MC-Guide

Content Writing

SOP 4: Pitching

This SOP named Pitching method is going to help you in your pitching process

This SOP will shows you, step by step, how a beginner can learn to pitch perfectly and follow up.

You will learn what information you should collect, how you can pitch and follow up.

Process 2 — Audience & Topic Research (Connects to Process 1)
Content Writing Flow · Process 2/11 · Audience & Topic Research

Process 2: Audience & Topic Research

In Process 1 you created a Strategy Brief (publication + reader + problem + angle + proof + scope). Now you do one smart thing: you validate that brief with fast research, so your pitch feels “editor-safe”. Your output here is a Research Pack you can keep as backup when the editor asks questions about audience and topic.

1 Fit scan 2 Reader reality 3 Topic map 4 Search intent 5 Reference audit 6 Source map 7 Data/proof 8 Interview targets

Your goal here: when an editor asks “Why this? Why now? Where’s the proof?” you answer in 10 seconds.

Overview

What you’ll build in Process 2

You’ll turn your Strategy Brief into a small research system: topic map, search intent, reference stories, source list, and interview targets. This is how Process 2 connects to Process 1: you keep the same idea, but you add proof and “editor confidence”.

Think like an editor: “Can we trust this? Is it timely? Is it new? Can the writer deliver proof?”

Connection note: If your Process 1 brief is vague, Process 2 will feel hard. If your Process 1 brief is clear, Process 2 becomes fast.
Step-by-step

The beginner approach (8 research blocks)

Do this in 60–120 minutes. Your job is not “read everything”. Your job is: find proof and reduce risk.

1Fit scan

Confirm the publication fit

  • Read 5–10 recent stories in the same section.
  • Spot what they love: tone, length, structure, sources.
  • Write one line: “My story matches because …”.
2Reader reality

Check the reader’s real questions

  • List 5 questions your reader actually asks.
  • Use simple language: no buzzwords.
  • Make sure your angle answers those questions.
3Topic map

Map the topic in 3 layers

  • Core: your main problem.
  • Sub-topics: 4–6 supporting parts.
  • Edges: risks, tradeoffs, “what people miss”.
4Search intent

Write “search queries” like a reader

  • Write 8–12 queries (beginner + advanced).
  • Group them: how-to / comparison / cost / risk / checklist.
  • This tells you what readers already know (and don’t know).
5Reference audit

Study 3–6 reference stories

  • Pick stories from your target publication + competitors.
  • Write: “What did they cover?” + “What did they miss?”
  • Your angle should fill a gap, not repeat.
6Source map

Build a safe source list

  • Official docs (standards, policies, documentation).
  • Credible research (reports, academic, reputable orgs).
  • One “human” source (expert, practitioner, impacted person).
7Proof plan

Decide what you will prove

  • Pick 2–4 claims you will support with sources.
  • For each claim, write: “Best source type = …”.
  • This prevents weak writing and factual risk.
8Interview targets

List interview targets (easy outreach)

  • 3–8 names/roles: “security lead”, “policy manager”, “researcher”.
  • Write 3 questions each (short + specific).
  • Keep interviews short: 10–15 minutes.
Simple rule: Process 2 is not “more reading”. Process 2 is “better evidence + better angle + lower editor risk”.
Build

Research Pack Builder (copy-paste ready)

This connects directly to Process 1. Paste your Process 1 mini brief (optional), then generate a clean Research Pack.

Process 2 Output Research Pack (fit + sources + proof + interviews)
This saves time and makes Process 2 feel connected to Process 1.
Claims are your “proof targets”. If you can’t prove it, remove it.
Generated Research Pack

For: [Publication] ([Section])
Reader: [Ideal Reader]
Core problem: [Problem]
Why now: [Stakes]
Angle promise: [Angle]

Fit scan notes (write after reading 5–10 stories):
• Tone: [ ] · Length: [ ] · Typical sources: [ ] · What they avoid: [ ]

Proof targets (claims):
• [Claim 1]
• [Claim 2]

Reader search intent (queries):
• [Query 1]
• [Query 2]

Source map:
• Official docs: [ ]
• Reports/data: [ ]
• Expert/practitioner: [ ]

Interview targets:
• [Target] — [Question]

Deliverable plan: [Deliverable plan]

Tip: keep this pack as your “evidence backup” for editors.
Connection tip: If you change your angle during Process 2, go back and update Process 1 briefly. The two should match.
Example

Example Research Pack (copy the pattern)

Replace [bracketed text] with your own details.

EXExample pack

For: [Tech / business site] ([AI / Work / Security])
Reader: A team lead who wants to use AI tools at work but struggles because they don’t know what is safe to share.
Core problem: People paste private info into AI tools without understanding the risks.
Why now: Many companies still lack clear rules, and the cost of one mistake is high.
Angle promise: A practical do/don’t checklist with safe prompt examples and red flags.

Fit scan notes: They like short intros, 1–2 expert quotes, and specific examples. They avoid fear-mongering.
Proof targets: (1) common data-leak paths, (2) real policy examples, (3) safe/unsafe prompt patterns.
Source map: official security guidance, platform privacy docs, reputable reports, 1 security lead interview.
Interview targets: security lead — top 3 mistakes; policy manager — rules; researcher — trend data.

Avoid These

Common beginner mistakes in research (and the fix)

×Mistake: no human source

Only reading blogs

Fix: add one expert/practitioner (10–15 min) or an email quote.

×Mistake: copying old angles

Repeating what exists

Fix: find a gap: what they missed + add your proof + checklist.

×Mistake: weak proof

“Everyone says…”

Fix: choose 2–4 claims and assign a best source type to each.

×Mistake: ignoring fit

Pitching the wrong section

Fix: read 5–10 recent stories and mirror their format + sourcing.

Before Process 3

Checklist: are you ready to outline?

Click to check. When these are done, you’re ready for Process 3 (Outline & Angle).

Next: Say Continue and I’ll write Process 3/11: Outline & Angle in the same connected style.

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