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My startup got mentioned on live TV! Here's how you can do it, too.

Getting mentioned on TV can be either a very big achievement for your PR department, a very expensive endeavor of buying a feature/ad, or a lucky fluke for your business.

One thing is clear - it will result in your name getting noticed, you receiving more users or selling more of your product. And exponentially expand your authority and credibility as a brand and voice in your industry.

Recently, my travel-tech startup Ratepunk got mentioned on CNBC TV, which resulted in extensive media coverage and probably our biggest breakthrough in the US market, PR-wise!

And the best part was that it was free and organic.

This is how we at Ratepunk did it.

Finding the right journalist.

Hunt for relevant headlines and keep up with the news.

At Ratepunk, we're all about travel, so we regularly review travel news and look where we can add our input, use our data to provide value for the journalist we want to reach out to

relevant

When we find an angle we can pursue, we look at what we have and what we can provide and reach to that journalist with an idea and an open-ended email to contact us live for a comment or any further details to ensure the best for the article if there is even a slight sign of interest towards the topic we chose to pursue.

email

To get the contact information of the journalist, you can use various methods.

  • find their personal page by googling their name
  • use muckrack (expensive)
  • or use contactout - basically, a muckrack that is cheaper with a flexible free trial. This is our preferred method

okay, easy

It is very important to provide value with your idea. Be interested and invested in your idea for the article, and provide quality content for the journalist. Create good-looking spreadsheets and so on.

data
one of the spreadsheets we provided bundled with our pitch for the article

Leverage the unique aspects of your business to stand out.

We at Ratepunk collect a ton of data that our users search and look for. We see what the lowest prices are on the internet for all the booking websites, and we realized that this data is unique and no one else is really tracking this; that's why we opted out to go with this angle when pursuing this particular journalist - she has written about cheapest hotels before so we swoop in and said

data

"Hey, you can write about this topic from this angle by using our data."

So yeah, don't forget to track data, and use it to improve your product and push your identity and authority forward through PR, marketing, and social media strategy.

Live contact.

One big part of our TV success was my quickly following up with a call with a journalist to have a conversation about the matter.

Do not be afraid of live calls and interviews - it's the best way to get your point and information across without any confusion while also making real contact with a person whom you can start to develop a professional relationship with, which will potentially bear even more fruit in the long run.

And that's it!

  • Find the right journalist who writes about your niche.
  • Provide value with your pitch, research what they write about, and what subjects are relevant to you.
  • Leverage the unique aspects of your business to get yourself mentioned.
  • Make real, live contact; know what you're talking about.

Success.

  1. 2

    It's inspiring to see your strategy and success, and it definitely serves as a great roadmap for other entrepreneurs. Thanks Justin for sharing your journey and insights!

  2. 2

    I love this!
    I had not priorized the data/analytics tracking features, but now I see how they help with PR.

    Thinking of it, that's pretty much 100% of ProfitWell's PR strategy too: Patrick Campbell has been spending years going from conference to podcast talking about the aggregated data his tool gives him on the industry.

    Thanks for this post @Justin_Alb !

    One question: how did you leverage the PR after the live tv show was ended? How do you use it in your marketing?

    Sebastien

    1. 2

      So basically, being mentioned on TV gave Ratepunk and me a ton of credibility.

      I, of course, shared the fact that we got mentioned on TV and on every social media.

      We are working on implementing this TV thing into ads, whether it's an image of the TV feature or a video ad of getting "Ratepunk" said on live TV.

      Posts like this are a part of marketing, too! Helps me position myself as an expert and an authority figure in startup communities all over the internet.

      Purely PR-wise, we are pitching what got us success on TV to various other publications and so on. If it works - don't change it :)

      Mentioning the fact that Ratepunk got mentioned on TV when talking/pitching journalists is an approach we're trying out, too, even though "flexing" your publications and mentions to journalists of other publications/networks is generally not an advisable thing to do.

      It's a first for us, so we're still testing things, maybe I'll write a post on how to ride the publicity wave when we fully figure it out :)

  3. 2

    Sounds amazing would love to do this to with our company someday!

  4. 2

    Good work, will try that out.

  5. 2

    Hey Justin! Great job there. Congrats on the exposure!

  6. 2

    Wow. I always felt like it was daunting to create cold-emails and reach out to journalists. It always feels like a large brick wall and there's no way to scale it to see that horizon (in your case, the horizon being getting featured on the news). Hopefully one day that can become a reality.

    1. 1

      It's not that scary!

  7. 2

    Big thanks for sharing your experience, especially pointing out the pitch and data stuff. We took a swing at reaching out to journalists once, but no luck so far. Gonna tweak the pitch and give it another shot!

    1. 1

      It's all in the pitch

  8. 2

    Really clever technique! Thanks for sharing the insights

  9. 2

    Not only was this post a goldmine of actionable information, but I was also looking for a tool or app EXACTLY like Ratepunk 🙏🙏

    I used to use OnePitch, but now that it's a subscription I'm wondering if it's worth it anymore. Going to look into contactout for sure.

  10. 2

    This is incredibly clever and unique. I like how you targeted your pitch to someone who was already writing about a similar area, instead of wide net cold emails

  11. 2

    This is an interesting approch in getting clients. And thanks for reminding me (us) of this promotion channel, through reaching journalists but also bloggers or even youtubers etc.

  12. 1

    It's an amazing technique to get results faster, great to learn more from you. Thanks, mate!

  13. 1

    I want to reach out to a community (for my product, it would be a group of parents interested in coding for kids or educators), but most groups on Facebook are filled with advertisements and are not my real target audience. Do you have any suggestions for this kind of need?

    1. 1

      Great question. I'm also working on some community-related marketing strategies at the moment, but I can't really help you out because I am still learning, just like you.

      I'll for sure make a post when I get lucky

  14. 1

    Have you had luck with HARO?

    1. 1

      Yes, HARO is now called Connectively but it is one of the tools we used along with Qwoted and Terkel. Not for TV though, purely for getting mentions in the media, I talk all about it in my other ALL PR related article on Indiehackers

      See the article here: https://www.indiehackers.com/post/how-we-got-mentioned-in-washington-post-the-telegraph-msn-forbes-and-many-more-with-0-press-budget-15417b22d8

  15. 1

    Really helpful post, thanks! How many journalists did you reach out to before getting one interested?

    1. 2

      Surprisingly, not a lot. I'd say in the range of 20-ish. I probably got lucky, it seemed like an impossible task, and then it just kind of happened. :)

      1. 2

        Awesome! Great strategy to follow :)

  16. 2

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