<b>The credibility line that earns the quote</b>
Reporters can't quote a stranger. They need to tell readers who you are in a few words, so they need you to hand them those words.
This is your "credibility line" — one short phrase proving you're allowed to have an opinion on this topic.
Think of it like a name tag at a conference. "Sam, Plumber, 12 years" tells people instantly why your plumbing advice counts.
Here's how to build yours:
— 1. Your role and company. "Founder of a payroll software firm."
— 2. A number that shows depth. "Worked with 400 small businesses."
— 3. Skip awards and buzzwords nobody can check.
That line often gets copied word-for-word into the article, so write it like you'd want to be introduced.
Try this today: write three different credibility lines for yourself and keep the clearest one in a notes file.
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<b>The credibility line that earns the quote</b>
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