Internal Advocacy Guide
⌚ 7 min read · 1,620 words
In This Article
Pitching Digital PR to Your CMO
Templates, data, and objection handlers to get your digital PR budget approved.
“The moment you frame digital PR as link building, you’ve lost. Frame it as brand media presence, and the budget conversation changes entirely.”
— Salva Jovells, Presslei
You already know reactive PR works. You’ve read the case studies. You’ve seen the placement data. You understand that earned media links outperform bought links on every metric that matters.
The problem isn’t knowledge. The problem is that your CMO doesn’t care about DR scores, link velocity, or anchor text ratios. They care about brand visibility, competitive positioning, risk management, and return on investment.
This guide is the bridge. It’s how you translate what you know about digital PR into a business case that gets budget approved.
Why Your CMO Doesn’t Care About Links
CMOs think in terms of brand equity, market share, customer acquisition cost, and competitive positioning. When you walk in and say “we need budget for link building,” they hear “we need to spend money on a technical SEO tactic that I can’t explain to the board.”
The moment you frame digital PR as link building, you’ve lost. Links are a byproduct of good PR, not the goal. The goal is brand authority, media presence, and competitive positioning.
Key Takeaway
Don’t frame digital PR as “link building” to your CMO. Frame it as brand authority and competitive positioning. The first framing gets scrutinized. The second gets funded.
The ROI Argument: Numbers Your CMO Actually Cares About
Cost Comparison
Don’t say: “Bought links cost $597 each and PR links cost less.”
Say: “We’re currently spending $X per month to acquire links that carry penalty risk, generate zero brand visibility, and have a 15-25% annual attrition rate. For the same or lower budget, we can earn editorial placements in publications our customers actually read, with zero penalty risk and 95%+ link survival rates.”
| Investment | Bought Links ($7,000/mo) | Reactive PR ($3,000/mo) |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly spend | $7,000 | $3,000 |
| Links acquired | ~12 | 8-14 |
| Cost per link | $583 | $214-375 |
| Average linking domain DR | 40-60 | 70+ |
| Brand visibility | Zero | Significant |
| Penalty risk | Material | Zero |
| 12-month link survival | ~80% | 95%+ |
| Referral traffic | Negligible | Measurable |
The Brand Visibility Multiplier
When your company gets quoted in Forbes, cited in TechCrunch, or referenced in a BBC article, that creates:
- Social proof you can use in sales decks, investor presentations, and on your website
- Brand recognition among your target audience
- Trust signals that influence customer purchase decisions
- PR assets that compound over time
- Earned media value that PR teams measure in equivalent advertising cost
A single placement in a top-tier publication can be worth $5,000 to $50,000 in equivalent advertising spend.
Risk Reduction: The Argument That Closes
Google’s link spam updates in 2024 and 2025 impacted thousands of sites that relied on purchased links. Manual actions can tank organic traffic by 50-90% overnight.
For your CMO, frame it this way: “Our current link building strategy exposes us to algorithm risk that could materially impact organic revenue. Switching to earned media eliminates that risk while delivering better results.”
The Competitive Intelligence Angle
Before your meeting, do this research:
- Search Google News for your top three competitors. Note which publications cover them.
- Check their backlink profiles in Ahrefs. Filter for editorial domains.
- Search for competitor brand mentions. How often are they quoted as industry experts?
If your competitors are earning press coverage and you’re not, present that gap. CMOs are deeply competitive.
How to Frame the Budget Request
Don’t Ask for a “Pilot Program”
Pilot programs are where good ideas go to die. Instead, request a focused three-month engagement:
- Investment: $3,000 per month ($9,000 total)
- Deliverables: 8-14 editorial placements per month in publications with DR 70+
- Timeline: First placements within 30-45 days
- Risk: Zero penalty risk, no long-term contract
The Template Email to Your CMO
Subject: Proposal to shift link building budget to earned media (lower cost, zero risk)
[CMO Name],
I want to propose reallocating part of our link building budget to a reactive PR approach. Here’s the short version:
The problem: We’re spending [$X/month] on purchased links that average DR [XX], carry Google penalty risk, and generate zero brand visibility.
The opportunity: For $3,000/month, we can earn 8-14 editorial placements per month in publications with DR 70+. Zero penalty risk. 95%+ link survival rate.
The competitive gap: [Competitor A] earned [XX] editorial placements last year. We have zero earned media placements.
The ask: Three-month engagement at $3,000/month. First results within 30-45 days. No long-term contract.
Handling Common Objections
“We already do PR.”
Traditional PR and reactive digital PR are different disciplines. Traditional PR focuses on product launches and corporate news. Reactive PR focuses on earning coverage by providing data and expert commentary that journalists need for stories they’re already writing.
“Can’t we just do this in-house?”
Practically, it requires a database of journalist relationships, a trend monitoring system, and the ability to turn around pitches within hours. A focused agency engagement gets you results in 30-45 days while your team learns the approach.
“What if it doesn’t work?”
Three months at $3,000 per month is $9,000. No long-term contract. The downside is capped at $9,000. The upside is a sustainable media presence that compounds over time. That’s an asymmetric bet in your favor.
“$3,000 a month seems cheap. Is this quality?”
Reactive PR is efficient because it leverages existing journalist demand rather than creating demand from scratch. Compare: $3,000 for 8-14 earned editorial placements versus $7,000 for 12 purchased links on sites nobody reads.
What Results to Promise (and What Not To)
Safe to Promise
- 8-14 editorial placements per month in publications with DR 70+
- First placements within 30-45 days
- Zero Google penalty risk
- Brand mentions in publications your target audience reads
Don’t Promise
- Specific ranking positions for specific keywords
- Exact traffic increases
- Placements in specific named publications
- Overnight results
Stop Asking Permission to Do Better Work
You know reactive PR delivers better results. You know bought links carry risk. The only thing standing between you and a better strategy is a 20-minute conversation with your CMO.
Have the conversation. Use this playbook. Get the budget approved.
Ready to show your CMO what reactive PR actually delivers? Check out our placement data or get in touch about a PR Power Pack.
DO
- Frame PR results in terms of pipeline influence and brand search lift
- Present a 90-day pilot proposal with clear success metrics
- Show competitive coverage gaps your CMO can see in the market
- Benchmark PR cost-per-link against paid link-building alternatives
- Start with one focused campaign to prove the model before scaling
DON’T
- Lead the conversation with media impressions or AVE
- Propose an open-ended retainer without defined deliverables
- Promise specific placement counts before assessing story potential
- Compare PR directly to performance marketing metrics
- Wait until budget season to make the case — start with a small test
Frequently Asked Questions
What if my CMO says no?
Ask for a pilot budget of $3,000–$5,000 for a single campaign rather than an annual commitment, tied to a specific measurable outcome. CMOs say no to vague requests far more than well-framed experiments with defined success criteria.
How long until a PR campaign shows results the CMO will care about?
Plan for 6–8 weeks from pitch-out to first significant coverage, and 3–6 months before meaningful movement in domain authority and branded search volume. Set interim milestones so the CMO can see activity before the big numbers appear.
How do you pitch PR when you have zero PR history?
Lead with competitor coverage rather than your own track record. Show the CMO exactly which publications cover competitors and what stories are getting traction. This reframes from “trust us” to “here’s the opportunity you’re missing.”
Keep Reading
Ready to Stop Buying Links?
Get 8–14 editorial placements in DR 70+ publications. One campaign. $3,000. No retainer. No risk.
Salva Jovells is the founder of Presslei, a reactive PR agency that helps brands earn editorial coverage in top-tier publications. He built Presslei on a simple premise: earned media beats bought media, every time.
Related Reading
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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.


