MC-Guide

Content Writing

Content Writing The Workflow: Process 2 To 11

This content writing workflow have 11 processes that going to help you in your planning, writing, pitching, and submission process.

This workflow not only shows you step by step process, but also gives you a generator – simply put your idea and copy paste the final output. Click on each card to start.

Process 7 — Pitch & Outreach (Connected to Process 1–6)
Content Writing Flow · Process 7/11 · Pitch & Outreach

Process 4: Pitch Email & Outreach (Send the Package You Built)

Everything before this was preparation. Now you convert it into one outcome: reply → questions → assignment → fee → deadline. This process connects directly to what you already built: Process 1 brief, Process 2 proof, Process 3 outline.

1 Find contact 2 Subject line 3 5-part pitch 4 Attach package 5 Follow-ups 6 Reply handling

Your pitch must do one thing: remove work for the editor.

Overview

What you’ll do in Process 4

You will send a pitch that contains: one promise (Process 1), proof (Process 2), and outline (Process 3).

The goal is not to “sound impressive.” The goal is to be easy to assign.

Simple pitch rule: Your email should read like a mini product page: problem → solution → proof → deliverable → next step.
Step-by-step

The beginner approach (6 outreach blocks)

These 6 blocks keep your pitching consistent and professional.

1Find the right contact

Don’t pitch “info@” if you can avoid it

  • Find editor / section editor / pitch inbox.
  • Match the desk: AI, Security, Business, Culture, etc.
  • Save name + email in your tracker.
4Attach the package

Remove work for the editor

  • Paste the submission package text (Process 6).
  • Include outline + assets block.
  • Link 2–3 relevant clips.
6Handle replies

Answer questions like a pro

  • Reply fast (same day if possible).
  • If they ask for angle change, update Process 1 + 6 quickly.
  • Confirm fee, deadline, and rights.
Connection tip: If an editor asks “What exactly will you deliver?” paste your Process 3 Outline again. Make it effortless.
Tool

Pitch Email Builder (connected to your package)

Fill the fields. It generates: subject line, short email, and two follow-up templates.

Process 4 Output Pitch email + follow-ups
If you don’t know the name, use “Hi [Desk] team,” or “Hi there,”.
This should be your first sentence in the email.
If email must be short, paste a condensed assets + outline block only.
Pitch Email + Follow-ups (copy-paste)
Fill fields and click Build pitch email...
Tip: Keep your pitch under ~180–220 words if possible.
Beginner safety: If you don’t have a strong clip yet, say: “I can deliver a clean, proof-backed draft quickly; happy to write on spec for a smaller fee if needed.” (Only use this if you truly want it.)
Follow-up plan

Follow-up timeline (simple and polite)

Most editors are busy. Following up is normal. Keep it short and respectful.

Day 0
Send pitch email. Save the date in your tracker. Don’t send multiple ideas in the same thread.
Day 4–5
Follow-up #1: 2 lines. “Just bubbling this up.” Re-attach the pitch line + deliverable.
Day 10–12
Follow-up #2: very short. Offer a small angle tweak. Ask if they prefer a different desk.
After
No reply? Move on. Pitch another publication using the same Process 1–3 workflow.
Pro move: If you pitch 10 times and get 2 replies, you’re normal. Track: pitches sent, replies, assignments, fees.
Avoid These

Common beginner mistakes (and the fix)

×Mistake: long email

Huge paragraphs

Fix: 5-part pitch + bullets + short lines.

×Mistake: vague ask

“Thoughts?”

Fix: ask one question: “Is this a fit for your desk?”

×Mistake: no proof

Only opinions

Fix: add 2–4 proof items from Process 2.

×Mistake: no follow-up

Send once, vanish

Fix: follow-up twice on a schedule.

Before Process 8

Checklist: are you ready to hit send?

Click to check. When done, you’re ready for Process 8 (Assignment & Negotiation).

Next: Say Continue and I’ll create Process 8/11: Assignment & Negotiation in the same connected style.
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