For most of the last decade, media outreach sat low on the priority list for technical founders. You had engineers to hire, infrastructure to scale, and customersFor most of the last decade, media outreach sat low on the priority list for technical founders. You had engineers to hire, infrastructure to scale, and customers

Why Technical Founders Are Rethinking How They Approach Media Outreach

2026/03/13 14:41
7 min read
For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at [email protected]

For most of the last decade, media outreach sat low on the priority list for technical founders. You had engineers to hire, infrastructure to scale, and customers to retain. PR felt like something you delegated to a communications hire when you eventually had one — or outsourced to an agency when the budget allowed.

That calculation has shifted, and not because PR has become cheaper or easier. It has shifted because the founders who built sustained media presence early turned out to have a structural advantage that compounded over time: higher inbound deal flow, faster customer trust, easier recruiting, and stronger negotiating positions with investors and partners.

Why Technical Founders Are Rethinking How They Approach Media Outreach

The question is no longer whether technical founders should care about earned media. The question is how to build a programme that fits the way technology companies actually operate — fast, iterative, and data-driven.

The PR Gap in the Tech Ecosystem

There is an obvious irony in the fact that the technology sector — which has automated nearly every repetitive high-volume task in business — has been slower than most industries to apply those same principles to PR.

A significant portion of technical founders still approach media outreach the same way it was done in 2005. Someone on the team manually builds a list of journalists in a spreadsheet. A founder or communications person crafts a pitch. The pitch goes out to a list that is only loosely filtered. The response rate is low. The follow-up process is inconsistent. After a few cycles of mediocre results, the whole effort gets deprioritised.

The contrast with how these same companies approach, say, performance marketing is striking. In paid acquisition, every element is tracked, tested, and optimised. Audiences are segmented precisely. Copy is A/B tested. Attribution is measured. Campaigns are iterated continuously based on what the data shows.

Media outreach has been largely exempt from this rigour — partly because it was always seen as relational rather than systematic, and partly because the tooling simply was not available to do it differently. That has changed.

What Systematic Media Outreach Actually Looks Like

The shift toward data-informed PR starts with the media list itself. Rather than building a contact database from scratch or relying on static journalist directories, modern outreach programmes use platforms that track journalist coverage histories, beat focus, publication tier, and contact freshness in real time. The output is not a generic list — it is a qualified audience, filtered to the contacts most likely to find your story relevant based on what they have actually written recently.

The second shift is in pitch construction. Technical founders often write excellent pitches — when they write them. The problem is consistency. Building and maintaining a high-quality outreach rhythm alongside everything else a growing company demands is genuinely hard. Tooling that helps draft, personalise, and sequence outreach removes the bottleneck without compromising the quality that makes pitches worth sending.

The third shift — and arguably the most impactful — is in targeting. As TechBullion has covered in the context of how technical backgrounds are reshaping marketing effectiveness, the founders and marketing leaders who achieve the best results are those who apply the same precision to channel selection and audience definition that they apply to product and engineering decisions.

In PR terms, that means being willing to say: we will only pitch the thirty journalists and podcast hosts who are genuinely relevant to our story this quarter, and we will invest significant effort in making each touchpoint excellent — rather than scaling outreach volume through a broadly distributed generic blast.

The Podcast Angle

One of the most underused media channels for technical founders remains podcast outreach. The reasons are not hard to understand. Traditional media pitching is opaque — you send something into a void and rarely hear back. Podcast hosts are, by contrast, actively looking for guests.

The audience profile also tends to be better. Podcast listeners are typically highly engaged, self-selected around specific interests, and more likely to act on what they hear than the average article reader. For B2B technology companies, a well-placed appearance on a respected industry podcast can drive more qualified conversations than a mention in a major business publication.

The mechanics are similar to editorial outreach: research the show thoroughly, understand the host’s recent episode themes, and craft a pitch that makes a specific case for the value you bring to their audience — not a general request for airtime. Shows that publish breakdowns of how AI is changing the way tech companies earn media consistently point to relevance and specificity as the deciding factors in whether a pitch converts.

Thinking About Outreach as a Product

Perhaps the most useful reframe for technical founders is this: treat your media outreach programme as a product.

Products have users — in this case, journalists, podcast hosts, and newsletter writers. They have a value proposition: your story should make their job easier and serve their audience better. They require iteration based on feedback: open rates, reply rates, and conversion to coverage are the metrics that tell you whether your current approach is working.

And like any product, media outreach benefits from deliberate infrastructure. Who owns the programme? What does the process look like? How are results tracked? When something is not working — a low reply rate, a drop in coverage — what is the diagnostic process for figuring out why?

Founders who build this infrastructure early, even simply, tend to generate dramatically more consistent results than those who treat PR as a series of one-off efforts. The compounding effect of consistent outreach — small wins that build credibility, contacts who start to recognise your name, coverage that generates inbound interest — takes time to accumulate, but it does accumulate.

The Deliverability Problem Nobody Talks About

One technical dimension of media outreach that founders often overlook is deliverability. The same principles that govern cold email campaigns — sender reputation, domain warmup, inbox placement rates, spam filter avoidance — apply directly to PR pitching.

A pitch that lands in a journalist’s spam folder is a pitch that never happened. And with increasingly sophisticated spam filtering across enterprise mail platforms, the technical infrastructure behind your outreach matters more than it used to. According to Backlinko’s email outreach study, inbox placement is one of the primary variables distinguishing high-performing outreach campaigns from low-performing ones — independent of the quality of the pitch content itself.

For founders who are already thinking carefully about email infrastructure for their marketing and sales operations, applying the same thinking to PR outreach is a natural extension. The same discipline around sender domain configuration, sending volume management, and list hygiene that protects your commercial email reputation applies equally to your media outreach.

Measuring What Matters

The final shift required for technical founders to take media outreach seriously is a credible measurement framework. Coverage for its own sake is not a goal. Coverage that generates referral traffic, drives inbound leads, accelerates recruitment, or supports fundraising is.

Start by defining what you are actually trying to achieve with earned media this quarter. Map the coverage types most likely to achieve it — which publications, which formats, which topics. Track attempts, responses, and outcomes. Review the data regularly. Adjust.

This is not a radical proposition for technical founders. It is exactly how you would approach any other growth channel. The difference is simply that most teams have never applied it to PR. The ones who do tend to find the channel responds the same way as any other: it rewards systematic effort and penalises ad hoc, unstructured approaches.

The tools now exist to make this systematic approach viable even for small teams. The methodology is well understood. The remaining barrier is the decision to treat media outreach as a genuine operational priority rather than an afterthought.

Comments
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Trump Wants Rate Cuts Now — The Iran War and Oil Prices Say Otherwise

Trump Wants Rate Cuts Now — The Iran War and Oil Prices Say Otherwise

TLDR Trump posted on Truth Social demanding Fed Chair Powell cut rates “immediately” rather than wait for next week’s FOMC meeting. Markets have priced out most
Share
Coincentral2026/03/13 15:54
UK GDP arrives at 0% MoM in January vs. 0.2% expected

UK GDP arrives at 0% MoM in January vs. 0.2% expected

The post UK GDP arrives at 0% MoM in January vs. 0.2% expected appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The UK Gross Domestic Product (GDP) arrived at 0% MoM in January
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/03/13 15:59
Egrag Crypto: XRP Could be Around $6 or $7 by Mid-November Based on this Analysis

Egrag Crypto: XRP Could be Around $6 or $7 by Mid-November Based on this Analysis

Egrag Crypto forecasts XRP reaching $6 to $7 by November. Fractal pattern analysis suggests a significant XRP price surge soon. XRP poised for potential growth based on historical price patterns. The cryptocurrency community is abuzz after renowned analyst Egrag Crypto shared an analysis suggesting that XRP could reach $6 to $7 by mid-November. This prediction is based on the study of a fractal pattern observed in XRP’s past price movements, which the analyst believes is likely to repeat itself in the coming months. According to Egrag Crypto, the analysis hinges on fractal patterns, which are used in technical analysis to identify recurring market behavior. Using the past price charts of XRP, the expert has found a certain fractal that looks similar to the existing market structure. The trend indicates that XRP will soon experience a great increase in price, and the asset will probably reach the $6 or $7 range in mid-November. The chart shared by Egrag Crypto points to a rising trend line with several Fibonacci levels pointing to key support and resistance zones. This technical structure, along with the fractal pattern, is the foundation of the price forecast. As XRP continues to follow the predicted trajectory, the analyst sees a strong possibility of it reaching new highs, especially if the fractal behaves as expected. Also Read: Why XRP Price Remains Stagnant Despite Fed Rate Cut #XRP – A Potential Similar Set-Up! I've been analyzing the yellow fractal from a previous setup and trying to fit it into various formations. Based on the fractal formation analysis, it suggests that by mid-November, #XRP could be around $6 to $7! Fractals can indeed be… pic.twitter.com/HmIlK77Lrr — EGRAG CRYPTO (@egragcrypto) September 18, 2025 Fractal Analysis: The Key to XRP’s Potential Surge Fractals are a popular tool for market analysis, as they can reveal trends and potential price movements by identifying patterns in historical data. Egrag Crypto’s focus on a yellow fractal pattern in XRP’s price charts is central to the current forecast. Having contrasted the market scenario at the current period and how it was at an earlier time, the analyst has indicated that XRP might revert to the same price scenario that occurred at a later cycle in the past. Egrag Crypto’s forecast of $6 to $7 is based not just on the fractal pattern but also on broader market trends and technical indicators. The Fibonacci retracements and extensions will also give more insight into the price levels that are likely to be experienced in the coming few weeks. With mid-November in sight, XRP investors and traders will be keeping a close eye on the market to see if Egrag Crypto’s analysis is true. If the price targets are reached, XRP could experience one of its most significant rallies in recent history. Also Read: Top Investor Issues Advance Warning to XRP Holders – Beware of this Risk The post Egrag Crypto: XRP Could be Around $6 or $7 by Mid-November Based on this Analysis appeared first on 36Crypto.
Share
Coinstats2025/09/18 18:36