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In this solocast, On Top of PR host Jason Mudd discusses the ethical and practical differences between exclusives, advances, and embargoes and how to use them correctly in media relations.
Tune in to learn more!
Five things you’ll learn from this episode:
1. The clear differences between exclusives, advances, and embargoes
2. The most common PR mistakes that quietly damage credibility
3. Why advances don’t restrict publication unless you explicitly say so
4. How to structure ethical exclusives without limiting coverage
5. Practical scripts you can use for exclusives, advances, and embargoes
Quotables
“If you promise a national consumer outlet an exclusive and then you pitch another national consumer outlet the same story, you broke your promise.” — @jasonmudd9
“Reporters don't forget. They may confront you; they may not. They may complain; they may not. But they will remember, so always be honest and ethical in all of your communication.” — @jasonmudd9
“Embargoes work best when your organization has a plan for what happens if the embargo breaks. If you want to use embargoes correctly, you must be precise.” — @jasonmudd9
“This is a critical lesson: Don't rely on terminology alone. Don't assume the other party defines the offer the same way you do.” — @jasonmudd9
“Media relations is not about getting coverage. Media relations is about earning trust, earning credibility, and building relationships that last.” — @jasonmudd9
“If your goal is first-class media relations, the standard is simple. Say what you mean, mean what you say, deliver what you promise.” — @jasonmudd9
If you enjoyed this episode, please take a moment to share it with a colleague or friend. You may also support us through Buy Me a Coffee or by leaving us a quick podcast review.
Contact info and resources:
Jason Mudd on X
Jason Mudd on LinkedIn
Axia Public Relations website
Axia Public Relations resources
1:1 consultations and training with Axia
If you like this episode, you're going to love this:
What journalists want from your media pitch with Jason Mudd, Axia Public Relations
Common mistakes publicly traded companies make when working with the news media
Getting More Media Coverage by Making Journalists’ Lives Easier
Support the show
By Jason Mudd, Axia Public Relations4.9
4444 ratings
Send a text
In this solocast, On Top of PR host Jason Mudd discusses the ethical and practical differences between exclusives, advances, and embargoes and how to use them correctly in media relations.
Tune in to learn more!
Five things you’ll learn from this episode:
1. The clear differences between exclusives, advances, and embargoes
2. The most common PR mistakes that quietly damage credibility
3. Why advances don’t restrict publication unless you explicitly say so
4. How to structure ethical exclusives without limiting coverage
5. Practical scripts you can use for exclusives, advances, and embargoes
Quotables
“If you promise a national consumer outlet an exclusive and then you pitch another national consumer outlet the same story, you broke your promise.” — @jasonmudd9
“Reporters don't forget. They may confront you; they may not. They may complain; they may not. But they will remember, so always be honest and ethical in all of your communication.” — @jasonmudd9
“Embargoes work best when your organization has a plan for what happens if the embargo breaks. If you want to use embargoes correctly, you must be precise.” — @jasonmudd9
“This is a critical lesson: Don't rely on terminology alone. Don't assume the other party defines the offer the same way you do.” — @jasonmudd9
“Media relations is not about getting coverage. Media relations is about earning trust, earning credibility, and building relationships that last.” — @jasonmudd9
“If your goal is first-class media relations, the standard is simple. Say what you mean, mean what you say, deliver what you promise.” — @jasonmudd9
If you enjoyed this episode, please take a moment to share it with a colleague or friend. You may also support us through Buy Me a Coffee or by leaving us a quick podcast review.
Contact info and resources:
Jason Mudd on X
Jason Mudd on LinkedIn
Axia Public Relations website
Axia Public Relations resources
1:1 consultations and training with Axia
If you like this episode, you're going to love this:
What journalists want from your media pitch with Jason Mudd, Axia Public Relations
Common mistakes publicly traded companies make when working with the news media
Getting More Media Coverage by Making Journalists’ Lives Easier
Support the show

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