Warm Pitch Strategies to Connect With Magazines and Businesses

Thanks to our wonderful writer community for this topic! If you've ever wondered how to send a warm pitch to a magazine or how to get a magazine editor to warm up to you, how to send some pitches to a warm business client lead, or what's the format for a warm pitch, this is the livestream episode for you!

We're going over all the steps for warm pitch tips, how to send more, how to make them work on your schedule, and when they're most important to send.

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Warm Pitch Strategies to Connect With Magazines and Businesses

Have you ever wondered how you can send more warm pitches to businesses and magazines? Like what does that actually mean? How can you send more of them and how can you make them actually effective? Hey Holly. Hey Vicky. I always love the wave. I wish I could do like, I guess if I add a comment, Oh, you know what?

I can't add emojis in here, but I would if I could. So we're gonna talk about warm pitch tips for both businesses and magazines, and I'm gonna do magazines a little bit first because I think that one is a little bit easier to. You know, talk about, So, Oh, we also have two friends. One of them . One of them is completely under under there, and the other one's on the support duck.

There we go. They're all hanging out. Actually, everybody's quiet right now, so. We're lucky, . All right, so the first thing that we're gonna talk about, number one, Hold on. We gotta find the numbers. There we go. Number one. So number one, what we're gonna talk about is how to send these pitches. So first we're gonna talk about magazine.

1) How to send pitches to warm business or magazine leads

So what you need to know first with warm pitches is you actually have to talk to someone. It's not warm unless you have already talked to someone. Okay? So this was something that I felt like a lot of writers didn't get. They're like, Well, how do you make it warm? Like you would have to talk to someone, right?

Like there's a place where you can send like a warm, cold email, right? Like you can send something that's, um, has some nice compliments or has some nice things in it. But it's not really warm unless you've talked to someone . So here's the deal. First we have to talk to someone. So with magazines, when we're doing our warm pitches, what that means is a couple different things.

So the first thing with magazines is that you would already send a pitch, right? Let's say, So your first scenario is you sent a pitch to a magazine, they accepted it, you wrote the article. Your warm pitch after that would be a second piece. So what that means is you're like, Yay, my pitch got accept. You go off and you write the piece, right?

You go off, you write the piece, and then when you turn the piece in, you send another pitch or two and you're like, Hey, I hope you like this article. I also have a couple other ideas I think might be a fit for your magazine. Boom, a couple pitches. That's how you warm pitch. The first scenario is your stuff already got accepted and you're like, Okay, cool.

When I turn in my article, I'm gonna send a couple of other pitches to them. You already have a warm connection, right? They already accepted your pitch. You wrote the article, you got the assign. All good . And uh, when you're kind of like following, like, it's not even following up. It's like you're turning in your assignment.

When you send those extra pitches, now that you have this warm connection, your editor could be more willing to accept the pitches. They could be, um, more willing to work with you on them if they're just not quite right. But at least you have a warm connection with that editor where you can send more pitches.

And the idea is like if they get back to you and they say, Okay, those warm pitches, they're like, those are. You know, they're not a fit. You can be like, Okay, cool. Let me pitch you again. Now you have this like nice little follow up schedule of sending more pitches, but they're all warm because you've already turned in, Assign an assignment.

You already know that editor Uhoh Chaos. Chaos has sprung Barry. No, you can't sit in her thing. No, you can only stay in yours, . Hold on. We have mass destruction. You have to sit in your own thing. Okay? You sit in your own. And then mini can sit in hers. Come here. Mini bean. Come on, mini bean. Come here. Mini bean.

Come over to your little habit hole. Come on. Good girl. All right. Lay down. Here you go. Good job. Okay. Chaos averted. Sort of . Everybody. . You want me to pull this off a little bit? Now they think they get something. You guys are so ridiculous. All right, let's do a quick pub date cuz you guys think you get something, Charlotte.

You have to be in your ho hole. I agree. Good job. All right, Manny, can you get in your HOA hole?

All right, ready? Good job. Good job. Otherwise, good job. I like those High fives mini, They're filled with gusto today. All right. Yeah, I have my mighty duck shirt on today, Margaret. You can, you can only see like part of it, but it's, there's, it says Mighty Ducks on the bottom, but it's my mighty duck shirt today.

So the second way that we're gonna warm pitch magazines is if you send a pitch and they reject it. So if a magazine editor takes the time to reject your pitch, right, writes you back and says like, Hey, not quite right, try again. Now they answered you. So now you have like kind of a warmish connection. So that means you should send more pitches.

That means figure it out. Like go back, write some more pitches. Try that. So every time you an editor answers you, that gives you kind of like a warm in like connection, right? Cuz they're like taking the time. Like editors get thousands of emails every single week. Are you saying ho I am saying hobbit hole.

Yes, Holly. That's what I call it. I call it their hobbit. So like right now, Charlotte's not in our ho hole. Charlotte, go to your hoit hole. Charlotte, go to your hoit hole.

No, I'm not gonna give you high fives over here. Charlotte Hait hole. Go to your hoit hole. Go to your hait hole. Go to your habit hole. Thank you. All right, here's your blanket. I know you like having your blanket. All right. I'll give you a little snack. O. All right, now that we're in our hobbit holes, Yes.

Hobbit holes. All right. Gentle. Good girl. Gentle, good girl. Otherwise, wow. Gentle other one. Good job. You're so cute. Charlotte is like at her least skutt now, like we are almost, ugh, gosh, it's been like almost three months since she got skunked and she is now almost at her like, Hold on, I'm gonna see if it'll readjust the lighting.

She's almost at her like, Scot . All right. There we go. Now it seems to be fixed. Yeah, I started calling it like her, their hobbit holes. I don't remember why, but it's just like they're just kind of small. The areas that they're in are kind of small and I don't know, habit hole just made sense. . So, um, what was I talking about?

Oh yeah. So when you're doing magazines, when you're doing magazines, anytime that an editor spends time responding to you, that's really important because they don't respond to almost anybody. They have other stuff to do. Like editors have a lot on their plate. So if an editor actually. Says like, try again or not quite right, or whatever.

Take that opportunity to immediately email them other options, right? Other pitches. This kind of creates a warm connection of like, Hey, I'm, I really wanna work with you. There's, you know, let me find some other ideas that might work. Let me kind of think about this. Um, and let me try to like, you know, give, get a, get an assignment.

So as you kind of go through this, um, stuff with magazine, You're gonna have a lot more warm pitch opportunities with magazines than you do businesses, right? So as you go with, with magazines, anytime you're kind of getting a connection or like, let's say, one of the things that, um, the third thing that you can do with magazines is you can reach out to them on social media.

You can reach out on LinkedIn or Twitter or Instagram or whatever. I feel like LinkedIn is nice. So like if you send a connection request to an editor on LinkedIn, you can say like, Hey, You know, I would love to send you a pitch about this. Do you know, would you mind sharing your email? And then if they share their email, then you now have a warm connection cuz they're like, Yeah, I wanna hear your pitch, and then you can send 'em a pitch.

So there's a lot of things that we do with magazine editors that can be a lot warmer than businesses. So let's talk about businesses now. So when I'm sending pitches to businesses, that means I've already made contact again, right? So I've commented on their stuff, I've sent them an L Loy, and they responded.

Liked and shared their stuff. I have made some kind of connection where we have either talked back and forth or acknowledged each other or something like that. Then I can start doing things like, especially with Lois. If someone says like, Not right now, try again. Or like, We're trying to do this other thing, whatever that is, Um, you can then start sense.

Say like, Hey, I saw this article where you were featured. Congrats. Like, if you ever need help with content marketing or content strategy, let me. Um, the other thing you can do is just send them ideas. Hey, I saw that your top two competitors are doing this. Maybe you can try that. Like you are trying to give them ideas of things that could help their content or con help their, um, their company or help them over competitors after you've already made contact.

So like sometimes what ends up happening is you end up liking and sharing their stuff on social or, or like LinkedIn, Um, or you end up like kind of talking to them in the comments or you're in the same group or, um, I don't know. There's a bunch of different ways that we can connect with them, but we wanna make sure we have a connection first before we start going in with like, following up with ideas or following up with stuff because, um, if you're sending cold emails and then you just start following up with random stuff where no one got back to you, that's when people get annoyed and frustrated, right?

We only wanna spend that effort with people who are already saying like, Hey, you know, like making contact with us. What really upsets people is when they're, when they don't answer you, right, and then you just keep following up for like weeks and weeks and weeks, right? And you've had zero contact with them.

They haven't answered you at all. They haven't talked to you. There has been zero contact. It's only contact on your side. The other part of that is we wanna reserve our effort. We don't wanna be spending effort on all of these. You know, follow ups where no one got back to us, right? Because that wastes a lot of time.

We have to spend our time and effort and energy appropriately so that we can get things done, which means focusing our efforts on warm leads and focusing our efforts on like sending ideas and pitches and follow up emails and articles we saw that are useful for them or articles they were featured in.

That kind of stuff needs to be reserved for like people who are more likely to work with us. So that's kind of our first phase is like we're doing businesses and magazines in kind of different ways. So that's our first thing. So number two, can you go back to your hoit hole? Can you go back to your hoit hole please?

2) The steps to format your warm pitches

Thank you. Okay. Good job. All right. Everybody's in their hoit hole. Charlotte, you look extra shiny today because you finally got another, a deep scrub, yet another deep scrub to get the skunk out of you. Good job. Good. One more. Good job. Good job. All right, so that brings us to our second phase. So our second phase is our format for our warm pitch.

Oh, there she goes. . I thought I would leave the camera on to see what she does, but her favorite thing is to like come over here on this side and she just sits here and stares at me where she's like, I should get more snacks, I should get more trio. Or she just lays down in protest , or she makes dinosaur noises, which you might have heard many times on this live stream.

So let's talk about the format for the warm pitch. Hi, tiny Dino. Do you wanna come up and say hello? You wanna come up? She's like, No. I just wanna, I want more snacks. All right. One little more snack for now. There you go. Good job. Hey, go. All right, so our warm pitch format goes in a couple different ways, right?

I've already kind of mentioned the magazine one. So your magazine one is gonna be something like, you know, like, um, if they did accept your assignment, right, and they're, well, they accepted your pitch, and now you're sending in an assignment. Your pitch format is like, Hey, here's my assignment, . This was really fun to work on.

And then you give them two pitches or you know, I, I like two, but, um, then you send over two other pitches saying, Hey, I came up with a couple other ideas that I think might be a fit. And you send your pitches and make sure it's like, Um, the same kind of format that you used in your initial pitch. So like, I always like headline, like intro paragraph that's like really catchy, really interesting, like, why we're talking about this now, or why this is needed.

We talk about. Then your middle paragraph is like, who are you gonna interview or what studies are you gonna use? Um, and then your last paragraph is like, questions you're gonna answer within the article. Um, and then that's it. So make it short and sweet. Three paragraphs, maybe four. Um, and just kind of like send that off.

So that's your first, that's your first pitch format. Your second one is like your editor. The editor gets back to you and says like, This pitch isn't quite right. So try something different. Say like, Okay, cool. Let me try some different ideas. And then if you pitch them enough, They might get back to you and say like, Hey, you're, you're making mistakes with your pitches.

Go do this, then change what you're doing. But a lot of times it's mostly the idea. So if you get an editor responding back saying like, This isn't quite right, or like, basically try again. Just keep pitching ideas and if there really is something wrong with the pitch or um, the type of format or something that you need to fix, they will let you know if they keep getting back to you.

Excuse me. Hello? Woo. Will you have to be in your ho hole? We got spicy Woo. On our hands today. All right, Woo. Ready? Woo.

Good job. Gentle good girl. You good buddy? Barry, you're doing great today. You're doing great. As our seniors citizen, the seniors citizen of this whole room. I like how Yes. I like your tail Wags, buddy. Good. All right, so if I'm following up with, with businesses, it's a little bit different. So our pitch format for warm pitches for businesses is gonna be something basically like we are following up, like we're sending things from our loi.

Like, hey, uh, it could be your regular follow up email where you're like, Hey, you know, like, Um, you follow up on your regular schedule, right? Two weeks, two weeks, two weeks, one month. One month, and then put 'em on quarterly. So you're just like, Hey, uh, following up to see if there's anything you know, that you might need help within the future, whether it's content marketing or content strategy.

Uh, would love to chat more, answer any questions. Your other pitch format for businesses could be like, you're sending that article and you're like, Hey, if you ever wanted to work together, I have a few ideas I'd love to share. Your other thing is that you, when you're following up with businesses, like let's say you're making a warm connection over, um, comments or over sharing their posts, like you can tell them what things you really enjoyed about the post, or what things you really enjoyed about their company and why it's making a difference.

Woo. Woo. We're trying to teach the people right now, . So, um, you can tell them all the things you liked about your stuff and then you can say like, Hey, by the way, I noticed that your competitors are doing a bunch of case studies. There's like a hair that's like poking me in the eyeball. There we go. Um, Hi, Woo.

Um, and you can tell them like, I noticed your competitors are doing a bunch of case studies or doing a bunch of white papers or doing whatever they're doing. Uh, you may wanna consider doing that or you may wanna consider doing it and then give them some stats. If you feel like the stats will help, um, but you're always kind of sharing ideas with businesses, go back to your hub.

Hu woo. Chill out for a sec. Good job. So, You're always kind of sharing these ideas with them that are moving their content forward or that are talking about what their competitors are doing or, um, that are sharing things that you found interesting or that are pitching ideas or like things that you think might be helpful.

Like you're like, Hey, I noticed that you had a really strong partnership with Young Brands or Pizza hud, or like something where it's like a big, big brand. You can be like, Hey, you should do a case study on that. If. Um, because that would do abc. So when you're following up with businesses and you're kind of doing your warm pitch format, you're like thinking of ideas to help them with content.

You're thinking of ideas to help them with moving forward on, um, creating a content library or creating things that are better than their competitors or are capitalizing on the articles or things that you've seen them post that you really like. So a lot of these things are just kind of like building off the initial kind of relationship that you've already created.

So you've created a relationship based on liking and commenting. You've created a relationship based on, um, sending them ideas or sending them other things that you think might be useful for for com from competitors. There we go. So that's kind of what we're doing with our formats, is like they can take a bunch of different shapes based on whether it's businesses or magazines, and then also based on like, how did we actually interact with them in the first place.

Yes. Woo. I hear you making woo noises. Would you like. Would you like to, to lodge a formal complaint? Would you like to share your woos with the world? Hey, good buddy. You're doing great. All right. Woo. Can you do a pie? Yeah. Good girl. Other one. Otherwise the other one. I don't know if you could get it at that high.

Good job. Gentle. Otherwise, other one. Good job. Good job. You look like a tiny hippo. Look like a tiny hippo. Walrus. Together. There's a little bit. Good job. You guys are doing great today. Oh, gross. I just got a whole bunch of dog roll in my hand. . All right. Where are you going, Charlotte? Listen. I'm gonna pick you up.

I'm gonna pick you up and show you to the world. Ready? You're like, Don't do that. All right. Go back to your go back. Go back. Good job. You got backup.

Back up, Back up, Back up. Hold on.

Other one. That was like a half effort. Charlotte. Charlotte, you can't half effort getting a snack. What kind of, what kind of place is this? All right, if you found this info, info helpful so far, give it a thumbs up. If you feel like you wanna learn more about building a, hiring, freelance writing business or freelance writing business that you adore, subscribe, let's go to three.

3) How to send more warm pitches and make them work for your schedule

Okay, Let's talk about three. So three, How can we do more of these? So how do we do more of these and how do we make them work for our schedule? This is really important, so you can only do more of. If you do more activity, right? So if you are sending more Lois, if you're sending more pitches to magazines, if you are liking and commenting and paying attention to people's feeds, like interested companies, right?

Companies that you would like to work with, you can only get more warm things if you make more connections, right? So very short and simple. You have to be sending more lois. You have to be sending more magazine. This is like a numbers game. Your warm connections come out of how many cold things you send out, whether it's ideas or pitches or Lois.

Um, you have to do more of those, but to make them work for your schedule. This is why I love Boomerang. I talk about this all the time. Um, with Boomerang, you get to set them whatever time you want. So let's say that you have a business like you've emailed back and forth, or there's been like a LinkedIn message.

Um, back and forth with someone. Um, and what you wanna do is you can just boomerang that out. So every time you need to follow up, Boomerang will just put it back in your inbox. If it's an email, you can say like, if they didn't reply, there's a little checkbox that says if no reply you say, put it back in my inbox.

Right? So that's the first thing is you can keep sending it back to your inbox and keep following up Automat. The other thing is that you can set a bunch of follow up emails. So with Boomerang, you can set a bunch of things that say like, um, only if they don't reply send this email, right? So every time, like let's say they didn't reply, you will, it'll automatically send that prescheduled email that you have.

Then you don't have to spend so much time following up. You can kind of do a sequence if you want, right? Like you could send, you could set like three emails up in a row and have them send every two weeks based on your boomerang schedule. And then you don't have to spend so much time and energy on it.

It's already doing it. You kind of bulk schedule your follow up messages. You're like, okay, if they. Answer this one. Send this one with these ideas. If they don't answer this one, send this one with these ideas. If they don't answer this one, send this one and that way it's already prescheduled and it's automatically following up while you go do other stuff.

And if they do answer you right, then you can reply back. But if they don't answer you, boomerang, we'll just put it back in your inbox. Right. So it's really cool and it makes it a lot easier to follow up even with LinkedIn messages. So with LinkedIn messages I always get an email for those. So I'll just boomerang the email that says, Hey, you got an LinkedIn message.

And then I'll go to LinkedIn when I get that and type it in. Um, I don't know if there's, I don't think there's any way to preschedule LinkedIn messages, but there is a way to kind of preschedule the emails that you get about LinkedIn messages and then that's really easy to follow up with. So we wanna make it kind of.

um, like a no brainer. Like, we wanna make this stuff with Boomerang, and you can use gmas as well. Um, but Boomerang kind of helps you just like go off and do other stuff that matters, right? So with Boomerang, you're able to, um, like pay attention to your work or pay attention to someone else who's ready to sign a contract or whatever.

Like for me, when I started using Boomerang, and or you can use GMAC GMA to woo woo. Come here. Come here. Woo. Come here. Woo. I, You can't just growl at me the whole time. Woo. Hi shit. So welcome. The system is amazing and specific. Yeah. Well, it's supposed to be specific. Be Oh my, go back to your haba hole. Um, it's supposed to be specific because what we're doing is, um, we're, we're supposed to be making it a no brainer for us to move our business forward.

Especially when you're doing warm emails, you wanna make sure you have a schedule. You wanna make sure that it's something repeatable and scalable that you can follow. Cuz if it's not repeatable and scalable, you know what's gonna happen. You're gonna stop doing it . And that's what happened to me when I didn't have other tools and I tried to do everything manually with following up and with sending pitches and all that garbage.

It was just a disaster. I would never do it , I would just kind of skip over it. I'd be like, Oh God, this is so annoying. I have 85 other emails to get to, but then when I had, I know the, the black dogs being a wild beast. Look at her. She's, Oh, you can't see her eyeballs, but she's over there giving me the old stink eye.

So, When you're kind of doing all this stuff, if you haphazardly follow up, right, and you're warm leads, right? The warm pitches that you're sending and, and the messages that you're sending to warm leads, those are like the warmest things you have to clients, right? Those are, like when I talk about irons in the fire, these are like the irons in the fire who are actually heating up, and it could take a long time for them to actually schedule work with you or whatever, but at least if you have this.

Follow up schedule or if you have some way to like offload the brain activity, right? You spend, I don't know, let's say 30 minutes to an hour, setting up a few of these, right? You set up, let's say 10 of these, um, follow up schedules with ideas and other stuff and pitches. You set that now you forget it, right?

It's like, it's like that infomercial. You set it and forget it and now you have brain space to go off and do your paid. Or do your lois or write your magazine article or whatever, because all this other stuff is automated. Now we can go do something else, which is way more, you know, like it needs our best brain following up.

Doesn't need your best brain. Charlotte, come here. Nope. I'm gonna pick you up. If you're gonna be sassy, come here, I'm gonna pick you up. And she's like, Don't do that. She's like, Don't embarrass me on camera. You have to go back to your hava hole. Nope. You gotta go back to your hub whole week. All right, let's talk about four.

4) When it's most important to send a warm pitch

This is the last thing, so, um, hold on. Oh, Charlotte, this is disruptive and rude. Charlotte . Oh my gosh. Can you guys hear her barking and carrying on and making all kinds of, Oh, Charlotte, go back to your huff. She tried to eat the trio right outta my. Go buddy. Barry's being good because Barry's old. Barry's less than a month away from being 16.

Everybody, you gotta do a high five and you gotta back up. Back up. Back up. Back up. High five. Five, high five. Good job. Now we know you gotta put some effort into it. Charlotte, you're being a sassay. One more. This one? Nope, this one. Good job. Good job. Barry. Barry, you're being the golden child. You're being the golden child.

She's being a sas. SAS bean. All right, let's talk about the last thing. So number four, when is it most important to send a warm pitch? Is there going to be a natural disaster while the woo volcano might be erupting again? So, who knows? We'll have to see. Um, hold on. Ugh. Um, okay, so when is it most important to send a warm pitch?

Especially with magazines, right after they get back to you? So if a magazine gets back to you and says, Yay, like nay on your pitches, No, we don't want your pitches immediately. Send more pitches like when you have their attention, right? Immediately send more pitches. That means you should have other pitches in the box in your hopper like that you have written down, so that if that happens, you can immediately.

So that's really important. Like if you catch the editor's eye enough for them to respond, you need to have pitches in the bank to send them. The other time, ow is when you turn in that assignment. So have other ideas, like while you're writing the piece, come up with other ideas. Say like, Oh, you know what, I couldn't use this quote, or I couldn't use this idea.

You're so funny. Um, and I wanna make sure that like I write a pitch about that. So there's that. The other part is that, um, when you're sending warm pitches to businesses, the important thing there is more timing of like the boomerang messages. So with businesses, it's good to follow up when they're like talking about a project or, um, when they're talking about like moving forward or things that they struggle with or competitors or stuff like that.

That's a good time to follow up, obviously, and that's a good time to send some ideas or, or things that you think might be a fit. Um, But magazines are way more important than businesses. I have to call,

Hold on one.

Okay. I had to deal with the SAS SAS disaster. When you're sending your warm pitch, the important things are more to pay attention to. How do I get back to them quickly with ideas and how do I kind of nurture this relationship with businesses? Right. So sometimes with businesses, your best thing is going to be like following up with stuff over time.

Sending boomerangs, like sending all your messages boomeranged out. Or you could use G mask cuz that allows you to schedule certain follow up messages. Um, but what you wanna keep in mind is like take advantage of having a bank of ideas. Okay? So start making a bank of ideas that has to do with. Your like different kinds of magazines that you write for that has to do with different types of niches you write in for businesses, paying attention to competitors, paying attention to trends or things that are going on.

Um, paying attention to types of content that make the most sense for your potential clients. That kind of stuff. Okay, So we only have one in here. I'm gonna give him a snack just cuz it's just him, his Charlotte being, his ass being All right. You ready buddy? I don't know if you can catch it. I think that's not a thing anymore with your eyeballs and all that.

Now he has like both his eyeballs, both his eyeballs, like one of his eyeballs is still healing and his other eyeball has like this. He's had this like bump on his eye for a while and now it's like grown outta control and we have to remove it. So, He's, he's doing his best. He's 16 and he is doing his best.

All right. If you felt like this was helpful, give it a thumbs up. If you feel like you wanna learn more about building a hiring freelance writing business, or building up freelance writing business, you adore subscribe. So I didn't have any questions come in. I had questions for a while, but I haven't had any questions come in recently.

So no questions. But if you ever did have a question, you can pop it into mandela.com/question. And if you ever had a topic you want me to do, like this topic, , this topic that we did today was like asked of me a bunch of times. Like I, I've had a bunch of different people ask me to do this topic and I finally got to it.

So if you have a topic or a question you want me to cover in the live stream or in the weekly emails, you can go to mandela's dot com slash question and pop it in. . Um, and then the last thing was people asked about this, so if you want my free pricing guide, all you have to do is go to manela.com/pricing guide and you'll get my free pricing guide and it'll help you, um, sign up for the weekly emails to get tips and tricks there as well.

Cool. All right, so I think that's all the stuff we're gonna chat about today. Basically, keep in mind that your warm pitches and your warm ideas, um, and the things that you make with people, like it has to be a connection where someone's replying to you. Um, and then the other part of that is like, the more you do your marketing, the more you send Lois and pitches, the more warm connections and warm leads and warm pitches you can send.

Right? And we'll have, um, and the other stuff, man, when you're kind of going through stuff, it can feel really frustrating sometimes when you're following up. But I can tell you that sending these ideas and sometimes pitching a bunch of things, Being persistent and following up really matters to getting clients.

Like, I've gotten a bunch of clients that way. So don't give up. It's really important to be persistent. All right, so I guess we're gonna hop off. We're here every Friday at noon central time. If you ever have a topic, feel free to go to mandela.com/question. And it was good to see everybody. I'm glad everybody came to hang out and, uh, hope you have a great weekend.

 Thanks to our wonderful writer community for this topic! If you've ever wondered how to send a warm pitch to a magazine or how to get a magazine editor to warm up to you, how to send some pitches to a warm business client lead, or what's the format for a warm pitch, this is the livestream episode for you!

We're going over all the steps for warm pitch tips, how to send more, how to make them work on your schedule, and when they're most important to send.

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