign take to produce?
With practice, you can go from data collection to pitchable story in a single day. The morning for research and analysis, the afternoon for story packaging and journalist outreach.
What if my industry doesn’t have relevant public data?
Every industry has public data — you just need to look creatively. Google Trends covers every topic. Government statistics touch every sector. Even niche industries have trade associations publishing annual reports. The data is there; the angle is what makes it newsworthy.
Start Today
You now have the sources, the process, and the examples. There’s nothing stopping you from building your first data PR campaign this week.
Pick one dataset. Find one surprise. Write one headline. Pitch it.
That’s how every successful campaign starts. Not with a budget — with curiosity and a spreadsheet.
If you want to go deeper on campaign formats, I broke down the formats that consistently generate coverage based on thousands of real placements. And if you want to understand how Google Trends specifically can power your PR strategy, I’m publishing a detailed guide on that soon.
No excuses. The data is free. The story is yours to find.
About the Author
Salva Jovells
Founder of Presslei. 12+ years in ecommerce SEO across international markets. After a decade of link buying for Hockerty and Sumissura, I reverse-engineered 5,272 earned media placements and founded a reactive PR agency that builds authority through data-driven stories journalists actually want to publish. Based in Zurich.
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