How to Pitch to Media in 7 Easy Steps

This is a question that writers frequently ask me. They are interested in appearing on podcasts and other media platforms, but they are unsure of how to differentiate themselves from the competition. Following are 7 easy steps to pitch to media.

1. Edit Your Pitch

Before sending your pitch, put it aside for a few hours or maybe a few days. After rereading it, make any necessary edits while keeping the recipient of the email in mind. At most, limit it to 3 brief paragraphs. Remember that the best proposals make themselves clear and persuasively persuasive.

You should read your pitch aloud to yourself and pay attention to how it lands. Try to communicate in a straightforward, confident manner and meet them where they are. You’re not pleading with them to let you be on the show, nor are you conceited. You’re a like-minded expert who wants to assist them in creating an engaging conversation that benefits their audience.

2. Start With The Hook

There is a fundamental PR pitch pattern you should always adhere to while drafting the email itself, and it begins with the hook. How do you determine what the hook in your pitch is? It’s the part of your pitch that appeals to this audience the most. That could be:

Consider your pitch’s strongest point and use that as your opening statement. Set the scene and establish the audience’s relevance for your pitch in your introductory paragraph.

PRO TIP: Timely pitches are usually great, but be sensitive to market saturation. PR professionals read hundreds or even thousands of pitches. If a certain topic has been dominating the news for too long, consider going in a different direction.

3. Create Your Email Subject Line

Once your email is ready, it’s time to craft your email’s subject line. Start with your ask, posed as a question:

Then, add a very brief hook. For example:

Pitching to male-driven self-help podcasts:

Pitching to both contractor and subcontractor podcasts:

Pitching to podcasts for military entrepreneurs:

Pitching to retail podcasts:

Pitching to podcasts for nonprofits:

Pitching the same guest to podcasts on fundraising:

4. Add Value

After the hook, make a succinct statement detailing the benefit you will offer the audience. Highlighting the issue that makes you and your message relevant to this particular audience of listeners or readers is a fantastic method to achieve this.

The journalist or other media professionals should find it simple to understand how to pitch the piece to their own audience after reading this part. Set up the issue, then ace your pitch with a precise, succinct description of the resolution you’ll offer. Consider creating a list of succinct bullet points with the main ideas you will highlight. You can instruct listeners on how to, for instance:

Remember to include your credentials and previous work in the field, but keep them brief. Limit yourself to the ones that are most relevant:

All that said, be concise. The most impressive pitches convey tremendous value in very little space.

5. Follow Up

Wait two weeks before contacting them again if you don’t hear from them soon away. Don’t be in a rush; public relations specialists who work in the media may follow up as much as a month later.

Reply to your initial pitch when you do follow up so they have that background information. Include a link to your media kit in your follow-up email, and limit your message to three succinct points:

6. A Note On Repitching

If they reject your pitch for a podcast, don’t try again. not even from a different perspective. Wait a few weeks before proposing a print or online publication. then feel free to suggest something else to them (as long as it has a different angle).

7. Make The Ask

Finish by saying that you would adore to appear as a guest on their programme, a guest blogger, or whatever else your particular request is. Keep it brief and uncomplicated.


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