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Pitch Email Generator

Pitch Email Generator — pitch writing expert. Powered by free AI, no signup required.

Your prompt

Free, no signup — describe whatever you need.

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Describe what you need on the left, hit Generate, and the response will appear here. Send follow-ups to refine — your chat keeps context for up to 10 turns.

  • Try: product or idea: ... · target: ... · unique value: ...

About Pitch Email Generator

Pitch Email Generator writes the email that asks for something specific — a meeting, a podcast slot, a press feature, an introduction, a partnership. Tell it the recipient, the ask, and what you bring to the table, and it returns a persuasive email built around the value to them, not you.

Who this tool is for

  • Startup founders pitching journalists, investors, and potential customers
  • PR professionals pitching reporters and producers for client coverage
  • Podcasters and writers pitching themselves as guests or sources
  • Business development leads pitching channel partners and integrations
  • Job seekers pitching themselves for a role that is not posted yet

Real use cases

  • Pitch a TechCrunch reporter on covering your Series A announcement
  • Pitch yourself as a guest on a podcast in your industry
  • Pitch a strategic partnership between two SaaS companies with overlapping ICPs
  • Pitch a customer success story to a B2B trade publication
  • Pitch yourself for a role at a company that has not posted the opening you want

How to use Pitch Email Generator

  • Name the recipient by name, role, and what they care about (the beat they cover, the deals they fund, the role they hire for)
  • State your one specific ask in the first paragraph — vague pitches ("would love to chat") have under 5% reply rates
  • Lead with the value to them, not your story: why this is interesting to their audience, fund, or business
  • Add one piece of credibility (traction, named customers, prior coverage, mutual connections)
  • Pick length — under 150 words for first cold pitch, 200–250 for warm pitch with context

Tips for better results

  • Reporter pitches under 100 words have 2–3x higher reply rates than longer ones (per BuzzStream and Muck Rack benchmarks)
  • Always research the recipient and reference their recent work in the first line — it signals you did not just blast a list
  • Skip the bcc-everyone approach. One personalized pitch to the right recipient beats 50 generic ones for press, partnerships, and exec intros
  • For investor pitches, lead with the metric or insight that matters most — never bury your traction below the fold

Frequently asked questions

When should I follow up on a pitch that did not get a response?

Once, 5–7 business days later. A second follow-up after that is rarely worth it for cold pitches. Move on and re-engage in 2–3 months with new news.

Should I send my pitch as an attachment, in the body, or as a link?

Always in the body for the first email. Attachments and links get blocked by spam filters and ignored by busy recipients. Save the deck/portfolio for the second email after they reply.

How is this different from a cold email?

Cold emails focus on getting a meeting from a long list of prospects. Pitch emails focus on a specific opportunity with a specific person — coverage, partnership, guest slot — where personalization matters more than scale.

Should I include the subject line or generate it separately?

Generate it separately. Pitch subjects are short and angle-driven (under 50 chars), and you want to test 2–3 variants before sending to your top picks.

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