Media Database: The Ultimate Guide

Unlock the full potential of your earned media efforts by mastering the tool that drives them: the media database. This guide breaks down everything you need to know about media databases: what they are, why they’re essential, how to use them effectively, and how to choose the right one for your PR goals. From finding the perfect contact to sending personalized pitches at scale, this guide lays out the roadmap to smarter, more successful media relations.

Public relations without a media database is like standing at a microphone. You’re ready to go public with some of the biggest news your organization has ever had. News that is going to change everything. Except, as you look out into a room that should be full of reporters, it’s empty.

There’s no one to hear your news; just your mom, way at the back.

If you don’t have a way to find the right journalists and the means to reach them, no matter how revolutionary, feel-good, or just plain awesome your announcement is, it will never get past your owned channels.

Media contact database. Press database. Media database. Media list. PR list. Whatever name you know it by, it’s a media relations super-tool and integral for PR and communications professionals.

This page is going to delve deep into what a media database is and what it can do for you.

Here’s how we’re going to break it down:

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1 Media Database: The Ultimate Guide

What is a media database?

Simply put, a media database comprises the contact information of journalists, reporters, and other influencers, such as bloggers and social media personalities.

It is a core component of every PR professional’s toolkit, helping them find relevant contacts that align with their story or topic. Not only does it save valuable time navigating the massive network of media contacts, but it also helps streamline PR workflows such as creating media lists, cultivating media relations, and press release distribution.

Notably, a media database provides more than just the people you want to contact. It also provides the means to reach out, aka contact details. Modern databases even detail areas of interest and social media links so you can get to know potential contacts that much better.

Features of a media database

We’ve come a long way since legacy databases that, once created, stayed that way. Modern-day media databases are dynamic platforms updated regularly and feature various filters that allow segmentation.

Here’s a brief roundup of the standard features you can find in a media database:

Extensive search parameters

Present-day media databases allow users to filter through millions of contacts through elaborate search parameters. Let’s look at some of the standard options:

  1. Journalist Name: Track contacts you are well-versed with and know their name.
  2. Topic: Highlight contacts that cover your industry, subject, or campaign matter. For instance, you can highlight journalists who cover ‘Artificial Intelligence’ or ‘Land Mining.’
  3. Job Title: Filter contacts based on their job, designation, or position, such as ‘news anchor,’ ‘data journalist,’ or ‘chief editor.’
  4. Publication/Outlet: Identify contacts by the publication they write in.
  5. Location: Find contacts that feature in local or global outlets, depending on your coverage criteria.

Updated media contacts

Another essential feature that distinguishes a high-quality database is its contact accuracy. Journalists and influencers may change their focus, outlets, job roles, location, and contact details, to name a few. Outdated contacts lead to undelivered emails, missed opportunities, and diminished trust in the database.

The best media databases are updated regularly to ensure media contacts contain relevant and timely information. This allows users to save time wasted on inaccurate information, comply with compliance standards, and build long-term relationships.

Detailed media profiles

Finding the ideal contact goes beyond searching for a journalist covering your industry. Modern-day PR success relies on relevancy, reliability, and personalization of the content to the audience.

With journalists receiving as many as ten pitches per day, they certainly won’t entertain pitches that don’t speak to who they are and what they do. Investing in a leading media database can prove beneficial, as it offers more than just contact information.

They offer detailed contact profiles that include:

Media coverage

A track record of the contact’s past media coverage, highlighting the blogs, articles, press releases, and mentions they have published in various outlets. This helps gauge the contact’s media presence.

Publications/Outlets

A list of newspapers, websites, and outlets they write for and have featured in.

Job Roles/Titles

A recap of the roles and designations the contact has held over their career.

Preferences & interests

Some databases include info like the subjects and issues the particular contact is eager about. More importantly, they provide information on the journalists’ communication preferences, including their preferred day, time, and mode of communication.

This helps PR and communication professionals take relationship-building efforts up a notch by personalizing their outreach to their preferences.

What type of contacts are there in a media database?

Journalists

Journalists can be influencers, but not all influencers are journalists.

Long before the internet came along, journalists were the ones the public turned to for information. They’ve always had the credibility of their outlet and the confidence of their readers.

But we can’t bring up reader confidence without mentioning the proliferation of fake news and the growing narrative that the media is not to be trusted. Indeed, only 32% and 39% of adults in the United States and Canada trust news media, respectively.

It aligns with industry research that found that 59% of the global population thinks that “most news organizations are more concerned with supporting an ideology or political position than informing the public.”

Social media influencers

When people talk about influencers now, more often than not they mean social media influencers. The people on Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube who have the hearts and minds of their followers.

Influencer Marketing Hub defines an influencer as a person who has, “the power to affect the purchasing decisions of others because of his or her authority, knowledge, position, or relationship with his or her audience.”

And, just like journalists, social media influencers belong to varying tiers according to their industry authority. The State of Influencer Marketing 2021: Benchmark Report breaks influencers down into six categories based on following size, ranging from micro-influencer (less than 15,000 followers) to mega-influencer (more than 1 million followers). Each type of influencer has its own allure as a champion for your brand.

Having the right influencer spread your good word can make all the difference.

Who is the ideal contact for your outreach?

When it comes to spreading your message, both journalists and social media influencers have their advantages. Journalists have the credibility of their profession and the clout of their outlet behind them. Influencers have the trust of their followers and can be a critical word-of-mouth advocate or awareness builder for your organization. An authentic recommendation has more power than you know.

If you aren’t sure which type of influencer is right for you—ask yourself where your audience’s attention is. Is it with traditional journalists or the digital authorities? Once you answer this, simply align your efforts with the channels your audience pays attention to.

Regardless of who your ideal advocate is, make sure your database includes those types of people.

Types of media databases

A media database helps you search for (and find) the most relevant journalists and influencers. The best ones even have features that allow you to learn about their interests and what they’re writing about. This lets you personalize your outreach and increase the chance of landing that elusive earned media.

MEDIA DATABASE FUNCTIONALITY

functionality of a pr database

Basic

When it comes to functionality, a basic media database will make it easy to search for journalists based on keywords, beat (what they write about), region, type of media (radio, print, and so on), etc. It should also have detailed contact info for them, not just general inbox emails. Ideally, a basic database will also let you save your lists and/or the search criteria for future use.

The provider should also have a research team that constantly reviews, updates, and adds contacts to the database. This eliminates those annoying bounce-backs and missed opportunities, and saves you the headache of trying to stay on top of every media move.

Advanced

PR databases with more advanced functionality may also have distribution capabilities built right in, so you can personalize and send emails to the journalists in your lists. Some also have tracking so you know who opened your email and where they clicked, making follow-up so much easier.

Ultimate

When it comes to the ultimate level of functionality in a media database, you get the means to discover new influencers and really get to know the ones in your lists. You get access to the published articles and social posts of the journalists and influencers you are researching. You’ll know exactly what they’re working on right now, what they’ve covered in the past, and how they’ve done it. Plus, you gain insight into any personal interests or quirks they might have—knowledge you can use to make your pitch stand out.

The better the research you do into the influencers you want advocating for you, the better you can craft and tailor your pitches.

influencer streams in agility's media database

There you have it! Now that you know exactly what a media database is, who’s in it, and what features distinguish the basic from the ultimate, let’s talk about why you need one.

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Why do you need a media database?

As we’ve said, executing a successful public relations campaign without a media database is like talking to an empty room.

Databases give you access to the people who can spread your message.

The journalists and influencers a media database connects you with are gatekeepers. They have the eyes and ears and hearts of your audience. They deliver your message with credibility and—ideally—authority.

You need a media database because media relations still matter.

Media relations

The world is changing. The way we consume information is changing. And, for PR people, so too is the way we interact with the media gatekeepers.

A bit of context: media relations holds a special place in the world of PR. Plainly put (thanks to Wikipedia), it’s the practice of working with members of the media “for the purpose of informing the public of an organization’s mission, policies and practices in a positive, consistent and credible manner.” And whether you advocate a return to its glory days, or claim that we need to embrace a more modern approach, it’s clear that media relations is essential.

While it’s not quite like it used to be, interacting with those in the media and convincing them to spread your message is still the backbone of what PR people do. Alex Slater, founder and managing director of D.C.-based Clyde Group, agrees: “The core of public relations is relationship building, and it’s based on a mutual respect between journalists and PR practitioners.”rolodex - yesterday's media contact database

Building relationships with journalists

With a database, you can focus on building long-term, mutually beneficial relationships with journalists.

Databases make it easy to find the right people, do your research on them, and reach out to them effectively—even if you’ve never spoken to them before. Whether you’re big or small, an established player or the new kid on the block, a not-for-profit or a financial giant, securing and managing media coverage is a fact of life.

But it’s not easy when the only constant of the media world is that things are in constant upheaval.

  • Journalists move around a lot
  • Their emails change
  • They hardly ever have a physical desk in an office and if they do, they’re hardly ever at it
  • They may write for several publications about several subjects
  • They may work a specific beat but write articles about a personal area of interest as well

With a media database at your disposal, earning coverage becomes easier, but you still need to know whom to pitch.

 

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How to use a media database

Not all media databases are created equal.

They vary in size, regions served, and data accuracy, among other things. Generally, the way you use a media database is constant across the industry.

(Keep in mind, we know and love our database the best, and it’s the one we spend the most time in, so we’re kind of assuming that everyone else’s works the same way.)

When you log in, you’ll see your dashboard. It will have handy charts on useful things like your recent distributions and who you’ve been targeting. From the dashboard, you begin your search and start building your lists. There are typically three ways to do this:

  1. Search by beats/topics
  2. Search by outlets/journalists
  3. Keyword search

Search by beats/topics

A “beat” is a particular issue, sector, organization, or institution that a reporter specializes in.

Read: Beats vs. areas of interest: how to catch a journalist’s attention

When you search by beat, you identify those journalists who primarily write about a certain topic e.g. oil and gas, semiconductors, or college football. These are the experts, the authorities on your subject, and their audience (aka your audience) listens to them.

Search by outlets/journalists

Sometimes you’ll have a client who is desperate to get some coverage in a specific outlet, whether it be a specialty publication or a top-tier national one. When this is the case, simply search for that outlet and the database will return every single person on its roster. From there, you can drill down to see which ones you should contact.

Likewise, for specific journalists, if you know the name of the person you want to target, simply type it in, make sure they’re in the database, and add them to your list.

Keyword search

Here’s where the best databases set themselves apart.

If you’re having trouble finding suitable media contacts searching by beats or outlets, try the keyword search.

It works like this:

When you type in a term, the database searches the text of articles (this requires the tool to be integrated with a media monitoring solution) and identifies who is writing about the keyword(s) for specific topics, industries, or competitors. Agility PR Solutions has an integrated monitoring service that pulls in millions of articles daily, so you’re searching billions of articles.

This easy-to-use method also makes it simple to identify non-traditional journalists—such as bloggers or social media influencers—who may not cover a conventional beat or subject.


Media databases allow for hyper targeting.

Filters make your pitches count. By employing filters like media type, location, job role, publication frequency, news focus, etc., you can drill down to such a depth that you all but guarantee the contacts you find are the most likely to want to hear from you and spread your message.

There’s power in that.


You can also apply filters to a keyword search, which helps when you need to build a niche list. For example, filters allow you to find journalists who have written about the Oscars but typically cover sports, or influencers known for blogging about high-tech topics but who might occasionally review ballet.

media database search interface

Keyword search 2.0

The Agility database has yet another feature that takes keyword search even further: Influencer Streams returns articles AND tweets containing your chosen keyword. But it sets itself apart from Hootsuite and TweetDeck in that it only shows you tweets from journalists and influencers, not just anyone with a Twitter handle. Influencer Streams also lets you interact directly with the journalists you find, retweeting, following, or replying to their posts, thereby making yourself known and establishing a rapport even before you reach out.

gif of Influencer Streams in action

First you do the searching, then you build the lists, then it’s all about the…

Distribution

Getting coverage depends on making sure your pitch gets read—that means you must stand out from the 100 other pitches that journalist got today. As a communicator you know that to have a message hit home you need to tailor it to an audience. As Alex Slater says, “Above all, tailor your pitch.”

FREE DOWNLOAD: HOW TO GET JOURNALISTS TO OPEN, CLICK, AND LOVE YOUR EMAIL PITCH

A database makes it simple to create multiple media lists that you can use for different types of pitches or even to spin the same story in a different way to appeal to a niche list of journalists.

By segmenting your database into focused lists of influencers who cover niche topics, your chances of getting coverage increases. The spray-and-pray method is passé and does not work. Journalists are tired of getting pitches that don’t apply to them. All you have to do is look up #PRFail on Twitter and you’ll see what we mean. Nothing irks an influencer more than getting a mass email about something irrelevant to them.

Lucky for you, today’s media databases are further distinguished by also being distribution platforms.


Media databases are powerful tools.

Considering all the benefits, it’s no surprise that databases are ubiquitous among PR agencies and in-house communications teams seeking to gain earned media. But it’s not always sunshine and rainbows. Even seasoned PR professionals can face real challenges when using a database.

Being in the game for as long as we have, we’re familiar with the pitfalls of database use. That’s why we’re sharing the five most common database-use challenges and their solutions.


 

AI in media relations: How AI-powered media databases can help streamline media outreach?

AI’s impact on PR and communications cannot be overstated, with advanced machine learning transforming legacy workflows for improved efficacy. While research highlights that 68% of PR professionals already utilize AI for research and list building, its growing potential will drive greater engagement and help develop valuable media relations.

So, how does AI impact media databases? Here are some emerging AI-driven features that can help you make the most of your media database:

Identify ideal media contacts

Journalists are faced with an increasing number of pitches every day. And they only choose topics and subjects that resonate with their target audience. When asked what PR and communication professionals can do to make your job (and pitch acceptance) easier, 75% of journalists responded: ‘understand my target audience.’

That means reaching out to journalists who are relevant to your pitch and cover the same subject matter. Even if you use complex search filters, you will still have thousands of contacts to filter manually.

However, the latest AI-powered targeting features help PR professionals pinpoint pertinent contacts that align with your media content and help save time spent on creating media lists manually.

AI-powered media databases analyze media content and list the optimal contacts, gauging them against the journalists’ past coverage, subject matter, and other variable factors that make them suited for your outreach.

Draft outreach messaging instantly

While AI has been around for some time, generative AI has skyrocketed its integration in the PR industry. Approximately two-thirds of surveyed PR professionals reported utilizing AI for creating content in 2023—and it’s only growing.

Modern media databases feature integrated generative AI that allows communication professionals to generate drafts in minutes. Tailored for PR use, this gen-AI feature offers different content customization options to develop a solid first draft.

You can define the appropriate length for your draft, add personalized quotes, set the right tone, generate subject lines, and even leverage advanced translation for an international audience. You have to input the key message you want to convey – and let AI take care of the rest.

This will eliminate writer’s block and allow you to simultaneously scale your outreach efforts by sending multiple pitches.

Compose personalized pitches

You’re competing with hundreds of pitches in a journalist’s inbox for attention. How do you stand out? The answer lies in personalization.

Stats back it up. 6% of surveyed journalists highlighted a lack of personalization as the top reason to reject pitches. Simply personalizing the subject line can drastically impact open rates by 26%.

Modern media databases feature AI-enabled personalization features that customize your pitch for each contact. The feature analyzes the contact’s role, past coverage, and to generate tailored intros and outros that increase pitch engagement and pickup.

Users can save personalized details (such as custom name, intro, etc.) for each contact, saving time whenever reaching out to them. This adds a human element to your outreach, building rapport and elevating media relationships.

How to choose a media database

If you’re doing any kind of PR work, you will have to keep track of contact information for multiple journalists and influencers. But do you need to source a media database tool, or can you just keep track of your own lists?

Build vs Buy

The answer to this age-old PR question will depend on a few things, but the biggest factor is the number of journalists and influencers you regularly contact—or hope to contact.

If you’re operating in a relatively small and local information economy, there is probably only a handful of journalists who would ever even consider covering your stories. If this is your situation, it’s safe to say you don’t need a professional grade media database solution.

Maintaining your own lists?

PROCON
  • No financial investment
  • You have to make sure the contact information is up to date
  • You have to find and add new contacts on your own
  • You may have out of date contacts and not even know it
  • You don’t have an integrated way to send to email list
  • You can’t easily track opens or responses

If, on the other hand, you are operating in a bigger arena (think state-wide, national, or international) or you have multiple different publics you need to reach, then things are different. There may be dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of journalists and influencers who might be interested in covering your stories—but only if you can reach them.

What professional media databases do really well is save you time.

And we all know that for PR and comms folks, time is at a premium.

That’s why a good media database can be your best friend. A good media database does the heavy lifting, the behind-the-scenes, thankless work. All to make sure sure you have the most up-to-date contact details of the most hard-to-find influencer at the most out-of-the-way outlet.

How we manage our media database

At Agility PR Solutions, our research team’s only job is to track down contact details and update the database with the accurate data. They’re hunters and gatherers. They make sure that when you reach out to a journalist or influencer, your email will get where it needs to go.

And for those rare times that you do get a bounce-back, a good database will automatically alert its researchers. The team can then find the correct address and update it. The next time you email that contact, it will get through.

As a communications professional, you’re busy crafting high quality messages. This is your superpower. This is the work that will generate the biggest impact for you. If you’re spending your limited time and energy on the endless task of maintaining a media database…you’re not investing your time well. Please stop.

Wonka meme: Oh you're going to maintain your own media database? You must have tons of time

Investing in the right media database

Now, when it comes time to buy, to choose the database that’s right for you—whether you’re switching providers or it’s your first time subscribing to one—you’re going to want to do your homework before signing.

A great place to start is G2. It will be your best friend when it comes to making informed decisions. It’s a peer-to-peer, business solutions review platform providing verified user reviews from fellow business professionals to help you objectively assess which company and products are best for your organization.

For media databases you’ll want to explore the Media Influencer and Targeting Software section. And if we may be so bold, you can see how Agility PR Solutions compares to other vendors here.

 

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Questions to ask a media database provider

This section is designed to help you ask the right questions so you get a solution that’s right for you. So read on discerning professional.

How many UNIQUE journalists and influencers does the database have in your industry? In your region?
Some database providers will claim huge numbers of contacts but count a single journalist who works for three outlets as three contacts. Beware the bloated database.

Is the database global?
Some databases specialize in core markets, regions, industries, etc. Your business will determine which type of database you require.

How often is contact information updated, new contacts added?
You want the answer to be “as frequently as possible.” Ideally, there’s a research team adding and updating thousands of records every day.

Can you request research into new contacts in a niche market (Harry Potter-loving healthcare writers in Malawi)?
Some database vendors will do custom research and find contacts in a niche market or region—and really amazing ones will do it with a smile, usually within a couple business days.

How easy and intuitive is the tool?
If you need an advanced degree to figure out how to build a list, that’s a red flag. If the user reviews you read on review sites like G2 talk about how simple and straightforward things are, you might have a winner.

Can you save and export lists?
The only right answer is yes.

Is it possible to save search criteria so your lists can be automatically updated with the latest contacts and info?
The biggest issue with maintaining your own list is keeping up with all the media moves. You want a database that lets you save your searches (using keywords and filters, of course) so your lists automagically update without you having to do a thing. And when new journalists do appear in your lists, you’ll see an icon beside their name, so you can know immediately who the new kid in town is, and treat them accordingly.

Are you able to reach out to influencers with personalized pitches directly from the platform?
Is email distribution built in? And what about tracking capabilities? Sending emails to your lists right from the platform is good and useful; what’s even better is also knowing who opened them and what links they clicked on. You want both.

Can you easily format your pitch or add multimedia to it?
It’s so much easier when the answer to these questions is “yes”.

What post-sales support and training is provided?
Is it free or is there an additional cost? Are you given a login and that’s the last you hear from them until it’s time to renew?

What are the payment terms?
Is there room for flexibility? For example, can you pay monthly instead of annually?
Is there an auto-renew clause? (Most have this so make sure you read the fine print.)

Are there references you can consult?
If so, make sure they aren’t handpicked by the vendor. Get the real story on a review site like G2.

For more resources on choosing a media database that’s right for you, read our Ultimate Buyer’s Guide to Media Lists.

Your media database awaits

There’s a lot to consider when it comes to media databases, but what most every PR professional already knows—and what we’ve been trying to tell you over the last 3,500 words or so—is that, bottom line, you need one.

Because no matter how overwhelming it can seem, how many variables there can be—from the database’s size to its contact accuracy to the regions and industries it serves—engaging in public relations without a media database is tricky at best, madness at worst.

We’re here to take away any jitters that come with choosing. With our phenomenal research and support teams—and, of course, our phenomenal database of over 1 million unique contacts itself—we’re here to make sure the Agility PR Solutions media database does in fact become your best friend.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a media database, and why is it important for PR?

A media database is a searchable directory of journalists, editors, bloggers, and influencers, often with detailed contact information, coverage history, and interests. PR professionals utilize it to identify relevant media contacts, build targeted lists, and distribute pitches or press releases to secure earned media coverage. Additionally, advanced media database solutions, such as Agility PR Solutions, help track your interactions with journalists over time, providing deeper insight into your outreach efforts and how to optimize them.

How do I choose the correct media database for my organization?

Selecting the right media database depends on your organization’s goals, industry, and outreach strategy. A high-quality media database provides up-to-date contact information, offers detailed journalist profiles, features advanced search filters, and integrates outreach tools.

Some key considerations include:

  • Scope of Coverage: Ensure the database includes media contacts that align with your industry, sector, and campaign goals. Geographic coverage is also essential—look for global, national, and regional reach based on where your audiences and stakeholders are located.
  • Search Functionality: Prioritize platforms with advanced search filters such as by keyword, beat/topic, location, publication type, outlet size, and language to help refine and target your media outreach.
  • Data Accuracy and Updates: Choose a media database that is frequently updated to ensure you’re reaching active, relevant journalists and avoiding inaccurate contact details. Leading databases feature in-house media researchers, allowing them to actively review journalist profiles and fulfill ad hoc research requests for contacts in niche industries.
  • Support and Training: Evaluate the availability of onboarding resources, live support, and training guides to help your team fully leverage the platform.
  • AI Capabilities: Consider platforms with AI-powered workflows that streamline processes and enable features such as helping surface relevant contacts, refining and translating content, suggesting headings and subject lines, and personalizing content based on specific media contacts.
What’s the difference between a media list and a media database?

A media database is a comprehensive tool containing thousands (or millions) of media contacts with search, segmentation, and outreach features. A media list is a curated subset of contacts pulled from the database, customized for a specific campaign or announcement. Cara’s note: Let’s add that media databases typically allow users to compile multiple media lists, ideally an unlimited amount.

How does AI improve media database performance?

An AI-powered media database solution improves targeting, personalization, and efficiency. It can draft and refine personalized email copy and recommend relevant journalists based on the content of your pitch. Agility’s AI-powered pitching analyzes previous coverage to tailor outreach and boost response rates.

Can I send press releases directly from a media database?

Yes. Most modern media databases, such as Agility PR Solutions, include built-in email distribution capabilities. You can personalize pitches, add multimedia, and track open rates, click-throughs, and bounces. This makes it easy to manage outreach and reporting on a single platform.

How often are media contacts updated in a database?

The best media databases are updated daily by dedicated research teams and automated monitoring. Agility PR Solutions utilizes automated systems and a dedicated research team to identify and merge duplicate contacts, as well as update outdated information, thereby maintaining the integrity and accuracy of its media database.

What types of contacts are included in a media database?

Media databases include:

  • Journalists: Traditional media professionals writing for newspapers, magazines, TV, and radio. Standard titles include Editor, Publisher, Reporter, Staff Writer, Associate Editor, etc.
  • Bloggers: Independent writers with niche authority. Common titles include Freelance Writer, Contributor, and Contributing Writer, among others.
  • Social media influencers: Creators with relevant and considerable following on platforms like Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, and LinkedIn.

Each contact includes job title, topics of interest, recent work, and communication preferences.

Should I build my own media list or use a database?

If your outreach is small-scale and local, a DIY list may work. But for national or global campaigns, a media database saves time, improves targeting, and reduces bounce-backs. It’s especially valuable when you need to track media moves, manage multiple lists, or send personalized pitches at scale.

What questions should I ask before choosing a media database?

It is important to assess whether the media database meets your requirements before committing to it. Here are some key questions to answer before choosing the best media database for your organization:

  • How many unique, verified contacts does it contain? The higher the number of contacts, the higher the possibility of finding the right fit for your organization
  • How many geographic regions does it cover? Particularly for multinational organizations, it is necessary to access global contacts for effective outreach
  • Do they cater to custom research requests? Modern solutions offer a proactive approach that utilizes in-house research teams to actively review profiles and accommodate ad hoc research requests for clients
  • Does it include contacts from various industries? It is crucial to have an all-purpose database that hosts contacts from multiple industries and niches, rather than focusing on a select few industries
  • What is the frequency of updates? Leading media database solutions regularly update their databases to include newer contacts and remove older, inaccessible contacts
  • How many users do they support? Some platforms charge per user, which can lead to an increase in the costs
  • Do they include training as part of the package? Do they provide training resources and responsive support to facilitate a smooth onboarding process?
  • Does the platform support integration with monitoring and reporting tools?
  • Does the media database solution host AI features and personalization capabilities?
  • Are they transparent with their pricing and contract length? Some platforms have an auto-renewal policy, while others may offer advanced features only at a higher tier
  • Do they offer custom contact research capabilities? Some organizations may need to find new contacts in a niche market or underrepresented industries and regions