Writes professional follow-up emails to journalists/media contacts who haven't responded to a pitch. Calibrates tone by relationship stage, urgency, and prior attempts. Useful for PR professionals managing media outreach.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/autopunk-media-skills:follow-up-email-writerThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Writes a professional follow-up email to a journalist, editor, or media contact who has not responded to a previous pitch or request, calibrated to the relationship stage, urgency, and number of prior attempts.
Writes a professional follow-up email to a journalist, editor, or media contact who has not responded to a previous pitch or request, calibrated to the relationship stage, urgency, and number of prior attempts.
Required:
Optional:
Assesses the follow-up stage. A first follow-up is warmer and more generous than a second or third. The assistant adjusts assertiveness, length, and tone accordingly — first follow-ups assume good faith and a busy inbox; later follow-ups are shorter, more direct, and offer an easy out.
Leads with value, not with a reminder. The email never opens with "just checking in" or "circling back." Instead, it leads with a new detail, a timely hook, or a reframing of why the story matters now — giving the journalist a reason to engage rather than a guilt trip.
Keeps the email short and scannable. Follow-ups are under 120 words. The core ask is visible without scrolling. No attachments are referenced unless the original pitch included one; if so, the key detail is pulled into the body so the journalist does not need to open a file.
Calibrates formality to the relationship. Cold contacts get a professional, concise tone. Established contacts get a warmer, more conversational register. The email never assumes familiarity that does not exist.
Closes with a single, clear ask. Every follow-up ends with one specific action the recipient can take — reply with interest, suggest a better time, or decline. No compound requests.
A ready-to-send email: subject line, body text, and sign-off. Total body length: 60–120 words. Tone: professional, respectful, never passive-aggressive. No bullet-point lists in the body — this reads like a real email from a real person. If a new hook is provided, it appears in the first sentence. Subject line is a reply-style "Re:" continuation of the original subject or a fresh line if the original subject is not provided.
Original pitch: Sent a press release on March 10 about the launch of a new regional investigative journalism fund — a coalition of six independent newsrooms pooling resources to fund long-form investigations. Pitched exclusively to a senior media correspondent at a national broadsheet.
Recipient: Elena Marsh, Media Correspondent, The National Record
Follow-up number: First
New information: Since the original pitch, the fund has announced its first commissioned investigation — a six-month project into water quality failures across three rural counties.
Urgency: Time-sensitive — the fund's public launch event is April 2.
Relationship: Met once at a press conference; exchanged cards.
Subject: Re: Regional Investigative Fund — First Commission Announced
Hi Elena,
Quick update on the investigative journalism fund I sent over on March 10 — the coalition has just commissioned its first project: a six-month investigation into water quality failures across three rural counties, funded jointly by all six member newsrooms.
The public launch is April 2. I can arrange an advance briefing with the fund's director or any of the editors involved if that would be useful for a piece ahead of the event.
Would that work for your schedule?
Best, Sarah Clement Communications Director, Regional Press Alliance [email protected]
npx claudepluginhub ur-grue/autopunk-media-skills --plugin autopunk-media-skillsWrites professional follow-up emails to unresponsive sources, calibrated by relationship, urgency, and follow-up count.
Writes journalist outreach emails, podcast pitch scripts, newsletter sponsor pitches, and press releases. Activates for media coverage, pitching journalists, or press release requests.
Checks one journalist-pitch pair through media-relations audits (bylines, topics, angles) and returns fit level with a recent anchor article.