PR Emerges as the Primary Source for Journalists in High-Pressure Newsrooms

13.05.2026

Cision's 2026 State of the Media Report reveals 66% of journalists rely on PR for story ideas

CHICAGO, May 13, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Cision, a global leader in consumer and media intelligence, today released its 2026 State of the Media Report, revealing a shift in how the media ecosystem operates: PR is no longer just pitching stories, it's becoming a critical part of how the modern newsroom works.

Cision’s 2026 State of the Media Report features insights from 1,800+ journalists worldwide.

Based on a global survey of nearly 2,000 journalists across 19 markets, the report finds that 66% of journalists rely on PR-provided content – including press releases, pitches, and media kits – for story ideas, making PR the leading source of story leads.

More information. More pressure.

Journalists are working across a more fragmented media landscape, and competing with creators and AI for audience attention. At the same time, newsroom constraints continue to grow:   

  • Accuracy, fact-checking, and combating misinformation emerged as the No. 1 challenge journalists face today
  • 49% cite shrinking budgets, staff cuts, and increased workloads as their biggest obstacles

These trends point to a shift in how journalists and PR professionals work together, with journalists placing greater reliance on PR teams that can provide timely, relevant, and credible information.

"The 2026 report makes one thing clear: The newsroom and PR professionals are more interdependent than ever," said Amy Jones, Chief Marketing Officer at Cision. "As journalists face unprecedented pressure on their time and resources, PR is becoming an essential partner, providing data, ideas, and expert access that helps support the news cycle."

Key insights

  • Relevance is the biggest gap

    72% of journalists say fewer than a quarter of pitches are relevant
  • LinkedIn is the most valuable platform for media

    62% use LinkedIn professionally, with 33% ranking it as the single most valuable platform for their work
  • AI is growing, but trust matters

    53% oppose AI-generated pitches due to concerns around accuracy and personalization
  • What journalists value most in pitches

    Original research, expert access, and embargoed information

What this means for PR

As AI becomes more embedded in newsrooms, generic outreach is losing impact.

Journalists are clear on what works: Relevant ideas, original research, credible data, expert access, and ready-to-use assets.

PR teams that support how journalists work, not just pitch them stories, are the ones that stand out.

In a faster, more fragmented media environment, clarity, and credibility, not volume, drive impact.

Download the 2026 State of the Media Report

Cision is following the report's release with a two-part webinar series featuring a panel of journalists who will unpack the findings and answer audience questions. Register for free

About the 2026 State of the Media Report

Cision's State of the Media Report has served as a trusted benchmark for more than a decade, helping communications professionals understand journalists' preferences, challenges, and evolving workflows.

The 2026 report is based on a survey conducted in January and February 2026 of 1,899 journalists across North America, EMEA, and APAC, representing digital publications, newspapers, magazines, broadcast outlets, and emerging media platforms.

About Cision

Cision is the global leader in consumer and media intelligence, engagement, and communication solutions. We equip PR and corporate communications, marketing, and social media professionals with the tools they need to excel in today's data driven world. Our deep expertise, exclusive data partnerships, and award-winning products, including CisionOneBrandwatch, Trajaan, and PR Newswire, enable over 75,000 companies and organizations, including 84% of the Fortune 500, to see and be seen, understand and be understood by the audiences that matter most to them.

Media Contact: 

Cision Public Relations 

CisionPR@cision.com

Cision

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Roter Ring, blaue Forderungen: Maikundgebung der SPÖ Wien im Zeichen sozialer Anliegen

04.05.2026

In Wien haben am Freitag die traditionellen Maifeierlichkeiten der SPÖ begonnen. Seit den frühen Morgenstunden zogen Delegationen aus den Bezirken durch die Innenstadt in Richtung Rathausplatz, wo am Vormittag die zentrale Schlusskundgebung angesetzt ist. Dort treten Bundesparteivorsitzender und Vizekanzler Andreas Babler, Wiens Bürgermeister und SPÖ-Landeschef Michael Ludwig, ÖGB-Präsident Wolfgang Katzian sowie die Frauenvorsitzende der SPÖ Wien, Marina Hanke, als Redner auf.

Optisch dominieren rote Fahnen und Transparente das Bild am Ring, akustisch ist der Aufmarsch von Blasmusik, Dudelsackklängen und Trommeldarbietungen begleitet. Bei stabilem Frühlingswetter inszeniert die Partei ihre traditionelle Präsenz im öffentlichen Raum. Ludwig zog als einer der ersten auf den Rathausplatz ein und führte – wie in den Vorjahren – die Abordnung aus seinem Heimatbezirk Floridsdorf an.

Auf den Schildern und Transparenten der Delegationen zeigte sich neben klassischer Unterstützung auch deutliche Kritik aus den eigenen Reihen. So richteten sich Parolen gegen Kürzungen bei der Mindestsicherung. Weitere Forderungen zielten auf eine stärkere Besteuerung hoher Vermögen, etwa mit dem Slogan „Her mit der Millionärssteuer“. Auch der Aufruf „Soziale Werte nicht über Bord schmeißen“ machte deutlich, dass Teile der Basis stärkere sozialpolitische Akzente einfordern.

Neben der politischen Symbolik waren am Rathausplatz bereits Aufbauten mit der Aufschrift „12 Points Vienna“ zu sehen. Sie stehen im Zusammenhang mit dem Eurovision-Village, das in der kommenden Woche eröffnet wird und als Fan-Zentrum des Song Contests dienen soll. Damit überlagern sich in der Wiener Innenstadt an diesem 1. Mai die klassischen Maifeiern der Sozialdemokratie mit den Vorbereitungen auf ein internationales Pop-Ereignis.