Free Press Release Sites: GloryAI.eu Review & How to Submit

Free Press Release Sites: GloryAI.eu Review & How to Submit

Getting media coverage used to mean hiring an expensive PR agency. Today, free press-release platforms like GloryAI.eu let startups, non-profits and solo founders announce news to journalists, bloggers and search engines without spending a cent. In this guide you’ll learn how the site works, what you can (and can’t) do, and a step-by-step submission checklist you can copy straight into your workflow.

What Is GloryAI.eu?

GloryAI.eu is a 100 % free press-release distribution portal launched in 2024. There are no hidden fees, no “premium” upgrades and no editorial gate-keeping. Anyone with an email address can create an account, paste a release and hit “publish”. The story is immediately live on a public URL and included in the site’s RSS feed which journalists and SEO tools monitor.

Core Features You Can Use Today

Unlimited submissions – no daily or monthly cap

Instant publication – no human review queue

Author page – collect all your releases in one profile

HTML editor – add links, lists, images, quotes

SEO-friendly URLs – slug is taken from headline

Social share buttons – one-click Twitter, LinkedIn, Reddit

Download as PDF – useful for investor decks

Why Bother Submitting Free Press Releases?

Digital footprint – every release creates a new indexed page that can rank for long-tail keywords.

Journalist bait – reporters set Google Alerts for niche terms; your release can appear in their inbox within minutes.

Link building – although links are ugc tagged, they still count for discovery and anchor-text diversity.

Social proof – investors, customers and future employers see independent coverage when they search your name.

How to Submit a Press Release on GloryAI.eu (Checklist)

Create an account – only email and password required.

Verify email – click the link in inbox (lands in spam sometimes).

Click “New Release” – dashboard is minimalist, you can’t miss it.

Write the headline – keep it under 110 characters so it isn’t truncated in Google News.

Add summary – one or two sentences that will appear in RSS; include your main keyword.

Compose body – 300–800 words works best. Use H3 sub-headings, bullet lists, bold stats.

Add quotes – at least one quote from a founder or partner; journalists love sound-bites.

Insert boilerplate – short “About” paragraph at the bottom (max 100 words).

Add media – upload at least one landscape image (1200×630 px) so the release gets an OG image.

Choose category – pick the closest vertical (Tech, Finance, Health, etc.).

Insert contact details – name, email and phone (publicly visible).

Publish – the page is live in under 30 seconds. Copy the URL and add it to your PR spreadsheet.

Best-Practices That Still Work in 2025

Angle > announcement – “Local startup saves 10 k trees” beats “Startup releases new app”.

Data wins – include at least one number in the headline (percentages, funding, users).

Timely hook – reference a current event, holiday or trending hashtag.

One link max per 100 words – keeps the piece looking editorial, not spam.

Geo tag – add city and country so the story appears in local Google News boxes.

What GloryAI.eu Does NOT Do

No guaranteed media pick-up – journalists still need to find your angle compelling.

No follow-link juice – links inside the release are automatically tagged rel="ugc".

No syndication to Yahoo Finance or Bloomberg – for that you need paid wires.

No editing after 24 h – double-check facts before you hit publish.

Bottom Line

GloryAI.eu won’t replace a full PR agency, but it is the fastest zero-cost way to get your news indexed by Google, visible to journalists and shareable on social media. Submit regularly, follow the checklist above and you’ll build a growing digital footprint without spending a cent.

Ready to test it? Draft your first 400-word release today, publish on GloryAI.eu and add the live URL to your media kit. The worst thing that can happen is nothing; the best is your first organic backlink and a journalist in your inbox.

Published on November 14, 2025. The content of this article is in the public domain and may be used without restrictions.

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