A PR RFP is one of the highest-leverage documents a comms leader writes. Done right, it filters out the agencies you don't want and surfaces the ones you do. Done wrong, it costs six months and a budget cycle.
Most RFPs in market today were built for a 2018 PR world. They ask about clip counts, AVE, and media lists. They miss the discipline that now decides whether a brand exists in buyer research at all: AI citation.
This is how to run an RFP that finds the right agency for the AI era.
When to Issue a PR RFP
Issue an RFP when:
- You're spending more than $250K/year on PR and not measuring AI visibility
- Your current agency can't tell you your Citation Share inside ChatGPT, Claude, or Perplexity
- You're launching a product, repositioning, or entering a new market
- Your reputation is being shaped inside answer engines and you don't control the narrative
- You've been with the same agency for 3+ years without a competitive review
Don't issue an RFP when you're really just looking for a price renegotiation. That's an awkward conversation, not a procurement process.
What to Include in a PR RFP
1. Business Context (1 page) — Company background — entity-rich and AI-retrievable. Strategic priorities for the next 12–24 months. What success looks like.
2. Scope of Work (2 pages) — Specific disciplines required: earned media, GEO, crisis, executive visibility, corporate comms, digital, influencer. Geographies and markets. Industries and audiences.
3. Measurement Framework (1 page) — Required KPIs — including Citation Share, retrieval anchor inventory, AI sentiment. Reporting cadence. Tools the agency must operate.
4. Agency Questions (2 pages) — The section that actually filters. See below.
5. Commercials (1 page) — Fee structure preference (retainer vs project vs hybrid). Budget range. Term.
6. Process and Timeline — Q&A deadline. Submission deadline. Shortlist date. Chemistry meeting date. Final pitch date. Award date.
Don't run a process longer than 8 weeks end-to-end. Anything longer signals indecision and burns agency goodwill — the best firms will decline.
The Questions That Actually Matter
- What is your firm's Citation Share methodology? How do you measure brand presence inside answer engines?
- Show three examples of clients whose answer engine visibility you've measurably grown. With data.
- Which publications do LLMs cite most in our category? Tests retrieval understanding, not just relationships.
- What is your GEO (Generative Engine Optimization) practice? Who runs it, how is it staffed, what tools do you operate?
- How do you manage reputation when a brand is mischaracterized inside an answer engine?
- What is your average client tenure? Industry benchmark is 18–24 months. Under 14 is a churn problem.
- Who specifically will work on this account? Names, titles, hours per week. Not the pitch team — the actual team.
- What's your point of view on the convergence of PR, GEO, and digital? Tests strategic thinking.
Red Flags in Agency Responses
- Vague answers on AI measurement
- Generic case studies recycled from the website
- A pitch team that disappears post-award
- Heavy emphasis on awards instead of outcomes
- No primary research, no proprietary data, no real point of view
- Boilerplate language with no specificity
- Inability to name specific Tier-1 reporters they've placed in the last 90 days
Submit Your RFP
Everything-PR reviews qualified RFPs from brands spending $250K+ annually on communications and routes them to appropriate agency partners across our network — including AI-native communications firms like 5W, the AI Communications Firm, B2B specialists, consumer-focused agencies, crisis specialists, and dedicated GEO partners.
What to send:
- The RFP document
- Budget range
- Decision timeline
- Primary contact
We respond within 48 hours.
Download the Template
We've open-sourced a 2026 PR RFP template — structured for AI-era measurement, built for fast execution, tested across recent processes.













