[Was it impossible to self-study? How to acquire the skills to write a release that increases media adoption rate?] 'Releasing the '○○ Style Training Method' to make your press release professional-level 10 times faster!' Video Release Campaign

Takehisa Inoue, a PR consultant and director of Curry Research Institute, released a YouTube video on professional press release training methods and is running a book giveaway campaign.
キャンペーンNQ 64/100出典:PR Times

📋 Article Processing Timeline

  • 📰 Published: April 4, 2026 at 19:00
  • 🔍 Collected: April 4, 2026 at 10:30
  • 🤖 AI Analyzed: April 21, 2026 at 04:14 (401h 43m after Collected)
Curry Research Institute Co., Ltd. (Director: Takehisa Inoue / Shibuya-ku, Tokyo), a curry-specialized consulting company familiar to the media, is famous with its director Takehisa Inoue working as a popular PR consultant representing the Inoue Strategic PR Consulting Office. On the YouTube channel 'The Unknown World of PR by Takehisa Inoue', run by Takehisa Inoue who has successfully guided the PR strategies of numerous companies over the years, the video 'Releasing the '○○ Style Training Method' to make your press release professional-level 10 times faster! A must-watch if you feel 'self-study has hit its limit' or want to escape the 'zero media reaction disease'!' has been published. To commemorate the video's release, we are running a campaign to give away the book 'Practical Public Relations PR' to the first 5 applicants. If you are interested, please inquire and apply. (Until April 5)

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Are your releases reaching the media?

'I write releases, but they have no effect!'
'Don't expect much from releases!'

Even after taking the trouble to write them, they are not picked up by the media at all...
Some people say writing releases is a waste of time, but is that really true?

That's not the case.
The people around me have a high probability of being featured in the media.

Have you ever thought about what is needed to increase the media adoption rate of your releases, what was wrong with the release you wrote, or the reason why it wasn't picked up?

Actually, there is a limit to creating a release all by yourself.
Write a release, have a professional review and correct it.
Fix the release, and have a professional correct it again.
Through repeating this process, a single release is completed.

Creating a release requires 'training'.

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■ Released Video
Releasing the '○○ Style Training Method' to make your press release professional-level 10 times faster!
A must-watch if you feel 'self-study has hit its limit' or want to escape the 'zero media reaction disease'!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=emFJCp-CSfE&t=1s