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How to Get Featured on Indian Tech Media Without a PR Agency

Reji Modiyil
Reji Modiyil
Founder & Editor-in-Chief Β· 23 March 2026

PR Agencies and Why Most Founders Don't Need One

A PR retainer in India costs β‚Ή75,000–2,00,000/month. For a Series A company with funding news to announce, this makes sense. For an early-stage founder trying to build credibility, it's usually the wrong spend.

The good news: Indian tech journalists are accessible. They're looking for stories. You don't need an intermediary.

Understanding What Indian Tech Media Actually Wants

Different publications have different story appetites:

YourStory: Loves founder journey stories, regional startup ecosystem pieces, and first-time founder profiles. Very receptive to human-interest angles.

Inc42: Prefers funding news, market analysis, and growth metrics. Numbers-heavy pitches do well here.

The Ken: Long-form, skeptical, deeply reported. They want access, documents, and multiple sources. Don't pitch The Ken with a press release.

Economic Times/Business Standard: Want business outcomes, revenue numbers, and market context. 'We crossed β‚Ή1 crore ARR' is a headline-worthy number here.

TechCrunch India/Entrackr: Breaking funding and product news.

Building the Journalist Relationship

Don't send a cold pitch as your first contact. This is the most common founder mistake.

First, follow journalists who cover your space on Twitter and LinkedIn. Read their work. When they write something relevant to your industry, engage with a thoughtful comment β€” not a promotional reply.

After 4–6 genuine interactions over 2–3 weeks, a direct message doesn't feel cold. 'I've been following your coverage of [topic] β€” I'm building in this space and thought you might find our perspective interesting' lands very differently than a blast pitch.

Crafting the Pitch

The subject line is everything. 'Indian SaaS startup reaches 1,000 customers' is weak. 'How a 2-person team from Kochi is replacing Intercom for 1,000 businesses' is a story.

Pitch structure that works:

  • One sentence: What's the story (the hook)
  • One sentence: Why now (what makes it timely)
  • Two sentences: Your numbers or proof (don't be vague)
  • One sentence: Why you specifically are the right person to tell it
  • Offer: Are you available for a 20-minute call this week?

Total: Under 150 words. Journalists receive hundreds of pitches β€” make yours readable in 30 seconds.

Story Types That Get Covered

Funding announcements: Even small rounds (β‚Ή50 lakh seed) get coverage if the story is interesting.

Milestone numbers: First β‚Ή1 crore ARR, 10,000 users, 1,000 paying customers β€” with the story of how you got there.

Contrarian takes: 'Why we turned down VC funding' or 'How we grew 10x without marketing spend' are more interesting than standard success narratives.

Local success stories: Regional angle (Kerala startup, Tier 2 city, NRI founder) gets more coverage than generic Indian startup stories.

Problem advocacy: Pieces about problems in your industry β€” not about your product β€” position you as an expert and lead to being quoted in future coverage.

The HARO Approach

Help a Reporter Out (HARO) and similar platforms send journalist queries daily. When a reporter is writing about topics in your space, they send a query asking for expert sources.

Responding to HARO queries with useful, specific insights β€” not product pitches β€” builds a track record as a quotable expert. Over time, journalists remember you and reach out proactively.

What to Do With Coverage When You Get It

Share it everywhere immediately β€” LinkedIn, Twitter, WhatsApp to relevant contacts. Tag the journalist. A piece that gets good engagement leads to more coverage from the same journalist.

Add press logos to your website ('As seen in...'). B2B buyers check this. It signals credibility before the sales conversation starts.

#pr#media#press#india#startup

Written by

Reji Modiyil
Reji Modiyil

Founder & Editor-in-Chief

Founder of Super Launch and ecosystem builder behind Hostao, AutoChat, and RatingE.