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Learn to land journalist quotes and authority links step by step: how to read queries, write a pitch that gets picked, and turn a mention into a backlink.
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The 4 parts of a reply that gets used

When you answer a reporter's query, your reply is called a "pitch" — just a short message offering your help. Most beginners over-think it. A pitch that gets picked has only four parts.

1. The answer first. Give the actual tip or quote in the first two sentences. No warm-up.
2. Who you are. One line: your name, your job, why you'd know this.
3. A usable quote. Write one sentence the reporter can copy-paste with quotation marks around it.
4. Contact + link. Your name as you want it printed, and your website.

Think of it like handing someone a sandwich already made, instead of a bag of groceries. The reporter is busy. The easier you make their job, the more likely your name ends up in print.

Try this today: take a query you'd skip, and draft just part 3 — one clean, quotable sentence. That single skill wins more placements than anything else.
Why fast beats good

Reporters work on tight deadlines, and most queries get more replies than they can read. So they often stop reading once they've found enough. That means a good answer sent early often beats a perfect answer sent late.

Here's the simple math:

1. A query opens in the morning.
2. By lunch, the reporter may already have 40 replies waiting.
3. They pick from the first solid ones and move on.

Think of it like a school field trip — the bus leaves on time whether or not you're on it.

So aim to answer within the first few hours, not the last. A reply that's 80% polished and early will outperform a 100% reply that arrives after they've finished.

Try this today: when you spot a query you can answer, set a 20-minute timer and send something solid before it rings. Speed is a skill you can practice, and it's the cheapest edge you have.
Neighbor spotlight: @DeadLinkDetective. They go deep on broken link building — the kind of channel you actually keep notifications on for.
Where reporter queries actually come from

New people often ask, "Where do I even find reporters asking for help?" The answer: they gather in a few predictable places. Think of it like fishing spots — the fish are there, you just have to know the ponds.

Three main types:

1. Query services. Websites and email lists where reporters post requests, and you reply. You sign up, pick your topics, and answers arrive in your inbox.
2. Social posts. On X and other networks, reporters post requests with tags like "looking for an expert in..." so people can find them.
3. Direct relationships. Once a reporter likes your answers, they sometimes email you directly for the next story.

Most beginners start with type 1 because it requires no following and no luck — the requests come to you.

Try this today: sign up for one free query service and choose just two topics you genuinely know. A flooded inbox helps no one; a focused one gets answered.
How to choose which queries to answer

You don't answer every query — you answer the ones you can answer well. Picking right saves hours and raises your win rate. Think of it like a menu: you order what you actually want to eat, not one of everything.

Ask three quick questions:

1. Do I genuinely know this? If you'd have to invent an opinion, skip it. Reporters can smell a guess.
2. Does my real-life experience fit? "I've done this 50 times" beats "I read about this once."
3. Can I answer in 15 minutes? If a query needs a research project, it's not worth the deadline pressure.

A "no" to all three means move on, guilt-free. Saying no to weak fits is what gives you time to nail the strong ones.

Try this today: scan five queries and mark only the ones that get a clear "yes" to all three questions. Answer those. Ignore the rest with a clean conscience.
How to write a sentence a reporter can quote

The heart of any pitch is one sentence the reporter can lift straight into their article with quotation marks. This is called a "pull quote" — a short, self-contained line that makes sense on its own.

Think of it like a fortune-cookie message: complete, clear, and good even with no context around it.

Three rules for writing one:

1. Make it stand alone. It should mean something even if someone reads only that line.
2. Say one idea. Not three. One sharp point lands; a list gets cut.
3. Sound like a person. "Skip the fancy app and use a paper list" beats "utilize analog budgeting methodologies."

A good test: read it out loud. If it sounds like something a smart friend would actually say, it's ready.

Try this today: pick a topic you know and write one pull quote about it. Just one sentence. Read it aloud. Rewrite until it sounds human.
The 3 reasons your pitch got ignored

Getting no reply feels personal, but it almost always comes down to a few fixable habits. Think of it like a job application — usually it's not you, it's the format.

1. You buried the answer. If your tip is in paragraph three, the reporter never reached it. Put the answer in line one.
2. You pitched yourself, not your help. "I'd love to share my expertise" tells them nothing. Give the actual tip instead.
3. You didn't match the ask. They wanted a dietitian; you're a chef. Close, but not what the story needed.

None of these mean you failed. They mean your next pitch can be tighter. Reporters aren't judging you — they're scanning fast for a usable answer.

Try this today: pull up your last ignored pitch and find which of these three it was. Naming the reason turns a silent rejection into a clear lesson you can apply tomorrow.
The one line that proves you're real

Reporters can only quote people they can trust, so every pitch needs a "credibility line" — one sentence explaining why you, specifically, would know this.

Think of it like a name tag at a conference. It tells the reporter, at a glance, that they're talking to the right person.

A strong credibility line has three small parts:

1. Your role. "I'm a pediatric nurse..."
2. Your experience in numbers. "...with 12 years on the night shift..."
3. The relevant proof. "...and I've coached new parents on sleep nightly."

Notice it's concrete. "I'm passionate about health" proves nothing. "I've treated 3,000 patients" proves a lot. Numbers and specifics do the convincing for you.

You don't need a famous title. A real, specific background beats an impressive but vague one every time.

Try this today: write your own credibility line for one topic. Include a number. Save it — you'll reuse this line again and again.
What to do when you're mentioned but not linked

Sometimes a reporter quotes you by name but forgets to link to your site. You got the mention, but not the authority link. Good news: this is fixable, and politely asking works more often than you'd think.

Here's the gentle three-step:

1. Thank them first. A short, warm note: "Thanks so much for including me in your piece!"
2. Make the ask tiny. "Would you mind adding a link to my site next to my name? Here's the URL."
3. Make it easy. Paste the exact link and the exact words you'd like linked.

Think of it like asking a waiter for the side of sauce they forgot — small, reasonable, and usually a yes.

Many reporters simply missed it and are happy to add it. The worst case is a no, which costs you nothing.

Try this today: search your name plus your topic and find one article that mentions you without a link. Send the friendly note.
Build a reusable pitch skeleton

Writing every pitch from a blank page is exhausting, so good outreach people keep a "skeleton" — a fill-in-the-blanks template they reuse. Think of it like a recipe card: the structure stays, only the ingredients change.

Here's a simple skeleton:

1. "Here's my answer to [their question]: [your tip]."
2. "I'm [role] with [experience], so I see this often."
3. "Quote you can use: '[one clean sentence].'"
4. "My name is [name], site is [link]. Happy to add more."

You paste this, fill the brackets, and you've cut a 20-minute task to five. The structure handles the thinking; you just supply the facts.

A word of care: never send the brackets unfilled, and always tailor the tip to the exact query. The template is your frame, not your whole house.

Try this today: write your own four-line skeleton and save it where you'll find it fast. Future-you will thank present-you.
The subject line is half the battle

When you reply by email, the reporter sees your subject line before anything else. If it's dull, your brilliant answer never gets opened. Think of it like the cover of a book on a crowded shelf.

Three habits for a subject line that gets opened:

1. Lead with the answer, not yourself. "3 quick ways to cut a grocery bill" beats "Expert available for interview."
2. Match their words. If their query said "budget travel," use "budget travel" in your subject.
3. Keep it short. Phones cut off long lines. Aim for under nine words.

The goal isn't to be clever. It's to let a busy reporter see, in one glance, that you have exactly what they asked for.

Try this today: take a query and write three different subject lines for it. Pick the one that most clearly promises the answer. That instinct sharpens fast with practice.
Channel photo updated
When to follow up, and when to let go

New people worry about being a pest, so they never follow up — or they follow up five times. Both hurt. There's a calm middle path. Think of it like knocking on a door: once is fine, banging is not.

The simple rule:

1. Send your pitch.
2. If the deadline hasn't passed and you've added something new (a better stat, a photo), one short follow-up is okay.
3. After the deadline passes with no reply, let it go completely.

Why let go? Reporters get buried, stories get cut, and silence almost never means they disliked you. It usually means the piece changed or they found enough sources.

Moving on isn't giving up — it's saving your energy for the next query, where a fresh, fast pitch has a real shot.

Try this today: check for any pitch past its deadline and mentally close the file. Clear inbox, clear head.
Neighbor spotlight: @AnchorTheory. They go deep on anchor text strategy — the kind of channel you actually keep notifications on for.
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Read what the reporter really wants

Queries are short, so beginners often answer the topic but miss the exact ask. Reading carefully is a quiet superpower. Think of it like a test question — half the battle is noticing what's actually being asked.

Watch for three hidden details:

1. The angle. "Budgeting for college students" is not "budgeting." The narrow word matters most.
2. The format. "One tip" means one. Sending five looks like you didn't read.
3. The exclusions. "No financial advisors please" means don't pitch if you're one.

Reporters slip these clues in to filter replies. Catching them puts you in the small pile that actually fits, which is where picks come from.

Think of every query as having an invisible checklist. Match it, and you stand out simply by paying attention.

Try this today: take one query and underline the angle, the format, and any exclusion. Then answer only what those three points asked for. Precision reads as professionalism.
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Keep a "ready kit" so you never stall

The fastest sources have their materials prepped before a query ever lands. They keep a "ready kit" — a small folder of things reporters often ask for. Think of it like a packed gym bag by the door: when it's time, you just go.

What to keep in your kit:

1. A short bio. Two sentences, written in third person, with one number in it.
2. A clear headshot. A simple, well-lit photo reporters can publish.
3. Your exact name and link. Spelled the way you want it printed.
4. Two or three pull quotes. Pre-written quotable lines on your main topics.

When a query fits, you assemble a polished pitch in minutes instead of scrambling. The deadline rewards the prepared.

Think of the kit as removing every excuse to be slow.

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