Build a press page. "As seen in" press logos, chronological press mentions, awards, and press contact.
Want more control? See the expanded prompt ›
Build a press page at /pages/press: hero with 'As seen in' + press logos, a chronological list of press mentions with publication, date, article title, and 'read more' link, awards grid with badges, and a press contact block.
- Press logo grid (most-recognized publications first).
- Chronological list of mentions with links.
- Awards grid with badges and citations.
- Press contact form for new opportunities.
Sections this page should include
- 'As seen in' hero with press logo marquee
- Chronological list of press mentions (publication, date, link)
- Awards grid with badges
- Press contact block (for media inquiries)
- Featured story callouts
- Schema markup (Article + Organization)
What you're trying to do
Press logos are one of the highest-impact trust signals on a store. A dedicated press page concentrates them, lets you brag without bragging on every page, and gives PR contacts a single destination to evaluate you against.
Things to watch out for
- Truthfulness — Fudge only displays press that's actually happened.
- Linking — Fudge handles this: each press mention links to the actual article for verification.
- Recency — Fudge handles this: most-recent first; older mentions deprioritized.
- Press contact — Fudge handles this: submissions go to your designated PR inbox.
How Fudge does it
Fudge duplicates your live theme into a draft, builds a custom page template with the sections and logic your prompt requires, and populates it with your real products, pricing, and brand styling. Everything starts in draft — you preview before publishing, tweak any section, and your live store stays untouched until you're ready.
Building a press and awards page that converts skeptics
A press page does two jobs: it converts skeptical shoppers (third-party validation overcomes brand skepticism), and it makes life easier for journalists (which gets you more press). The two audiences need different things — shoppers want quick logo recognition; journalists want the press contact and the latest news.
When this page is worth building
Build the press page if you have meaningful press to display. Skip the page if you have nothing yet — a press page with three logos and one award reads as thin.
The page works best when it’s actively maintained. A press page that hasn’t been updated in 18 months reads as a brand past its peak.
What makes one great
- ‘As seen in’ hero with press logo marquee — quick visual validation.
- Chronological list of press mentions — publication, date, article title, ‘read more’ link. Easy scanning.
- Awards grid with badges — visible icons, easy recognition.
- Press contact block — for media inquiries. Email, phone, social.
- Featured story callouts — for the biggest hits.
- Article + Organization schema — eligible for rich result treatment.
Common mistakes to avoid
The biggest mistake is showing dead links. Press articles get unpublished or paywalled over time. Keep the archive working — or include a brief summary of the article when the link breaks.
The second mistake is the static press page. Update at least quarterly with new mentions, retired older ones, and any new awards. Press pages reward maintenance.
Pair this with founder story page and mission and values page — together they give journalists everything they need to write the next article.