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The Press Playbook:
How to Pitch Journalists and Win Coverage

Jason Feifer
Editor-in-Chief, Entrepreneur Magazine
PRESS STRATEGY
The Mindset Shift

Journalists Don't Care About You

YOUTHEIR AUDIENCETHE REAL VALUE EXCHANGEWriter serves audience. You serve audience. Both win.
"They don't care about you. They care about their reader, their listener, their viewer. If you can be of use to them in sharing the kinds of information that they are looking to serve their audience, then you can get what you want."
  • Press is not a service you buy — it's a story exchange
  • The journalist's only boss is their audience, not you
  • You must understand the publication's mission first
  • Stop thinking like a customer; start thinking like a partner
Framework

The Three-Step Press Playbook

PREPWHOPITCHDefine your whyFind the right writerCraft the emailEach step unlocks the next. Skip none.
  • Step 1 — Prep: Know why you need press. What specific outcome will drive your business forward right now?
  • Step 2 — Find Who: Identify the exact writers and editors at publications whose audience matches your customer
  • Step 3 — Pitch: Send a short, customized email that shows you understand their mission and how your story serves it
Press is not growth magicThink of it like raising money: only do it when you know what you need it for. If you're too early, you have nothing to show. If your product isn't ready, timing is wrong.
Prep

Define Your Press Why

  • Drive product awareness: You're launching something new and need target audience to know about it
  • Fundraising credibility: You need stories in reputable publications to show investors the market validates you
  • Hire talent: You want engineers or experienced operators to see you're building something real
  • Partner conversations: You need potential partners or distribution channels to take you seriously
Bad reason to pitch

"I've worked really hard and I deserve this." Emotional justification doesn't drive business results.

Wrong publication example

Local hot dog food truck owner pitching national Entrepreneur Magazine. 99.5% of readers can't buy hot dogs in DC. Wrong audience = wasted effort.

Targeting

Find the Specific Writer

  • Search the publication for your category or adjacent topics
  • Find writers who have covered similar stories in the past
  • Prioritize freelancers over staff writers — they need work and respond faster
  • Check bylines on stories to find who covers your space
  • Google their name if you find them — you'll quickly learn who they are
Freelancer advantageFreelancers got to eat. They're hungrier, faster to respond, and more likely to say yes than staff writers juggling 10 assignments.
The Pitch

How to Write the Email That Gets Opened

Generic blast email to 50 journalistsINSTEAD →Personalized 3-paragraph email to one specific writer who covers your category
Call their personal cell phoneINSTEAD →Email is the standard. DMs are risky. Phone calls are annoying.
Lead with the product, not the storyINSTEAD →Lead with the human insight or counterintuitive decision that readers will care about
Fake familiarity with their workINSTEAD →Reference a real story they wrote. If you haven't read it, don't mention it.
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