Startup PR 101: Getting Press Without an Agency
The complete guide to building your startup's PR strategy from scratch. Learn how to think like a journalist, craft compelling stories, and land coverage in top publications—all without spending $10,000/month on an agency.
Why PR Matters for Startups
Press coverage does something that paid advertising can't: it builds credibility. When TechCrunch writes about your startup, that's a third-party validation that no amount of Facebook ads can buy.
Here's what PR can do for your startup:
Credibility and Trust
Coverage in respected publications signals to customers, investors, and partners that your company is legitimate. It's social proof at scale. When a prospect is evaluating your product against a competitor, that Forbes article tips the scales.
SEO Benefits
Every piece of coverage typically includes a backlink to your website. These high-authority links from news sites dramatically improve your search rankings. One TechCrunch article can be worth more than months of link building.
Investor Attention
VCs read tech publications religiously. Coverage puts you on their radar without a cold email. Many founders report that their funding conversations started with "I saw your article in..."
Recruiting
Top talent wants to work at companies making news. Press coverage helps you stand out in a competitive hiring market and attracts candidates who are already excited about what you're building.
When to Start Thinking About PR
The best time to start PR is before you need it. Building journalist relationships and crafting your narrative takes time. Start laying groundwork 3-6 months before any major announcement.
That said, you need something to talk about. Wait until you have:
- A working product (even if beta)
- Some early traction or interesting data
- A clear story angle beyond "we launched"
The Startup PR Mindset
The biggest mistake founders make is thinking PR is about their product. It's not. PR is about stories, and your product is just one element of the story.
You Are the Story, Not Your Product
Journalists don't write about products—they write about people, trends, conflicts, and ideas. Your job is to connect your startup to a larger narrative that readers care about.
"Nobody cares about your product. They care about the problem you're solving and why now is the moment it can finally be solved."
Think Like a Journalist
Journalists have one job: write stories their readers want to read. They're judged on clicks, engagement, and whether editors assign them more stories. Before pitching, ask yourself:
- Would I click on this headline?
- What makes this relevant to the publication's readers?
- Why is this interesting beyond my company?
Long-term Relationship Building
PR is not a transactional exchange. The founders who get the most coverage are the ones who build genuine relationships with journalists over time. They're helpful even when they have nothing to pitch. They become trusted sources.
This means:
- Responding quickly when journalists reach out
- Providing background info without expecting coverage
- Connecting journalists with other interesting sources
- Sharing useful insights about your industry
What Makes Something Newsworthy?
Before you pitch anything, it needs to pass the newsworthiness test. Journalists evaluate stories against these seven criteria:
1. Timeliness
News is called news for a reason. Is this happening now? Is there urgency? A funding round is news the day you announce it. Three months later, it's history.
2. Significance/Impact
How many people does this affect? A startup serving a niche of 1,000 people is less newsworthy than one changing an industry of millions—unless that niche is incredibly influential.
3. Proximity
Is this relevant to the publication's audience? A local business journal cares about your Chicago headquarters. TechCrunch cares about your Silicon Valley implications.
4. Prominence
Are notable people or companies involved? A seed round from unknown angels is less newsworthy than the same amount from Andreessen Horowitz.
5. Human Interest
Is there an emotional angle? Founder overcame adversity. Company is on a mission to help underserved population. Technology reunites families.
6. Conflict/Controversy
Is there tension? David vs Goliath. Industry disruption. Challenging conventional wisdom. (Use carefully—you don't want to create enemies.)
7. Novelty/Uniqueness
Is this genuinely new? First of its kind? An unexpected approach? If your pitch could be about any of 50 similar startups, it's not novel enough.
Newsworthiness Checklist
Before pitching, your story should check at least 3-4 of these boxes:
- [ ] Timely (happening now or tied to current events)
- [ ] Significant (affects many people or important people)
- [ ] Proximate (relevant to the publication's audience)
- [ ] Prominent (involves notable names)
- [ ] Human interest (emotional or personal angle)
- [ ] Conflicting (challenges status quo)
- [ ] Novel (genuinely new or unique)
Types of PR Opportunities
Not all PR is created equal. Here are the main types of opportunities and when to pursue each:
Company Announcements
The classic PR opportunity. Funding rounds, product launches, major partnerships, significant milestones (1M users, profitability). These are your tentpole moments.
Best for: Building awareness, credibility markers
Challenge: You need something genuinely newsworthy to announce
Founder Thought Leadership
Position yourself as an expert through bylined articles, podcast appearances, and quoted commentary. This builds personal brand and company credibility without needing news.
Best for: Ongoing visibility between announcements
Challenge: Requires genuine expertise and insights
Industry Commentary (Newsjacking)
React quickly to industry news with your unique perspective. When a competitor raises funding, when regulation changes, when a trend emerges—you can be the expert voice.
Best for: Quick wins, building journalist relationships
Challenge: Requires speed and genuine insight
Data and Research Stories
Original data is gold for journalists. Analyze your user data for interesting trends. Survey your customers. Commission research. Give journalists exclusive access to findings.
Best for: Building authority, high-quality backlinks
Challenge: Requires meaningful data and analysis resources
Customer Success Stories
A customer's transformation is more compelling than your product description. Help journalists tell stories about how real people solved real problems.
Best for: Product credibility, case study content
Challenge: Need customer permission and cooperation
Trend Pieces
Position your company as part of a larger trend story. Journalists love "the rise of X" articles, and your startup can be a key example.
Best for: Category creation, market validation
Challenge: Less control over final narrative
Building Your PR Foundation
Before you send a single pitch, you need these elements in place:
Your Core Narrative
What's the one-sentence story of your company? Not what you do, but why it matters. This narrative should connect your product to a larger trend or problem.
Narrative Formula
[Problem] is affecting [who]. [Company] is [unique approach] to [outcome].
Example: "Remote work has isolated millions of workers from meaningful connections. Watercooler uses AI to recreate serendipitous office conversations in Slack, helping distributed teams build culture."
Your Angle Library
Develop 3-5 different angles you can pitch depending on the journalist and publication. Each angle emphasizes different aspects of your story:
- The Origin Story: Why you started this company
- The Trend Story: How you fit into a larger movement
- The Data Story: What your numbers reveal
- The Contrarian Story: Why conventional wisdom is wrong
- The Human Story: Who you're helping and how
Your Media Kit
Create a press page with everything a journalist might need: company overview, founder bios, high-res logos, product screenshots, key stats, and contact info. See our complete media kit guide.
Your Media List
Build a targeted list of journalists who actually cover your space. Quality over quantity—50 well-researched contacts beat 500 random emails. Learn how to build your media list.
Tracking Setup
Set up Google Alerts for your company name, competitors, and key industry terms. Monitor mentions and track your coverage. You can't improve what you don't measure.
The PR Process Overview
Here's the complete process for any PR campaign:
1. Research and Targeting
For each campaign, identify which journalists are most likely to cover your story. Look at what they've written recently, what topics they care about, and how your story fits their beat.
2. Pitch Creation
Craft a concise, personalized pitch email. Lead with why the journalist should care, include the key facts, and make it easy to say yes. Get our pitch email templates.
3. Outreach
Send your pitches. For major announcements, consider offering an exclusive to a top-tier publication first, then expanding to others after the initial story runs.
4. Follow-up
No response doesn't mean no interest. Follow up once after 3-5 days with new information or a different angle. Know when to move on.
5. Interview Preparation
When a journalist wants to talk, be ready. Know your key messages, anticipate tough questions, and have data and examples at your fingertips.
6. Post-Coverage Amplification
Coverage is just the beginning. Share it on social media, include it in email newsletters, add it to your press page, and thank the journalist publicly and privately.
DIY vs Agency: When to Hire Help
What You Can Do Yourself
- Building your narrative and angles
- Creating your media list
- Pitching to journalists
- Managing your press page
- Responding to HARO queries (see our HARO guide)
- Building journalist relationships
When Agencies Make Sense
- You're announcing a Series B or later (high stakes, high volume)
- You're entering a new market and need local connections
- You're managing a crisis situation
- You have more money than time
- You need guaranteed volume of coverage
How to Evaluate Agencies
If you do hire help, ask these questions:
- Who specifically will work on my account?
- What coverage have you gotten for similar startups?
- Can I speak with current clients?
- What does success look like in 6 months?
- How do you measure and report results?
Expect to pay $5,000-$15,000/month for a reputable startup-focused agency. Anything cheaper is likely junior staff or spray-and-pray tactics.
Common PR Mistakes
Mass-Blasting Generic Pitches
Sending the same pitch to 500 journalists is a fast way to get blacklisted. Journalists talk to each other. They know when they're on a blast list. Personalize every pitch.
Pitching Non-News
"We exist" is not news. "We updated our UI" is not news. If it wouldn't interest anyone outside your company, it's not ready to pitch.
Bad Timing
Don't pitch on Friday afternoon, during major holidays, or when breaking news dominates the cycle. See our timing guide for optimal windows.
Being Unprepared for Interviews
You got the interview! Don't blow it by rambling, giving inconsistent numbers, or freezing on basic questions. Practice your talking points.
Not Following Up
Journalists get hundreds of emails daily. A polite follow-up after 3-5 days is expected and appreciated. Just don't overdo it.
Expecting Immediate Results
PR is a long game. Building relationships and earning coverage takes months, not days. Adjust your expectations accordingly.
PR Tools and Resources
Media Databases
- Muck Rack - Comprehensive journalist database (paid)
- Cision - Enterprise-level media database (paid)
- Prowly - Affordable option for startups (paid)
- Hunter.io - Find journalist emails (freemium)
Monitoring Tools
- Google Alerts - Free mention monitoring
- Mention - Real-time media monitoring (paid)
- Brand24 - Social and web monitoring (paid)
Email Tracking
- Mailtrack - Simple Gmail tracking (freemium)
- Mixmax - Advanced email tracking (paid)
- Streak - CRM with email tracking (freemium)
Free PR Opportunities
- HARO - Connect with journalists seeking sources
- Qwoted - HARO alternative with more context
- SourceBottle - Another journalist query service
Measuring PR Success
PR is notoriously hard to measure, but you should track these metrics:
Coverage Metrics
- Number of placements
- Publication tier (Tier 1 = TechCrunch, NYT; Tier 2 = industry publications; Tier 3 = local/blogs)
- Article prominence (headline mention vs. passing reference)
- Sentiment (positive, neutral, negative)
Business Impact
- Website traffic from coverage (use UTM parameters)
- Leads or signups attributable to PR
- Inbound investor interest
- Hiring pipeline changes
SEO Impact
- New backlinks acquired
- Domain authority changes
- Branded search volume
For a detailed breakdown, see our complete guide to measuring PR success.