PR Agency Red Flags Brands Should Avoid
Last week, we had a conversation with a founder who parted ways with her PR firm after six months with almost nothing to show for it. Thin coverage, vague reporting, no clear answer on who was actually running her account. It's a story we've heard before. Too many times.
Choosing a PR partner is one of the highest-stakes decisions a brand makes. Done right, PR is the most scalable investment in the kind of credibility that compounds. Done wrong, it's a cost center that drains resources and stalls momentum at exactly the moment you can't afford it. Before you sign anything, here's what to watch for.
They Lead with Guarantees Instead of Strategy
No one can guarantee earned media. It's earned — that's the whole point. If an agency opens with promises of guaranteed placements or viral results before they've spent real time understanding your brand, slow down. What you should be hearing instead is an honest conversation about timelines, realistic expectations, and the strategic thinking behind their approach — not just the outcomes they claim to deliver.
Every Client Gets the Same Pitch
Any agency can announce news. The good ones create it. What separates a true partner from a vendor is the ability to storytell when there is no news — consistently generating fresh narratives that map back to your actual business goals. If the deck in front of you could belong to any brand, it probably does. Strong PR is built on a genuine understanding of what makes your brand different. If the discovery process feels rushed, the execution will be generic.
The Senior Team Pitches, Then Vanishes
It's the classic bait-and-switch. A polished senior team walks you through a compelling pitch. You sign. Then you're handed off to a junior associate spread thin across too many accounts. Ask directly before you commit: Who will be my day-to-day lead? Who is actually writing the pitches? At JBC, our founders and executive team stay deeply involved in every account — not as a talking point, but as a structural commitment. It's part of why our talent retention rate is 80%-plus, well above the industry average.
Reporting Is Vague or Vanity-Driven
Impressions are not a business outcome. A link roundup is not a strategy. If an agency can't show you how to measure PR success — or connect their work to your actual business goals — that's a problem. A strong partner reports on metrics that connect to growth: Message Pull-Through, Tone and Sentiment, Share of Voice against your competitors. If all you're getting is a list of links at the end of the month, ask harder questions.
They're Unclear on Pricing and Terms
A confident agency doesn't need to trap clients. Vague contracts, hidden fees, and steep termination penalties are all signals of an agency that doesn't fully believe in its own work. Read everything carefully. Make sure deliverables, timelines, and exit terms are spelled out in plain language before you move forward. Transparency in the contract is a preview of transparency in the relationship.
They Don't Ask Enough of the Right Questions
This one is subtle. The agency shows up with a polished, pre-packaged pitch and it feels like they have all the answers. They don't. If they haven't asked about your business goals, your competitive landscape, or where you are in your growth trajectory, they aren't building you a PR strategy — they're selling you a template. The best partnerships begin with real discovery. Not a monologue.
The right PR partner is infrastructure for your growth. Take your time. Ask the hard questions. Hold agencies to a higher standard.
If you're in the middle of a search — or reconsidering the one you're already in — see how JBC has driven results for brands like OLIPOP, Parachute, and theSkimm. Real placements, real metrics, real access to the team making it happen.