Pitching Templates
Templates and strategies that actually get replies in AI-saturated inboxes
⌚ 11 min read · 2,583 words
updated tactics
“The journalist’s inbox isn’t your enemy. Bad pitches are. A genuinely useful pitch stands out because 95% of what journalists receive is noise.”
— Salva Jovells, Presslei
I’ve sent thousands of pitches. I maintain a database of over 27,000 journalists. And I can tell you with confidence that most pitches journalists receive are terrible.
Not because the people sending them are bad at their jobs. But because nobody teaches you what actually works. The advice out there is vague. “Be relevant.” “Personalize.” “Add value.” Great. But what does that look like in practice?
I’m going to show you exactly what a good pitch looks like, give you four templates you can steal today, and explain the data behind why they work. No theory. Just what I’ve learned from analyzing 5,272 real media placements.
In This Article
Why Most Pitches Fail
After tracking open rates, reply rates, and placement outcomes across thousands of outreach emails, the failure patterns are painfully consistent:
The Anatomy of a Pitch That Works
Every pitch that gets a reply shares four things:
- Under 100 words. Respect their time. If they want more, they’ll ask.
- A data hook. A number, a finding, a stat that makes them stop scrolling. “43% of UK renters skip meals to pay rent” is a hook. “Our survey found interesting results” is not.
- A personalized first line. Reference something they actually wrote. Not their publication. Not their beat. A specific article. This takes 60 seconds and doubles your response rate.
- A quotable expert. Journalists need quotes. If you can offer a named expert who can comment on the data, you’ve just saved them half the work of writing the piece.
That’s it. No attachments. No “I hope this finds you well.” No three paragraph company bio. Just the hook, the relevance, and the ask.
4 Pitch Templates That Get Replies
I use variations of these four templates for every type of PR campaign we run. Each one is annotated so you can see why every line is there.
Template 1: The Data Story Pitch
Use this when you have original data, research, or analysis to share.
Subject: [Stat] + [Trend] — data for your [beat] coverage
Hi [First name],
[Opening line referencing their specific recent article — shows you did homework]
We just analyzed [X data points] and found that [surprising finding with specific number].
ⓘ This is your hook. Lead with the most surprising stat. If this line doesn’t make them curious, nothing else matters.
The full data breaks down by [region/demographic/industry], so there’s a local angle if that’s useful.
ⓘ Offering angles shows you understand how newsrooms work. Journalists love data they can slice for their audience.
I can send the full dataset and connect you with [Expert Name, Title] for commentary.
ⓘ Clear offer. No attachment. Named expert ready to quote.
[Your name]
This is the template behind most of our successful placements. Data stories work because they give journalists something exclusive and concrete to write about. If you want to see what kinds of data stories land coverage, check our analysis of campaign formats that actually work.
Template 2: The Expert Commentary Pitch
Use this when a news story is breaking and your client or founder can add expert perspective.
Subject: Expert comment on [trending topic] — [Expert Name], [credibility marker]
Hi [First name],
Saw your piece on [specific article about trending topic]. Quick thought from [Expert Name], [Title] at [Company]:
ⓘ Go straight to the value. No preamble.
“[Ready-to-publish quote, 2-3 sentences max, with a specific take that adds something new to the conversation.]”
ⓘ Give them the quote upfront. Don’t make them schedule a call to find out what your expert thinks. The quote should be opinionated, not generic.
Happy to provide a longer comment or jump on a quick call if useful.
ⓘ Low friction follow-up offer.
[Your name]
The key here is speed. This template only works if you send it within hours of the news breaking. That’s the whole point of reactive PR. If you’re sending expert commentary on a story from last week, you’ve already lost.
Template 3: The Reactive / Newsjacking Pitch
Use this when a major story breaks and you have data or a unique angle that adds to it.
Subject: Data on [breaking story] — [one line teaser]
Hi [First name],
Following the [breaking news event], we pulled data from [source] that shows [unexpected finding].
ⓘ Connect your data directly to the news cycle. Timeliness is everything.
Key numbers:
- [Stat 1]
- [Stat 2]
- [Stat 3]
ⓘ Bullet points scan faster than paragraphs. Three stats max.
This hasn’t been published anywhere yet. Want the full breakdown?
ⓘ Exclusivity signal. Journalists want to be first.
[Your name]
Newsjacking is the fastest path to coverage if you’re just getting started. You don’t need a massive budget or a famous brand. You need speed, relevant data, and the right journalist. We wrote a full newsjacking playbook if you want to go deeper on this.
Template 4: The Survey Results Pitch
Use this when you’ve run a consumer survey or industry poll with publishable findings.
Subject: [X%] of [group] say [surprising behavior] — new survey
Hi [First name],
We surveyed [sample size] [demographic] about [topic] and one finding stood out: [headline stat].
ⓘ Lead with the single most surprising number. One. Not five.
Other findings include [second stat] and [third stat], with regional breakdowns available.
ⓘ Tease additional depth without overwhelming the pitch.
Full methodology and data available on request. [Expert Name] ([Title]) can provide commentary.
ⓘ Methodology mention builds trust. Named source makes their job easier.
[Your name]
Survey pitches work best when the finding challenges assumptions or confirms something people suspect but couldn’t prove. “72% of Gen Z would take a pay cut for better mental health support” is publishable. “Most people like their jobs” is not.
Subject Line Formulas That Work
Your subject line determines whether your pitch gets opened at all. After testing hundreds of variations, these five patterns consistently perform above 30% open rates:
“43% of UK landlords plan to sell in 2026 — data”
“Expert comment on NHS waiting times — surgeon, 20 years”
“Data for your housing coverage — new rental survey”
“1 in 5 teachers considering leaving before September”
“New data: remote workers exercise less than office workers”
What they all have in common: specificity. A number, a group, a finding. Nothing vague, nothing clever, nothing clickbaity.
Response Rate Benchmarks: What’s Actually Good
Let’s set realistic expectations. If you’re doing cold email outreach to journalists:
These numbers assume you’re pitching the right journalists in the first place. If you’re blasting 5,000 contacts from a purchased list, expect closer to 0.5%. If you’re sending 50 carefully researched pitches, expect 10 or more replies.
For startups doing this for the first time, I wrote a separate guide on getting your first media placements that covers the full process from zero.
When and How to Follow Up
Follow up exactly once. Three business days after your initial pitch. Add new information.
The new information gives them a reason to re-engage. Without it, you’re just adding noise.
Never follow up more than once. If two emails don’t get a response, the answer is no. Move on. Protect the relationship for next time.
The Pitch Quality Scorer
Before you hit send, run your pitch through this checklist. Score 5 or more and you’re in good shape. Below 4, rewrite it.
Pitch Quality Scorer
Score: 0 / 8
❌ Pitch Killers
- Generic “Dear journalist” openings
- Leading with your brand story
- Pitching off-beat topics
- Attaching press releases as PDFs
- Following up more than 3 times
✅ What Gets Replies
- Referencing their recent article
- Leading with a data point or stat
- Matching their beat exactly
- Keeping emails under 150 words
- Offering exclusive data or angles
Common Mistakes That Kill Your Pitch
DO
- Keep pitch emails under 200 words
- Reference the journalist’s most recent relevant article
- Lead with your strongest data point or news angle
- Send from a personal email address, not a generic PR address
- Follow up once after 3-5 business days, then stop
DON’T
- Open with your company background or credentials
- Attach large files to the initial pitch email
- CC multiple journalists on the same pitch
- Use a generic subject line like “Story Idea” or “Press Release”
- Follow up more than twice on the same pitch
Frequently Asked Questions
How many journalists should I pitch per story?
20–50 journalists per campaign, carefully selected for beat relevance. Mass-blasting 500+ contacts with a generic pitch will damage your sender reputation and burn relationships. Quality over quantity, always.
What’s a realistic response rate?
3–5% is good for cold pitches. 10–15% is excellent and usually means you have established journalist relationships. If you’re below 1%, your targeting or pitch angle needs work.
Should I use a PR tool or just email?
Start with email. Tools like Muck Rack help with journalist research and tracking, but the pitch itself should always feel personal and direct. No journalist was ever convinced by a slick email template — they’re convinced by relevant stories.
The Bottom Line
Pitching journalists is not about writing beautiful prose. It’s about delivering the right story to the right person at the right time, in the fewest words possible.
Get the targeting right with a solid journalist database. Pick the right tools for your workflow. Lead with data. Keep it short. Follow up once with new info. And never, ever attach a PDF.
That’s it. No magic. Just discipline and empathy for how busy these people are.
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Salva Jovells is the founder of Presslei, a reactive PR agency based in Zurich. He maintains a database of 27,000+ journalists and has analyzed over 5,000 media placements to understand what actually drives coverage.
About the Author
Salva Jovells
Founder of Presslei. 12+ years in ecommerce SEO across international markets. After a decade of link buying for Hockerty and Sumissura, I reverse-engineered 5,272 earned media placements and founded a reactive PR agency that builds authority through data-driven stories journalists actually want to publish. Based in Zurich.
Related Reading
- What Journalists Actually Want in a PR Pitch
- How I Built a 27,000+ Journalist Database
- HARO vs Qwoted vs Featured vs SourceBottle
Free tool: Score your headline before sending with our PR pitch headline analyzer — get a score out of 100 based on 5,272 real placements.


