Strategy 8 min read

PR Timing Strategy

The same pitch can succeed or fail based entirely on when you send it. Here's how to time your PR efforts for maximum impact.

Last updated: January 2025 Includes 1 template

Best Days to Pitch

Tuesday - Thursday: The Sweet Spot

These midweek days consistently have the highest open and response rates.

  • Tuesday: Journalists are past Monday catch-up, looking for stories
  • Wednesday: Peak productivity, good response rates
  • Thursday: Still strong, but afternoon response drops

Monday Challenges

  • Inbox overload from the weekend
  • Meetings and planning consume the morning
  • Can work for late-afternoon pitches

Friday Considerations

  • Lower response rates
  • Journalists often wrap up the week
  • Can work for Monday stories (give them the weekend to prepare)

Weekend

  • Generally avoid for pitches
  • Exception: Breaking news that can't wait
  • Some journalists do check email; use sparingly

Best Times to Send Pitches

Morning Sweet Spot: 6-9 AM (Journalist's Timezone)

  • Your email is at the top of their inbox
  • Journalists often scan emails early
  • Allows full day for response and interviews

Timezone Strategy

  • Most tech journalists are in ET, PT, or UK timezones
  • Aim for their local morning
  • If unsure, 9 AM ET works broadly

Times to Avoid

  • During lunch (12-2 PM)
  • End of day (after 4 PM)
  • Very early morning (before 6 AM)

Seasonal Considerations

January

New year trends, predictions, "state of" articles. Good for thought leadership.

Q1 (January - March)

Budget season, companies making decisions. B2B stories do well.

Summer (June - August)

Slower news period. Less competition, but also less coverage. Journalists take vacations.

Fall (September - October)

Back to business. Good time for announcements before year-end.

November - December

Year-end reviews, "best of" lists. Black Friday dominates late November. Holiday slowdown mid-December.

Dead Periods to Avoid

  • Week of Thanksgiving (US)
  • December 23 - January 2
  • Major tech conference weeks (CES, WWDC, Google I/O)

News Cycle Awareness

When Breaking News Dominates

  • Major political events
  • Tech industry crises
  • Natural disasters
  • Major company failures or layoffs

When these happen, hold non-urgent announcements. Your news will get buried.

When to Accelerate

  • Your news relates to a current story (newsjacking)
  • Competitor just made news (you can provide contrast)
  • Trend pieces are being written about your space

Newsjacking Timing

React to breaking news within hours, not days. Journalists write follow-up pieces quickly; you need to be available immediately.

Follow-Up Timing

First Follow-Up

  • Timing: 3-5 business days after initial pitch
  • Approach: Short, add new value or angle

Second Follow-Up

  • Timing: 7-10 days after first follow-up
  • Approach: Last touch, offer different angle

When to Stop

After two follow-ups with no response, move on. You can re-pitch for a different story later.

Re-Pitching Later

  • Wait at least 4-6 weeks
  • Have a genuinely different angle
  • Don't reference the unanswered pitch

Building a PR Calendar

Annual PR Planning Template

Quarterly Goals

  • Q1: [Major initiative, e.g., funding announcement]
  • Q2: [Major initiative, e.g., product launch]
  • Q3: [Major initiative, e.g., expansion]
  • Q4: [Major initiative, e.g., year-end milestone]

Monthly Activities

  • Week 1: HARO monitoring, relationship outreach
  • Week 2: Thought leadership content
  • Week 3: Campaign preparation
  • Week 4: Pitching and follow-up

Key Dates to Track

  • Industry conferences
  • Competitor typical announcement times
  • Publication editorial calendars
  • Award nomination deadlines
  • Holiday blackout periods

Planning Tips

  • Start planning 3-6 months ahead for major announcements
  • Build flexibility for opportunistic PR
  • Review and adjust quarterly
  • Track what timing worked best