Part 2 of 3: Pitching Journalists Series

The Perfect Startup Pitch: Format, Timing, and Follow-Up Rules (2026)

PR STRATEGY

Start Me Up PR Inc. 

March 2026

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TL;DR

Part 1 of this series covered why pitches fail. This post covers what to do instead. Part 3 is about finding the right people to send it to.

96.57%

of pitches never get a reply.

Here’s how to be in the other 3.43%

I spent 15 years reading pitches from the journalist side. Most got deleted before I finished the subject line. Not because the startups were boring — because the pitches were.

How Long Should Your Pitch Be?

Short. Really short. 28% of journalists prefer pitches of 100–200 words, and only 2% want pitches over 400 words (Cision, 2025). BuzzStream analysis found that pitches with 50–149 words get the highest response rate at 7.51% (BuzzStream, 2024).

Your pitch is a door-opener, not a press release. Write enough to make them curious. Save the details for when they reply.

✕  The Pitch That Gets Deleted

Subject: Exciting Launch — [StartupName] Is Transforming the Future of Payments

Dear Journalist, We are excited to announce that [StartupName], a groundbreaking fintech company, is officially launching our revolutionary payment platform that is set to transform how small businesses handle transactions. Our innovative solution uses proprietary technology to streamline payment processing…

No story angle. “Dear Journalist” signals a mass blast. No data. 150 words of jargon with zero angle.

✓  The Pitch That Gets a Reply

Subject: 68% of SMBs lose revenue to payment delays — data for your fintech column

Hi Sarah, Your recent piece on Square pricing changes nailed something most outlets missed — the hidden cost hitting businesses under $500K revenue. We just surveyed 1,200 Canadian SMBs. 68% reported losing revenue to payment processing delays of 3+ days. We are launching a platform that cuts settlement to same-day, and our beta users are seeing 23% faster cash flow cycles…

Subject line with data. References their actual work. A story angle. A specific offer. 120 words.

When Should You Send?

Monday morning at 8 AM is the sweet spot. That single hour generates 35.86% of opens and 36.67% of replies, with Monday leading all days at 24.46% open share (BuzzStream study of 4.5 million emails, 2024).

35.86%

of opens happen in the Monday 8 AM hour
 

36.67%

of replies from that same single hour

24.46%

open share — Monday leads all days

Tuesday is a close second for replies. Wednesday through Friday: diminishing returns. Friday afternoons are where pitches go to die. Send in the journalist’s time zone, not yours.

What Channel Should You Use?

Email. 96% of journalists prefer pitches via email — up from 87% in 2024 (Cision, 2025). Don’t DM them on Instagram. Don’t call their desk. Email. That’s it.

75% of publishers prefer subject lines under 10 words (Prowly / Digital Third Coast, 450+ subject lines analyzed). Keep it specific, timely, and relevant to their beat.

The Follow-Up Rules

Once. 62% of journalists say one follow-up is appropriate, and only 8% say multiple follow-ups are acceptable (Cision, 2025).

Rule 01

Wait 3–5 business days — not 24 hours

Rule 02

Send between 8 AM and noon

Rule 03

Keep the follow-up shorter than the original pitch

Three to four sentences. That’s it.

Rule 04

Reference something new

A news hook, updated data, a relevant development. Not just “following up on my last email.”

If they don’t respond after one follow-up, move on. Silence is an answer.

Should You Use AI to Write Your Pitch?

The honest answer

Use AI for research and angle brainstorming. But the final pitch should sound like a human who did the work. 72% of journalists cite factual inaccuracy as their biggest concern with AI-generated pitches (Cision, 2025).

AI pitches have a tell: they’re fluent but empty. They use words like groundbreaking without specifics.

The pitches that work combine AI-assisted research with a hand-written email. Five minutes of human effort shows — and it’s exactly what separates a 3.43% response rate from something much better.

START ME UP PR INC. 

Founded in 2021 by Theresa Tayler, the agency breaks away from traditional PR conventions by championing raw, unfiltered storytelling that helps brands own their voice unapologetically. With a three-tiered service structure — from self-service digital tools to full-scale PR strategy — Start Me Up PR meets you where you are and grows with you.

The firm blends time-tested media relations with cutting-edge, AI-driven tools, because good PR isn’t about fitting a mold. It’s about breaking it. Whether you’re launching, scaling, or disrupting, Start Me Up PR crafts multifaceted storytelling strategies that build real brand presence across paid, owned, and earned media.