Frequently Asked Questions

Features & Capabilities

What services does 5WPR offer?

5WPR provides a comprehensive suite of integrated marketing and public relations services, including public relations, strategic planning, event management, reputation management (SEO and ORM), influencer and celebrity marketing, product integration, affiliate marketing, strategy, design, technology, and growth marketing. Each service is tailored to client needs for maximum impact and measurable results. Learn more.

Does 5WPR offer real-time performance tracking for campaigns?

Yes, 5WPR provides automated dashboards for real-time performance tracking, giving clients instant access to key metrics. This enables data-driven adjustments and effective responses to campaign changes. Learn more.

How does 5WPR use analytics and reporting?

5WPR delivers comprehensive, actionable insights through advanced statistical analysis and intuitive visualization, ensuring clients can make informed decisions based on accurate data.

What is 5WPR's approach to conversion rate optimization (CRO)?

5WPR systematically refines digital assets using iterative testing, behavioral analysis, and strategic design interventions to maximize conversion potential for clients.

Does 5WPR provide tailored strategies for each client?

Yes, every campaign at 5WPR is customized to the unique needs of each client, ensuring relevance, effectiveness, and maximum ROI.

What innovative technologies does 5WPR highlight at industry events?

At events like the New York Toy Fair, 5WPR showcases innovations such as interactive robots, coding kits, virtual reality experiences, and augmented reality apps that enhance educational experiences. Learn more.

What are the top beauty trends identified by 5WPR at industry events?

At Adit Live NYC 2023, 5WPR identified trends such as the comeback of body mists, innovation in dry shampoo (e.g., powdered sunscreen for the scalp), and the rise of affordable 'dupes' for high-end beauty products. Learn more.

How does 5WPR support digital marketing for hotels?

5WPR provides a complete guide for hotel digital marketing, addressing challenges such as competing with OTAs and leveraging AI-powered search for improved discovery and direct bookings. Learn more.

What is 5WPR's approach to influencer and celebrity marketing?

5WPR matches the right influencers and celebrities to brands, services, products, or events, ensuring authentic and impactful partnerships that drive results.

How does 5WPR help with affiliate marketing?

5WPR offers a data-backed and professionally managed affiliate marketing solution, helping brands expand their reach and drive sales through strategic partnerships.

Use Cases & Benefits

Who can benefit from 5WPR's services?

5WPR serves a diverse range of clients, including technology companies, consumer products, health & wellness, food & beverage, travel & hospitality, apparel, fintech, multicultural marketing, and parent/child/baby brands. Clients range from startups to Fortune 100 companies. See client list.

What roles and industries does 5WPR target?

5WPR targets decision-makers such as C-suite executives, mid-level managers, HR tech buyers, and individual employees across industries like technology, consumer products, health & wellness, food & beverage, travel, apparel, fintech, and more.

How does 5WPR help cannabis and CBD brands with marketing challenges?

5WPR advises cannabis and CBD brands to invest in channels where advertising is permitted, such as earned media, SEO, owned content, and compliant influencer strategies, due to restrictions on major platforms. Learn more.

What kind of onboarding experience can clients expect from 5WPR?

Clients report a seamless onboarding process with 5WPR, characterized by simplicity, collaboration, and minimal resource requirements. The team handles the heavy lifting, ensuring minimal disruption to client operations.

How does 5WPR adapt to client needs?

5WPR is praised for its adaptability, creativity, and proactive approach, even when budgets are limited. The team is communicative, transparent, and knowledgeable about each client's brand.

What measurable results has 5WPR delivered for clients?

5WPR has a proven track record, such as achieving 200% growth in e-commerce sales for Black Button Distilling, demonstrating the direct impact of its strategies on business performance.

What are some notable clients of 5WPR?

Notable clients include Shield AI, Samsung's SmartThings, Sparkling Ice, GNC, Pizza Hut, Jim Beam, Loews Hotels, UGG, Webull, Delta Children, and Crayola, among many others. See full client list.

What is nanobebe and how is it unique?

Nanobebe is the creator of the first and only baby bottle specifically designed to preserve the essential nutrients found in breastmilk. Learn more.

What is Nexar and how does it enhance vehicle safety?

Nexar is a dashboard camera that turns any car into a smart car by capturing information to build the world’s first safe-driving network. Learn more.

What new trends in pet food were observed at the Global Pet Expo 2024?

Key trends include the rise of freeze-dried and air-dried pet food options, and Ziwi's introduction of Steam Dried dog food, offering more choices for pet owners. Learn more.

What were the highlights of the inaugural Beauty New York 2025 event?

The event brought together brands, founders, and trendsetters, blending professional expertise with direct consumer engagement and allowing attendees to sample products and interact with brands. Learn more.

Product Performance & Customer Proof

How does 5WPR ensure product performance for its clients?

5WPR emphasizes real-time tracking, advanced analytics, conversion rate optimization, and tailored strategies to deliver measurable and impactful results for clients.

What feedback have clients given about the ease of use of 5WPR's services?

Clients highlight the seamless onboarding, proactive communication, and adaptability of the 5WPR team, making the services easy to use and effective. Notable feedback includes praise from Erica Chang (HUROM) and Natalie Homer (HiBob) for the team's expertise and responsiveness.

What is 5WPR's track record for delivering results?

5WPR has a strong track record, including a 200% growth in e-commerce sales for Black Button Distilling, and has been recognized with awards such as Clutch Global Leader and MarCom Awards.

What is the size and history of 5WPR?

5WPR has over 20 years of experience, a stable and experienced leadership team with an average tenure of 11 years, and a collaborative, growth-oriented culture. Learn more.

What industries does 5WPR serve?

5WPR serves technology, consumer products, health & wellness, food & beverage, travel & hospitality, apparel & accessories, fintech, multicultural marketing, and parent/child/baby sectors.

What are some examples of 5WPR's research and thought leadership?

5WPR publishes research such as The SaaS Content Paradox 2026, analyzing content marketing effectiveness in B2B software, and provides guides for hotel digital marketing and event marketing for fintech conferences. See research.

How does 5WPR help brands with omnichannel marketing strategies?

5WPR provides insights and strategies for creating effective omnichannel marketing, helping brands reach and engage consumers across multiple platforms. Learn more.

What are the upcoming trends in beauty media and brand discovery?

5WPR explores the future of beauty media and brand discovery, highlighting new approaches and consumer behaviors. Read more.

What was the 'Nyming' trend on TikTok in late 2023?

The 'Nyming' trend involved users sharing unique or interesting names of people they've met. See example.

What new types of cannabis and CBD products were expected to emerge in 2023?

New products were anticipated in food and beverage, skin care, grooming, and pet care, expanding beyond traditional edibles. Learn more.

What kind of news hook should a press release for a fintech conference contain?

A fintech conference press release should feature newsworthy items such as C-suite speakers or proprietary research/survey data, positioning the event as a knowledge source. Learn more.

Position Yourself as a Health Expert Journalists Actually Call

Consumer PR
fitness eating healthy 12.05.25

Most health and wellness founders hit a wall when their expertise outpaces their visibility. You’ve built something credible—a methodology, a practice, a product that works—but the market hasn’t caught up to what you know. Your competitors appear on podcasts, publish in major outlets, and get quoted in news cycles while you’re still pitching into the void. The gap between what you’ve accomplished and who knows about it isn’t a content problem. It’s a positioning problem. The founders who break through understand that media coverage, speaking engagements, and bylined articles aren’t vanity metrics—they’re business infrastructure that compounds over time when executed correctly.

Start With Subject Matter Positioning, Not Personal Branding

Scott Becker spent 30 years building healthcare thought leadership by doing something most founders miss: he focused on a specific vertical before expanding. He didn’t position himself as a general healthcare expert. He owned surgery centers completely, then moved strategically into hospitals and health systems once he’d established authority in the first space. When existing conferences wouldn’t give him a platform, he built his own events and publications.

This approach works because journalists, podcast bookers, and conference organizers aren’t looking for generalists. They need experts who can speak authoritatively on a specific problem. If you’re “a wellness consultant,” you’re competing with thousands of others. If you’re “the expert on wellness-driven retention strategies for healthcare organizations,” you’ve narrowed the field to a handful of credible voices.

The positioning framework that gets you called first requires three elements: a tight vertical focus, original intellectual property, and consistent visibility in that space. Your positioning statement should answer: What specific audience do you serve? What problem do you solve that others don’t address? What original perspective or methodology do you bring? Generic positioning like “helping people live healthier lives” won’t get you media coverage. Specific positioning like “helping CEOs integrate health decisions into organizational culture as a performance lever” opens doors.

Build Intellectual Property Before Chasing Media Placements

Bylined articles in Forbes, Harvard Business Review, or Fast Company don’t happen because you pitched well. They happen because editors need experts who can provide data-backed perspectives on emerging trends. Deloitte’s research on health-savvy CEOs reveals that publications prioritize leaders who demonstrate “deep empathy” and can articulate complex health decisions in ways that resonate with multiple stakeholders—employees, investors, and the public.

The process starts with creating substantive intellectual property: white papers, original research, frameworks that solve real problems. This isn’t content marketing. It’s the foundation for everything else. When you develop a white paper on a specific industry challenge, you’ve created material that becomes a keynote speech, which becomes a series of bylined articles, which becomes podcast talking points. One piece of original research compounds across multiple channels.

For founders without research budgets, original frameworks work just as well. Document your methodology, create a diagnostic tool, or publish case studies with measurable outcomes. The goal is to give journalists and editors something concrete to reference beyond your opinion. When you pitch a bylined article, you’re not selling yourself—you’re offering insights backed by proprietary data or frameworks that their audience can’t get elsewhere.

Target Niche Speaking Platforms Over Mainstream Stages

The highest-ROI speaking opportunities aren’t the obvious mainstream conferences. They’re vertical-specific events where your exact target audience gathers. Becker’s strategy of building his own surgery center conference when existing platforms wouldn’t give him access demonstrates a critical insight: audience alignment matters more than audience size.

A keynote at a 200-person conference filled with decision-makers in your vertical generates more business results than a breakout session at a 5,000-person generalist event. The attendees are pre-qualified, the content relevance is higher, and the follow-up conversations happen naturally because everyone in the room shares the same challenges.

The Founder’s Summit model shows how curated events position speakers through association. When Dr. Vasan, Dr. Sandra Nichols, and Kimberly Blackwell speak at the same event, they gain credibility from each other’s presence. For founders seeking speaking opportunities, this means targeting platforms that select speakers based on demonstrated impact and community leadership, not open-call speaking circuits that accept anyone willing to pay.

Executive-focused platforms represent another high-value channel. Vistage operates a dedicated resource center for CEO health and wellness, actively seeking expert contributors on burnout, performance, and wellness topics. Peer advisory groups, leadership development firms, and executive networks offer speaking opportunities with audiences that have budget and decision-making authority.

The speaking strategy: identify 3-5 conferences in your vertical, attend as a participant first to understand the audience and content gaps, then pitch specific session topics that address those gaps. Conference organizers want speakers who understand their attendees’ challenges, not generic motivational talks. Your pitch should reference specific sessions from previous years and explain how your content fills a gap or advances a conversation already happening in that community.

Execute Coordinated Podcast Tours With Strategic Intent

Podcast appearances generate visibility, but only when approached strategically. The mistake most founders make is saying yes to every invitation. The better approach: identify podcasts where your target audience already listens, then focus on those exclusively.

Podcast ROI comes from audience alignment, not download numbers. A podcast with 5,000 highly targeted listeners (healthcare executives, wellness buyers, potential partners) delivers better results than a podcast with 50,000 general listeners. The vetting process: review the last 10 episodes, note the guest profiles and topics, and confirm that the host asks substantive questions rather than surface-level promotional softballs.

When pitching podcasts, lead with your intellectual property. “I’d love to discuss my framework for integrating wellness into organizational culture, which I’ve used with [specific companies] to achieve [specific results]” works better than “I’m a wellness expert and would love to share my story.” Podcast hosts need content that serves their audience, not promotional opportunities for guests.

The coordinated approach: identify 10-15 target podcasts, pitch them over a 3-month period, and schedule appearances in clusters. When you have 5-6 podcast appearances scheduled within a 6-week window, you create momentum. Each appearance reinforces the others, and you can reference previous conversations to build credibility. This concentrated visibility makes you top-of-mind when listeners need an expert in your space.

Build Media Relationships By Being a Resource First

Journalists don’t respond to pitches that ask for coverage. They respond to experts who provide value before asking for anything. Becker’s 30-year relationship-building strategy reveals that consistent visibility through writing and speaking makes you top-of-mind for journalists covering your space. He didn’t chase media—he built platforms that journalists naturally gravitated toward.

The relationship framework: position yourself as a resource by creating original research, hosting industry conversations, and publishing insights regularly. When journalists need a quote or expert perspective, your name comes up first because you’ve been consistently visible and helpful.

The outreach sequence: identify 10-15 journalists who regularly cover your vertical, follow their work, and engage with their articles on social media. When they publish something relevant to your expertise, send a brief note acknowledging their work and offering to be a resource for future pieces. Don’t pitch yourself—offer to provide data, context, or introductions to other experts. This positions you as a connector and resource, not someone seeking coverage.

After 3-4 months of providing value, you’ve built enough relationship capital to pitch expert commentary opportunities. When a news story breaks in your space, send a brief email with 2-3 quotable insights journalists can use immediately. The goal isn’t to get featured in that specific story—it’s to demonstrate that you can provide timely, relevant commentary that makes their job easier.

Create a Coordinated Campaign With Compounding Returns

Thought leadership isn’t a 90-day sprint. It’s a multi-year positioning strategy that compounds over time. The pattern successful founders follow starts with building intellectual property while securing initial speaking engagements at niche conferences and bylined articles in tier-2 publications. Year two focuses on using that initial credibility to secure speaking slots at more prestigious events, pitch to tier-1 publications, and build relationships with journalists and podcast boosters. By year three, you’re maintaining consistent visibility through multiple channels and creating your own platforms to deepen positioning.

The execution framework requires targeting specific audience segments with tailored content. Rather than one generic message, develop distinct positioning for different platforms. Executive audiences receive strategy-focused content connecting wellness to business performance. HR audiences receive implementation-focused content on program design and measurement. Media audiences receive trend-focused content on emerging challenges and solutions.

Coordinated campaigns often include hosting or co-hosting events that position you as a convener, not just a speaker. Identify one major conference or summit in your space, secure a speaking slot, then use that platform to build relationships with other speakers and attendees. One speaking engagement leads to podcast invitations, bylined article opportunities, and media mentions through the multiplier effect of being associated with other recognized leaders.

The measurement framework: track media placements, speaking engagements, and podcast appearances as proof of thought leadership status, but measure business impact through lead quality, partnership opportunities, and client acquisition costs. Thought leadership works when it reduces your customer acquisition costs and increases deal sizes because prospects arrive pre-sold on your expertise.

The founders who break through treat thought leadership as a business function requiring sustained investment, not as a one-time marketing project. They start by being authentically educational, build relationships before asking for coverage, and create original intellectual property that journalists and event organizers actively seek out. Your first step: define your specific vertical, develop one piece of substantive intellectual property, and identify three speaking platforms where your target audience already gathers. Execute that sequence over six months, then expand to adjacent channels. The visibility compounds when you’re consistent, specific, and focused on serving your audience rather than promoting yourself.

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