Getting quoted in Forbes, Business Insider, or The Guardian used to require a PR agency on retainer. Not anymore. Here’s how to earn press coverage yourself — systematically, without the gatekeepers.
Why traditional PR doesn’t work for most businesses
PR agencies typically charge £3,000–£10,000 per month for retained services. For most founders and small marketing teams, that’s a cost that’s hard to justify before you’ve established a track record. And even if you could afford it, agencies often focus on brand awareness rather than the high-DA backlinks and specific quotes that actually move the needle for SEO and credibility.
The good news: the same outcomes — being quoted in major publications, earning editorial backlinks, building authority in your industry — are entirely achievable without an agency. You just need the right workflow.
Step 1: Monitor journalist requests in real time
Journalists write hundreds of articles every week that require expert sources. They post requests on platforms like Twitter/X (using hashtags like #journorequest and #prrequest), Reddit, and dedicated platforms like JournoRequest. These requests are time-sensitive — reporters often close their source search within hours.
The key is monitoring these requests in real time, filtered by your area of expertise. Set up keyword alerts for your industry terms. If you’re in fintech, alert on “fintech,” “payments,” “open banking.” If you’re a nutritionist, alert on “nutrition,” “diet,” “health.” The faster you respond to relevant requests, the higher your hit rate.
Step 2: Write a pitch that gets read
Most source pitches are ignored because they’re too long, too promotional, or miss the point entirely. Journalists receive dozens of responses per request. Here’s what works:
- Answer the question directly in the first sentence. Don’t introduce yourself first. Lead with the insight.
- Keep it under 150 words. Journalists are on deadline. Shorter is almost always better.
- Include one specific data point or concrete example. Vague claims get ignored. Specific ones get quoted.
- Add one-line credentials at the end. Just enough to establish why you’re the right source.
Example structure: [Direct answer to the request] + [Supporting example or data] + [One-line bio with relevant credential]
Step 3: Build a target publication list
Not all press is equal for your goals. Before you start pitching, identify 10–20 publications where your ideal customers actually read. For B2B SaaS, that might be TechCrunch, VentureBeat, and Sifted. For a consumer health brand, it’s Women’s Health, Healthline, and your niche trade publications.
Focus on publications with high domain authority (DA 60+) if you’re primarily after SEO value. Focus on audience size and demographics if you’re after direct traffic and brand awareness. Often the best targets serve both goals.
Step 4: Respond to the right requests
Not every journalist request is worth your time. Prioritise requests that meet these criteria:
- The publication is on your target list (or has comparable authority)
- The topic is genuinely within your expertise — don’t pitch outside your lane
- The deadline gives you enough time to write a quality response (even 30 minutes is usually enough)
It’s better to send three excellent pitches per week than twenty mediocre ones. Hit rate matters more than volume.
Step 5: Follow up — once
If you don’t hear back within 48 hours, a single short follow-up is appropriate. Keep it one sentence: “Hi [name], just following up on my response to your [topic] request — happy to provide any additional detail.” Never follow up more than once. Journalists remember who respects their time.
What to do with coverage when you get it
When you’re quoted in a publication, maximise the value:
- Share it on LinkedIn and Twitter with a quote from the article
- Add the publication logo to your website’s “As seen in” section
- Mention it in your email signature and on your About page
- Use the backlink to improve the internal linking on your site for SEO benefit
Each piece of coverage makes the next pitch slightly easier — journalists are more likely to use sources who have been published elsewhere.
The tools you need
You don’t need much. At minimum:
- A journalist request monitoring tool — JournoRequest aggregates requests from Twitter/X and other sources, updating every 15 minutes with keyword-matched email alerts. Free plan available.
- A Google Doc pitch template — keep a master template with your bio, credentials, and common angles so you can respond fast
- A simple spreadsheet — track which requests you’ve responded to and the outcome
That’s it. No agency, no retainer, no complicated software stack. Just consistent monitoring and good pitches.
How long does it take to see results?
Most people get their first coverage within 2–4 weeks of starting to respond to requests consistently. The hit rate varies by industry and how competitive the publication is — expect roughly 10–20% of quality pitches to result in coverage at first, rising as you build a track record.
The compounding effect is real: your first mention makes the second easier, and by your tenth press placement, you’ll have built enough credibility that journalists start coming to you directly.
Ready to start monitoring journalist requests? JournoRequest offers a free plan with 3 requests per day — no credit card required.