Your guide on how to find journalists, craft irresistible pitches, and land coverage in NZ media outlets.
Getting media coverage in New Zealand can feel intimidating when you’re building a startup, scaling a company, or launching something new. But the reality is this: most journalists are actively looking for relevant, timely, and interesting stories.
The challenge isn’t getting media attention. It’s learning how to pitch properly.
If you understand how journalists think, how newsrooms operate, and how to position your business as a compelling story, you dramatically improve your chances of landing meaningful PR coverage.
In this guide, we’ll break down a simple but highly effective framework for getting PR in New Zealand – even if you’ve never pitched the media before.
Why PR Still Matters in New Zealand
Before diving into tactics, it’s worth understanding why PR remains one of the most powerful growth levers for New Zealand businesses.
Strong media coverage can help you:
- Build trust and authority
- Attract customers organically
- Generate inbound partnerships
- Raise investor awareness
- Improve SEO through backlinks
- Recruit better talent
- Differentiate yourself from competitors
Unlike paid advertising, PR creates third-party credibility. When a respected outlet writes about your business, it acts as social proof at scale.
For founders in New Zealand’s relatively small ecosystem, one strong media story can create outsized momentum.
Part 1: Finding The Right Journalist To Pitch
One of the biggest mistakes founders make is blasting generic emails to dozens of journalists.
That almost never works.
Instead, successful PR starts with identifying the right reporter – someone who already writes about your industry, technology, or business category.
Start With The Right Media Outlet
Choose a publication that already covers your business vertical.
For example:
| Industry | NZ Media Outlets |
| Startups & Tech | BusinessDesk, NZ Herald, Interest.co.nz |
| SaaS & AI | BusinessDesk, The Spinoff, NBR |
| Consumer Products | Stuff, Viva, Ensemble |
| Agriculture | Farmers Weekly, Rural News |
| Fintech | Interest.co.nz, NBR |
| Innovation | Callaghan Innovation features, Techweek |
If you’re building an AI startup, for example, pitching a journalist who primarily writes about politics probably won’t go well.
Relevance matters.
Search For Your Industry Keywords
Once you’ve chosen an outlet, head to their website and use the search function.
Type in keywords related to your industry:
- AI
- SaaS
- Logistics
- Climate tech
- Cybersecurity
- Manufacturing
- Agritech
- Venture capital
The goal is simple: Find journalists who are already writing about businesses like yours.
Sort Articles By Recency
This step matters more than most people realise.
A journalist may have covered your sector two years ago but no longer writes about it.
Look for:
- Recent articles
- Consistent topic coverage
- Ongoing interest in your category
- Similar companies to yours
If someone has written three AI-related articles in the last fortnight, there’s a strong chance they’re actively looking for more AI stories.
That’s your opening.
Find The Journalist’s Contact Details
Once you identify the right reporter:
- Click into their author profile
- Look for:
- Email address
- X/Twitter profile
- Bluesky
- Contact form
Sometimes journalists list direct contact information. Sometimes they don’t. If not, do a little digging.
Search Google using:
- “(Journalist Name) + LinkedIn”
- “(Journalist Name) + Twitter”
- “(Journalist Name) + email”
- “(Journalist Name) + publication”
You’d be surprised how often this works.
Part 2: Research Before You Pitch
This is where most PR outreach falls apart. Good PR is contextual.
Founders pitch stories without understanding:
- What the journalist writes about
- Their tone
- Their audience
- Their recent coverage
The more personalised your pitch feels, the more likely it gets opened.
Use AI To Analyse Recent Coverage
This is where tools like ChatGPT become incredibly useful.
Instead of manually reading dozens of articles, you can use AI to summarise a journalist’s recent work and identify patterns.
Here’s a simple prompt framework:
Please find any articles that have been written by (INSERT JOURNALIST PROFILE URL) in the last two weeks and summarise a concise pitch for my own business (INSERT YOUR WEBSITE URL).
Please also explain:
- Why this story would be relevant to the journalist
- Which themes overlap with their recent coverage
- Potential story angles
- Suggested headlines
- Key data points worth mentioning
This dramatically improves the quality of your outreach.
Instead of sending a generic “we launched a startup” email, you’re connecting your story directly to topics the journalist already cares about.
That’s a huge difference.
Part 3: Crafting A Pitch Journalists Actually Read
Now comes the most important part: The pitch itself.
Most journalists receive hundreds of emails every week. Your job is not to sound “corporate.”
Your job is to sound:
- Relevant
- Interesting
- Clear
- Human
What Makes A Strong PR Pitch?
A good pitch usually contains:
1. A Personalised Opening
Reference something the journalist recently wrote.
This proves:
- You’ve done your homework
- You’re not mass-emailing people
- Your story is relevant
2. A Clear News Angle
Why should anyone care?
Good examples:
- Funding announcement
- Industry shift
- New technology
- Economic impact
- Regulatory implications
- Unique founder story
- Contrarian insight
3. Supporting Evidence
Data makes stories stronger.
Use:
- Statistics
- Research
- Customer outcomes
- Market trends
- Case studies
4. Suggested Headlines
This is massively underrated. Journalists are busy.
If you can provide compelling headline ideas, you reduce their workload and help shape the narrative.
5. A Soft Close
Don’t demand coverage. Invite conversation.
Keep it casual and respectful.
Example Of A Strong New Zealand PR Pitch
Here’s a refined version of the original example pitch.
Kia ora Peter,
I listened to your recent piece on OpenClaw and thought I’d reach out because our work aligns closely with the AI themes you’ve been covering lately.
At Tacit Intelligence, we’ve recently received $1M in R&D funding from Callaghan Innovation to help capture expert judgement and institutional knowledge using AI.
A 2019 paper published in the Interdisciplinary Journal of Information, Knowledge, and Management estimated that up to 80% of organisational knowledge is tacit — meaning it exists inside people’s heads rather than systems or documentation.
That’s the problem we’re trying to solve.
Rather than building another generic chatbot, we’re developing AI systems that capture and deploy institutional expertise so organisations retain the judgement, decision-making, and operational knowledge that usually disappears when experienced staff leave.
Given your recent focus on applied AI and New Zealand innovation, I thought this might be relevant.
A few possible headline angles:
- The economic cost of losing institutional knowledge — and the NZ startup trying to digitise expert judgement
- From chatbots to judgement engines: NZ company building AI trained on human expertise
- Can AI preserve institutional knowledge in the public sector?
Happy to share more detail if useful — and equally happy for you to tell me I’m barking up the wrong tree.
Cheers,
Kale
Why This Pitch Works
- It’s Contextual
- It’s Timely
- It Contains Substance
The pitch includes:
- Funding
- Research
- Industry implications
- Economic relevance
- It Gives Journalists Angles
Instead of forcing the journalist to invent a story, the email hands them multiple directions to explore.
That’s incredibly valuable.
Part 4: Understanding What Journalists Actually Want
Many founders think PR is about promoting their business. It’s not. Your company is simply the vehicle for the story.
Journalists care about:
- Stories
- Trends
- Tension
- Impact
- Relevance
- Audience interest
The Best PR Angles For New Zealand Businesses
If you’re struggling to find a media angle, these tend to work well in NZ:
Funding Announcements
Especially:
- Callaghan Innovation grants
- Venture capital raises
- Government funding
- Expansion capital
Economic Impact
Stories tied to:
- Productivity
- Skills shortages
- Labour challenges
- Export growth
Unique Founder Journeys
New Zealand media loves authentic founder stories.
Industry Transformation
How technology is changing:
- Farming
- Healthcare
- Logistics
- Construction
- Education
Data & Research
Original insights are highly shareable.
Common PR Mistakes To Avoid
- Mass Emailing Journalists.
- Overhyping. Avoid words like “Revolutionary” and “Game-changing”.
- Writing Huge Emails. Keep is concise – 150–300 words, clear structure, easy to skim.
- Making is all about you. Focus on industry relevance, reader value, broader implications.
How To Follow Up Without Being Annoying
If you don’t hear back:
- Wait 3–5 business days
- Send one polite follow-up
- Keep it short
Example:
Kia ora Peter,
Just bumping this to the top of your inbox in case it got buried.
Happy to share more detail if the story is relevant – no worries at all if not.
Cheers,
Kale
That’s enough.
Don’t spam reporters.
FAQs
Do I need a PR agency to get media coverage?
No. Many founders successfully land press coverage themselves by learning how to pitch effectively and targeting the right journalists.
What’s the best NZ publication for startup coverage?
Outlets like BusinessDesk, The Spinoff, and NZ Herald regularly cover startups, technology, and innovation stories.
How long should a PR pitch email be?
Usually between 150 and 300 words. Journalists prefer concise, scannable emails.
Should I include attachments?
Generally no. It’s better to include links and offer additional material if requested.
What makes a story newsworthy?
Timeliness, relevance, economic impact, novelty, strong data, or a compelling human angle.
How many journalists should I pitch?
Start with a small, highly relevant list rather than mass emailing dozens of reporters.
Can I get PR coverage without hiring a PR agency?
Yes. Many startups, founders, and small businesses secure media coverage without using a PR agency. By researching the right journalists, personalising your outreach, and presenting a strong news angle, it is possible to build relationships with reporters and earn coverage independently. While PR agencies can provide expertise and connections, effective media pitching can be done in-house with the right approach.
What makes a story newsworthy to New Zealand journalists?
New Zealand journalists typically look for stories that are timely, relevant, and interesting to their audience. Common newsworthy angles include funding announcements, business growth, industry trends, economic impact, new research, technological innovation, and compelling founder stories. The stronger the broader relevance beyond your company, the more likely a journalist is to consider covering it.



