You've found the perfect guest for your podcast. Their expertise is spot-on, their audience aligns with yours, and you're confident they'd create an amazing episode.
You craft what feels like a solid pitch email, hit send, and then... nothing. No response. Not even a "thanks, but no thanks."
Sound familiar?
After booking hundreds of podcast guests and analyzing thousands of pitch emails, I can tell you exactly why most pitches fail — and more importantly, how to fix them. In this guide, you'll get the exact templates, subject lines, and strategies that consistently achieve 60%+ response rates.
Let's turn those crickets into confirmed bookings.
Why Most Podcast Pitch Emails Fail
Before we dive into what works, let's address what doesn't. These are the most common mistakes I see:
1. It's all about you. Don't say "I have a podcast about marketing and would love to have you on." Instead, try "Your approach to email marketing could help our 50K listeners improve their conversion rates."
2. Too generic. Don't say "Would you like to be a guest on my podcast?" Instead, try "Would you discuss how you scaled [specific company] to $10M ARR using unconventional growth tactics?"
3. No research evident. If your email could be sent to 100 different people with just a name swap, it's too generic.
4. Unclear value proposition. What's in it for them? Exposure? Positioning? Promotion? Make it explicit.
5. Too long. If your pitch requires scrolling on mobile, you've already lost them.
Now let's look at what actually works.
The Anatomy of a Perfect Podcast Pitch Email
Every successful pitch email has these five core elements:
- Personalized Subject Line — Gets them to open
- Specific Hook — Shows you've done research
- Clear Value Proposition — Explains what's in it for them
- Low-Friction Ask — Makes saying yes easy
- Social Proof — Builds credibility
Let's break down each element with examples.
Element 1: Subject Lines That Get Opened
Your subject line determines whether your email gets read or deleted. Here are proven formulas:
Specific + Intriguing: "Your take on [specific topic] for [podcast name]?" or "Loved your [specific thing] — podcast conversation?"
Mutual Connection: "[Name] suggested I reach out" or "Following up from [Event Name]"
Direct Value: "Share your [expertise] with [number] [audience type]" or "30-minute conversation about [specific topic]?"
Pro tip: Keep subject lines under 50 characters. Most people check email on mobile first.
Element 2: The Opening Hook
Your first sentence should prove you're not using a template. Reference something specific:
Strong: "I just finished your article on [specific topic] and your point about [specific insight] completely shifted my thinking on [related topic]."
Weak: "I hope this email finds you well." (Delete this from your vocabulary.)
The test: Could you send this opening to 20 different people? If yes, it's not specific enough.
Template 1: The Thought Leadership Play
Best for: Industry experts, authors, consultants, executives
Why this works: Shows you consumed their content, specific questions prove you're prepared, clear format and time commitment, makes scheduling easy, and provides an episode example for context.
Template 2: The Audience Value Play
Best for: People building personal brands, authors promoting books, consultants seeking clients
Why this works: Leads with audience size and relevance, clearly states what listeners get, emphasizes promotional value, removes friction, and shows ROI potential.
Template 3: The Mutual Connection Play
Best for: Anyone when you have a warm introduction
Why this works: Leverages trust from mutual connection, flatters them (someone recommended them), still includes specific angles, and combines low pressure with high credibility.
Pro tip: Always tell your mutual connection you're using their name. Better yet, ask them to make the intro.
Template 4: The Event/Conference Follow-Up
Best for: Speakers at conferences, people you met at events, webinar presenters
Why this works: Warm lead (they know you attended their session), shows engaged listening with specific callback, positions as expansion not repetition, offers promotion opportunity, and timing capitalizes on their conference momentum.
Template 5: The Competitor Guest Play
Best for: Guests who've appeared on similar podcasts
Why this works: Acknowledges their past appearance (flattery), promises differentiation (not repetitive), familiar format reduces friction, and shows you did research.
Caution: Don't do this if your show is substantially smaller or less credible than the one they appeared on. It works best for similar-tier podcasts.
The Follow-Up Sequence That Works
Most confirmations happen after the 2nd or 3rd email. Here's the sequence:
Follow-Up #1 (4-5 business days after initial pitch)
Follow-Up #2 (5-7 business days later)
Follow-Up #3: The Breakup (one more week later)
Why this sequence works: Respects their time, adds value in follow-up #2, provides a graceful exit that maintains the relationship, and 10-15% respond to the "breakup" email saying they're actually interested.
Pro tip: Space follow-ups across 2-3 weeks total. Anything faster feels pushy.
Advanced Pitch Tactics
Tactic 1: The Question Approach. Instead of pitching, ask a question: "Hi [Name], quick question: Would you ever consider doing podcast interviews about [topic]?" Lower commitment ask = higher response rate. If they say yes, then send the full pitch.
Tactic 2: The Content Collaboration. "Would you be open to co-creating an article on [topic] that we could publish and then discuss on [Podcast Name]?" Offers dual value — article plus podcast exposure.
Tactic 3: The Season/Series Pitch. "We're doing a 6-episode series on [topic] featuring the top voices in the space. Would you join [Notable Guest 1] and [Notable Guest 2]?" Social proof plus exclusivity is a powerful combo.
Tactic 4: The LinkedIn Warm-Up. Before emailing: connect on LinkedIn, engage with 2-3 of their posts with thoughtful comments, wait a week, then send your pitch email referencing their LinkedIn content. Cold becomes warm.
Common Pitch Email Questions
How long should my pitch email be? 150-250 words max. If it requires scrolling on mobile, it's too long.
Should I attach a media kit? No. Include a link to it instead. Attachments feel heavy and decrease response rates.
When's the best time to send pitch emails? Tuesday-Thursday, 9-11am in their timezone. Avoid Monday mornings and Friday afternoons.
Should I pitch multiple people at the same company? Not simultaneously. Pick one, wait for a response. If no, try another after 2-3 weeks.
How many pitches should I send per week? Quality over quantity. 10-15 highly personalized pitches beat 50 generic ones.
What if they say no? Thank them, ask if they can recommend someone else, and stay connected on LinkedIn. Today's "no" might be next year's "yes."
Tracking Your Pitch Performance
Key metrics to monitor:
- Open rate: Use tracking tools like Streak or HubSpot
- Response rate: Aim for 40%+ after the full sequence
- Booking rate: 20-30% of responses should convert to bookings
If your response rate is below 30%, your pitches aren't personalized enough or you're targeting the wrong people.
When to Skip the Pitch (And What to Do Instead)
Skip email if: you have a warm introduction available (use that instead), they're extremely high-profile (try their booking agent or assistant), they've publicly stated they don't do podcasts (respect that), or your show is very new with no episodes (build up 5-10 first).
Alternative approaches: Comment on their social posts consistently for 2-3 weeks then DM, attend their webinar and ask during Q&A, tag them in relevant content you create, or send a LinkedIn voice message (stands out).
Final Thoughts
The perfect podcast pitch email isn't about tricks or hacks. It's about showing you've done your homework, clearly communicating value, and making it easy to say yes.
Every successful podcast you listen to had to reach out to their guests somehow. Now you know exactly how to do it.
Start with one template, send five pitches this week, and adjust based on results. The guests you want are out there — you just need the right email to reach them.
Ready to Stop Writing Pitches and Start Recording?
We use these exact strategies — plus industry connections and years of booking experience — to consistently land the guests you want.
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