How to Write Cold Pitches That Get Opened

How to Write Cold Pitches That Get Opened

Stop sending generic press releases. Learn how to write short, human-centered, high-conversion intro emails that busy music editors will actually open and read.

Stop sending generic press releases. Learn how to write short, human-centered, high-conversion intro emails that busy music editors will actually open and read.

How to Write Cold Pitches That Get Opened

How to Write Cold Pitches That Get Opened

Cold Pitching Without the Spam: How to Write Emails That Get Opened

In a music world drowning in automated PR blasts and AI-generated noise, the simplest tool you have is your own voice. Music journalists and editors are buried in mail, and they can smell a “template” from a mile away. If your pitch looks like a machine wrote it, it’s going straight to the trash—usually before they’ve finished their first coffee.

The secret to a high-conversion pitch isn’t a clever hack; it’s just treating the person on the other end like a human being. You’re asking for their time, so show them you’ve actually earned it.

Here is how to write a pitch that doesn’t feel like spam.

1. Subject Lines: Be a Human, Not a Bot

Forget the “Urgent: Feature Opportunity” tactics. Those screams for attention just get filtered out. Your subject line should be clear, professional, and signal that you’ve done your homework.

  • Be specific: Mention the artist, the genre, or a hook that matters.

  • Keep it brief: 6–10 words is plenty.

  • Context is king: If you’re writing to someone because you liked their recent piece, say so.

Try this: Review/Feature: [Artist Name]’s new track “Motion” (For your [Column Name] column)

2. The Hook: Prove You’re Not a “Spray-and-Pray” Sender

Editors know when you’ve sent the exact same email to 50 other people. Prove you aren’t doing that by leading with a genuine connection to their work.

  • The “Why You” Rule: Point to a recent article of theirs or a specific beat they cover. If they’re a writer who obsesses over shoegaze, don’t pitch them a mainstream pop record. It shows you aren’t paying attention.

  • Connect the dots: Tell them why this artist or track matters to their specific audience.

3. The Body: Respect Their Time

Editors are busy. If your pitch looks like a wall of text, they’ll skip it. Keep it under 150 words.

  • Lead with the story: What makes this track or artist interesting? Is there a unique angle? Don’t bury the lead in fluff.

  • Write how you speak: If you find yourself using buzzwords like “synergy,” “landscape,” or “disruptive,” delete them. If you wouldn’t say it at a bar or in a meeting, don’t write it in an email.

  • Keep the bio lean: One sentence on who they are and one on their biggest win is enough.

4. The Call to Action (CTA): Keep it Low-Pressure

Don’t ask for a 30-minute interview or a phone call in the first email. That’s a massive ask for someone who doesn’t know you.

  • Make it easy: Give them a direct link to the music (SoundCloud or a private streaming link) that doesn’t force them to log in or download anything.

  • Ask a simple question: End with something that’s easy to answer, like: “Would you be open to hearing the full EP if I sent the private link over?”

5. The Real Talk

  • Timing: Avoid Monday mornings when their inbox is a disaster zone. Mid-week, early in the morning, is usually the sweet spot.

  • Follow up once: If you haven’t heard back in a week, send one polite, short nudge. If they don’t bite, let it go. It’s rarely personal—editors are just stretched thin.

  • Take the “L” as intel: If a pitch gets rejected, treat it as a lesson. Maybe the story wasn’t right for them, or their editorial calendar is full. Use that to sharpen your approach for the next one.

Quick Checklist

  • Subject: Is it clear and relevant?

  • Opening: Did I mention why I’m emailing this specific writer?

  • Body: Is it under 150 words? Did I cut the corporate jargon?

  • Assets: Can they listen to the music in one click?

  • Closing: Is the question easy to answer?

Final word: Music journalism is a relationship business. Your pitch isn’t a transaction; it’s the start of a conversation. Be a real person, respect their expertise, and the responses will follow.

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