<b>Send one quotable sentence, not a wall of text</b>
New sources often write three paragraphs hoping more words means more chance. The opposite is true.
A journalist is scanning many replies fast. They're hunting for one clean line they can drop straight into the article.
Think of it like a fruit stand. The reporter wants one ripe peach they can grab, not a whole crate to dig through.
Here's the shape that gets picked:
— 1. One sentence that states a clear opinion or fact.
— 2. One sentence that explains why, in plain words.
— 3. Your name and one line on who you are.
That's it. If they want more, they'll ask. "Quotable" just means a sentence that can stand alone and still make sense to a reader who knows nothing about you.
Try this today: take your last long pitch and cut it to three sentences. Read it aloud — if it sounds like something a person would say, you're done.
Source First
@SourceFirstHQ
<b>Send one quotable sentence, not a wall of text</b>
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