So, you registered your Fringe show, rehearsals are well under way, and you’ve selected the perfect typeface for your poster… now what? Media coverage is a great way to get the word out there and help get bums in seats. But before you start firing off emails like a confetti cannon, letโs talk about how to pitch like a pro:
๐ Make It Easy โ Your email should be short & sharp: who, what, when, where, and why they should care. Attach a high-res promo image (NO TEXT) and include your media release (1-pager). No giant PDFs or 10MB files, please.
๐ Do Your Homework โ Not all media are created equal. Check what the publication/journalist actually covers before you pitch. Research recent articles/reviews they have done to assess if your show aligns with what they are interested in covering.
๐ Think Outside the Box โ There is limited Arts media coverage & every artist and producer under the sun will be pitching stories and requesting reviews! What else does your show offer that appeals to media that sit outside of the Arts-space? A food writer wonโt care about your groundbreaking clown-tragedy… unless you also have pies (are there pies?!)
๐ Donโt Spam โ Sending the same email five times wonโt get you coverage; it will get you blocked. Follow up once (politely). If theyโre keen, theyโll let you know.
๐ Timing Matters โ Journalists work to deadlines. Pitch early – don’t request a review the day before your show opens!
๐ Be Ready โ If a journo bites, respond fast! They might need an interview now. And always offer up comps, this is a value exchange after all.
Happy pitching!