MC-Guide

Content Writing

Framework 02: PAS.

PAS – Problem, Agitate, Solution for intros and conversion sections

This Framework now given is like a thinking tool use it properly as told id guide.

Client Intake SOP — Data Collection Before Pitching (Favourite1 · White) · Batch 1/2
PAS Framework for Paid Guest Posts (WIRED-style)
Course 4.9 · Favourite1 · PAS for Paid Guest Posts

PAS Framework for Paid Guest Posting (WIRED-Style)

Beginner-friendly workflow to pitch and write paid guest posts using PAS (Problem → Agitate → Solution) — in your pitch, your intro, and your ending CTA.

P Problem · What’s broken? A Agitate · Why should we care now? S Solution · What story / fix will you deliver?

Use this page like a fill-once control panel: write PAS notes once → reuse them in pitch, intro, mid-article tension, and the final conversion block.

Overview

What you’ll do (beginner workflow)

Most beginners fail because they write the full article first and only then try to “find a website.” Paid outlets like WIRED-style publications usually want a pitch first. PAS is your shortcut: it helps you explain what’s wrong, why it matters now, and what story you will deliver.

Step 0

Fit check: are you pitching the right kind of story?

“Guest post” usually means “I submit a full article.” But WIRED-style outlets are closer to freelance journalism: you pitch a story idea, get assigned, then report and write.

  • Match the publication’s “why” Your idea should connect to science, technology, or innovation and what it changes for humans.
  • Pitch a story, not a topic Editors love narratives: characters, scenes, timeline, and a clear “what happens next.”
  • No hot takes Avoid pure opinion. Bring reporting: sources, documents, interviews, on-the-ground detail.
  • Prove “why you” Explain access: how you’ll get sources, why you can report it well, and what you’ve written before.
Beginner shortcut

Before pitching, read 5–10 recent stories in that section and notice: voice, structure, and evidence. Then make your pitch feel like it belongs there.

Your “yes/no” question

Can you explain in one line: “This story shows how [tech/science/innovation] is changing [people/society] — through [characters + scenes]”?

If you can’t, your pitch will feel like a topic. PAS helps you turn it into a story.

Step 1

PAS for paid pitches (this is what beginners need most)

Use PAS to write a pitch that editors understand fast. Think of it like this: Problem = what’s happening, Agitate = why it matters now, Solution = what you will deliver (reporting plan + shape of story).

PProblem · The situation

Pitch Problem — define the story in one clean line

  • What is the specific thing that’s broken, rising, spreading, failing, or changing?
  • Who is affected (not “everyone,” a clear group)?
  • Where is the story happening (place, industry, online community)?
Write this
“Right now, [group] is dealing with [specific problem] because [new shift in tech/science].”
AAgitate · Stakes + why now

Pitch Agitate — show urgency without drama

  • What’s the cost (money, safety, privacy, time, identity, power)?
  • What’s the “quiet harm” most people miss?
  • Why is this the moment to publish (new law, product, backlash, court case, trend)?
Write this
“If nothing changes, [real consequence] becomes normal — and readers will feel it as [pain].”
SSolution · Your story plan

Pitch Solution — the editor buys your reporting plan

  • Main characters: who will we follow?
  • Scenes: what moments will we “see”?
  • Sources: who will you interview + what documents/data?
  • Payoff: what will readers understand by the end?
Write this
“I will report this by interviewing [sources], accessing [docs/data], and reconstructing [timeline/scenes] to show [big meaning].”
Beginner rule: Editors don’t buy your “writing.” They buy your angle + access + proof you can finish. PAS makes those three visible.
Demo

Demo: a short PAS pitch email (copy + customize)

This is a beginner-safe pitch format: short, clear, and reportable. Replace [bracketed text].

Subject line ideas

• Pitch: [The hidden cost of X] · reported narrative
• Story idea: [New tech trend] is changing [group]
• Feature pitch: [One surprising scene] + why it matters

Pitch email (PAS inside)

Hi [Editor Name],

Problem
[1–2 sentences: what’s happening + who it affects.]

Agitate
[2–4 sentences: stakes, quiet harm, and why now.]

Solution
[3–6 sentences: story plan: characters, scenes, sources, data/docs, what readers learn.]

Why me / access: [1–2 lines: your expertise, location, language access, sources lined up, prior work.]
Links: [2–3 links to your best similar pieces.]

If this fits, I can deliver a detailed outline in [X days] and a first draft in [Y weeks]. Thanks for your time — happy to adjust angle or scope.

Best,
[Your Name]

Step 2

One-screen PAS grid for your intro + your ending CTA

After your pitch is accepted (or for your portfolio samples), reuse the same PAS notes in the article: Intro = Problem + Agitate (tease Solution), Ending = Problem + Agitate + clear next step.

Demo 1: PAS intro (WIRED-style feel)

Example topic: productivity tools quietly turn “free time” into invisible overtime.

  1. Problem
    There’s no “off” switch anymore: pings, dashboards, status dots.
  2. Agitate
    The cost shows up as guilt, fatigue, and feeling behind even after you finish.
  3. Solution (teased)
    A reported story showing how product design creates overtime — and what to change.

Draft intro using PAS:
Problem: There’s no “off” switch on the workday anymore. Your project app doesn’t clock out — it follows you from laptop to phone to smartwatch.

Agitate: You answer “just one more” ping while making dinner, clear tasks from the sofa, and check a dashboard that never looks finished. The tools that promised flexibility now sit on your bedside table, glowing quietly.

Solution (teased): In this story, we look at how “helpful” tools turn spare minutes into micro-work — and what it would take to design software that protects time instead of devouring it.

Step 3

Demo 2: PAS conversion section (ending CTA)

This is the part that often makes money: newsletter signups, downloads, product trials, or “reply to book a call.” You reuse the same PAS and make the action simple.

Sample Ending Block · PAS-Driven · High Contrast (fixed)

Problem: If your tools control your calendar, your attention, and your energy, it’s hard to protect time for deep work — or for doing nothing at all.

Agitate: The default settings in most apps push you toward more alerts, more check-ins, and more invisible overtime. You don’t notice the cost until you feel permanently tired and permanently “behind.”

Solution: That’s why I built a short, practical checklist on deleting invisible overtime — with screenshots, scripts, and tiny experiments you can run today.

If you want your apps to serve you — not the other way around — join the list here. I’ll send the first “reset your tools” checklist in the next 24 hours.

For client work, swap “checklist” with a product demo, free resource, or trial. Same PAS structure, different offer.

Templates

Fill-in-the-blanks templates (Pitch + Intro + Ending)

Replace each [bracketed text] with your situation.

Template · PAS pitch paragraph (short)

Problem
[Group] is dealing with [specific problem] because [new tech/science shift].
Agitate
If nothing changes, [real consequence] becomes normal — and the hidden cost is [time/money/safety/privacy].
Solution (story plan)
I’ll report this through [sources + documents], following [characters] across [2–3 scenes] to show [big meaning].

Template · PAS ending CTA (money block)

Problem (reminder)
You’ve seen how [problem] pushes [reader] into [bad outcome].
Agitate (short)
If nothing changes, [consequence] becomes the default.
Solution + action
That’s why I made [resource/offer] — so you can get [small win] without [big cost].
[Click / Reply / Start] to take the first step today.
Practice plan: One topic per day. Write (1) a PAS pitch paragraph, (2) a PAS intro, and (3) a PAS ending CTA. In 7 days you’ll have a mini-portfolio.
Before You Send

Checklist: does your PAS get a “yes”?

Use this before pitching or submitting samples.

  • Problem: Specific and human (not vague / not buzzwords).
  • Agitate: Real stakes + “why now” (not drama).
  • Solution: Clear reporting plan + what readers learn.
  • Proof: 2–3 relevant writing links included.
  • Access: You can realistically get sources + scenes.
  • Simple ask: You ended with one clean next step (assign? quick call? feedback?).

Over time, PAS becomes automatic: every pitch and every intro starts by naming the pain, showing the stakes, then offering a believable path out.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Shopping Cart
Scroll to Top