HARO Strategy for Free PR
HARO (Help a Reporter Out) connects journalists seeking sources with experts. Here's how to use it to get quoted in Forbes, Business Insider, and more—for free.
What is HARO?
HARO (Help a Reporter Out) is a free service that connects journalists with expert sources. Three times daily, HARO sends emails with journalist queries across categories like business, tech, lifestyle, and more.
How It Works
- Journalists submit queries for sources they need
- HARO sends these queries to subscribers
- You respond to relevant queries via email
- If selected, you get quoted (with a link to your company)
Success Potential
HARO can land you coverage in major publications: Forbes, Inc., Business Insider, NYT, and more. But competition is high—popular queries receive 50-200+ responses.
Getting Started
Account Setup
- Sign up at helpareporter.com
- Select relevant categories
- Choose your plan (free tier is fine to start)
Email Schedule
HARO sends emails three times daily (EST):
- 5:35 AM
- 12:35 PM
- 5:35 PM
Time Investment
Expect to spend 15-30 minutes scanning each email and 20-30 minutes crafting a quality response. Budget 1-2 hours daily for active HARO work.
HARO Alternatives
- Qwoted — More context about publications, modern interface
- SourceBottle — Similar to HARO, good for global opportunities
- JournoRequests — Twitter-based journalist requests
- Featured.com — Premium service with higher-quality opportunities
Try multiple platforms to maximize opportunities.
Finding Relevant Queries
Scanning Efficiently
Most HARO emails contain 30-50 queries. Scan for:
- Your industry or expertise keywords
- Publications you'd want to be in
- Queries you can genuinely help with
Evaluating Opportunities
Before responding, check:
- Publication quality: Is it a site you'd want to be on?
- Query specificity: Vague queries = more competition
- Deadline: Can you respond in time?
- Fit: Are you genuinely qualified?
Crafting Winning Responses
Response Structure
- Opening: Reference the query, establish credentials (2 sentences)
- Answer: Direct, quotable response (2-3 paragraphs)
- Credentials: Brief bio establishing expertise (1-2 sentences)
- Availability: Offer to expand or provide more (1 sentence)
What Makes Responses Win
- Speed: Respond within 30 minutes for best odds
- Specificity: Concrete examples, not generic advice
- Quotability: Write in complete, quotable sentences
- Credentials: Clear expertise relevant to the query
Response Templates
Template 1: Expert Commentary
Subject: [Query Topic] - [Your Name], [Company]
Hi [Journalist Name],
Responding to your query about [topic]. As the [Title] of [Company] with [X years] in [industry], I can offer some insight.
[2-3 paragraphs of direct, quotable commentary. Write as if being quoted. Include specific examples or data points.]
Brief bio: [Name] is the [Title] of [Company], [one-line company description]. [One relevant credential.]
Happy to expand on any of this or jump on a call if helpful.
[Name]
[Email]
[Phone]
Template 2: Data/Statistics Response
Subject: [Topic] Data - [Your Name], [Company]
Hi,
For your piece on [topic], here's some relevant data from [Company]:
[Specific statistic or finding #1]
[Specific statistic or finding #2]
[Specific statistic or finding #3]
Context: [Brief explanation of how you gathered this data and what it means.]
I can provide additional data, graphics, or commentary as needed.
[Name]
[Title], [Company]
Template 3: Personal Story Response
Subject: [Topic] - Founder Experience
Hi,
Your query resonates with my experience. When I [relevant situation], I learned that [key insight].
[2-3 paragraphs telling a specific story with concrete details. Include what happened, what you learned, and what you'd do differently.]
Background: I'm [Name], founder of [Company]. [Brief credential.]
Happy to share more details or photos if useful for your story.
[Name]
Template 4: Product/Service Mention
Subject: Source for [Topic] Article
Hi,
For your piece on [topic], [Company] might be worth mentioning.
We [what you do] for [audience]. [Key differentiator or metric.]
[Relevant quote about the topic from you or your CEO]
Happy to provide more information, screenshots, or connect you with customers who can share their experience.
[Name]
Common Mistakes
- Being too promotional: Focus on helping the journalist, not selling
- Missing deadlines: Late responses are ignored
- Generic responses: Address the specific query
- No credentials: Prove why you're qualified
- Poor formatting: Make it easy to read and quote
Advanced Tactics
Speed Optimization
- Set up email filters for HARO
- Prepare template responses for common topics
- Check HARO immediately when emails arrive
Building Relationships
After being quoted:
- Thank the journalist on Twitter
- Share the article (tagging them)
- Connect on LinkedIn
- Offer yourself for future stories
Tracking Success
Track every response:
- Query topic and publication
- Date submitted
- Outcome (quoted/not quoted)
- Link to coverage if successful