Evgenia, Creative Producer at Alpha Affiliates, breaks down how PR has outgrown press lists and become a force shaping brand culture, emotional loyalty, and bottom-line growth — especially in high-velocity industries like iGaming
PR in 2025. Still about the media — or something else entirely?
It’s gone far beyond media coverage.
We’re way past chasing headlines.
PR now flows through every part of the brand — from how we show up on social media, to how we speak internally, to how the product feels. It’s no longer a “channel.” It’s how the brand lives.
The game changed when algorithms did. You can’t just broadcast — you need to build something people actually want to lean into. That’s where creative PR comes in. The formats are faster, the signals are subtler, and the expectation is: I can relate.
We’ve leaned into a mixed strategy: legacy channels still matter, but they’re paired with new media, live formats, and storytelling that makes people feel something.
Is it harder to reshape a legacy — or start from scratch?
Blank slate sounds fun until you realize there’s no map.
But rebuilding an old system? That’s delicate work. You’re fixing the wiring without killing the power. Some habits run deep — undoing them takes a mix of patience, clarity, and knowing where you’re going.
That’s the path we took. We kept the bones, but rewrote the blueprint. Less corporate boilerplate: more lifestyle, more fashion cues, more edge.
Why does PR need to act like a production house now?
Because attention doesn’t stick to static ideas. For us, PR = brand producing.
We built an in-house video unit to shape the brand in real time: lookbooks, event edits, behind-the-scenes, campaign rollouts.
We’re not a media outlet, but we think like one. Every output should do more than inform — it should build equity.
What does a modern PR team actually look like?
It’s not about hiring fast, but designing the roles your brand will grow into.
I started with questions: What does PR need now? What do we test, where do we scale? Then built the system to match.
We rewired workflows, defined creative rituals, and set up bridges between PR, product, HR, and marketing.
My goal? A team that doesn’t just support strategy, but creates it.
Still measuring PR with ER and reach?
If those are your only KPIs, you’re missing the plot. What we care about now:
And yes, that maps to business: acquisition, LTV, trust. If the brand doesn’t resonate, it doesn’t convert. PR isn’t a nice-to-have. It’s how we earn attention, build trust, and reduce friction across the funnel.
How is iGaming PR different?
It’s fast. It’s noisy. And if you’re not precise, you’re invisible.
You don’t win by being louder, you win by being relevant.
iGaming doesn’t reward generic moves. You need taste, timing, and a deep read on the culture. That means fewer broad strokes — more intention. And you have to build it with intent. Every message, every asset has a purpose. If it doesn’t, it’s just noise.
A bold call that paid off?
Our iGB presence was a bold bet, and worth every second.
We stepped away from traditional comms and built something people felt: a 360° bar, our fashion drop, a brand lookbook, the whole thing choreographed for impact. Not just visuals — full-on experience.
It worked because it didn’t look like anything else. That moment became a foundation. From there, we built out our new positioning, and people followed.
For someone starting in iGaming PR — what should they know?
It’s not forgiving.
But if you can keep pace — and love the pace — it pays off. It’s chaotic, but if you thrive in movement, you’ll never be bored.
What about internal comms? Where does the HR brand fit?
We don’t separate “external” and “internal” comms — it’s a single ecosystem where the brand speaks with one voice.
The HR brand isn’t a side stream. It’s part of our PR architecture.
We invest in creating an environment where employees feel belonging, and the market feels the values.
We lean into EGC (employee-generated content) because trust comes from real people. It’s not just banners and slogans — it’s tone of voice, visual style, internal storytelling, longreads, photoshoots, and live formats that make the brand breathe.
PR is no longer about appearances. It’s about the authentic signals that make a brand feel alive.