How to Get Featured in Magazines — Without a PR Agency

"Editors are looking for great stories — they just can't find them if you don't pitch."

Most women think magazine features are only for big brands with PR budgets. They're not. As the editor of Anne Louise Magazine, I can tell you that editors are actively looking for great stories — and a well-crafted pitch from the right person beats an expensive PR agency every single time. I have featured women who simply emailed me cold with a genuinely interesting story. No agency, no following, no previous press. Just a good subject line and a clear hook. This guide will show you exactly how to do it.

Featured Magazine - Anne Louise
From the editor's inbox
"A year-one founder with a compelling story is more interesting than a successful but dull one."
Linsey x Editor, Anne Louise Magazine · Publishing since 2009
Featured Magazine - Anne Louise

Five things editors want you to know

1

The cold email works. I've featured women who emailed me out of nowhere. A good subject line and a clear hook is all you need to get opened.

2

Don't wait until you're "big enough." Editors aren't looking for the biggest business — they're looking for the most interesting story.

3

Never attach images to a first email. It will go straight to spam. Include a shared folder link instead — always.

4

Tailor every pitch. One line showing you've actually read the magazine goes a very long way. Editors spot batch emails instantly.

5

Follow up once, then move on. A single polite follow-up two weeks later is perfectly appropriate. More than once is annoying.

01 · The Process

The Pitch Process — Step by Step

01

Research the Magazine

Read 2–3 recent issues. Understand their tone, their readers, and the kind of features they run. Find the masthead — your list of who to approach.

02

Build Your Media Pack

Gather your key assets — bio, high-res headshot, website, social links, milestones. Host images on Google Drive or Dropbox with a shareable link. Never attach.

03

Write Your Pitch Email

Keep it short. One paragraph on who you are, one on your story hook, one clear ask. The subject line is everything — spend real time on it.

04

Send & Track

Use their submissions page to find the right contact. Note the send date. If no reply in two weeks, send one polite follow-up, then move on.

05

Reply Promptly When They Do

When an editor responds, reply within 24 hours and provide whatever they ask for quickly — editors work to tight deadlines and a slow reply can lose you the feature entirely.

Featured Magazine - Anne Louise
02 · Your Media Pack

What Goes in Your Media Pack

Your media pack is the document that does the heavy lifting once an editor opens your email. A well-structured Google Doc works perfectly — no designed PDF needed.

Professional headshot Essential

High-res (at least 1MB). Clean background preferred.Check your lighting. Images break or make a feature, so concentrate on getting the best photos you can. Link to a shared folder — never attach directly.

Short bio — 100–150 words Essential

Written in third person. Lead with the most interesting thing about you, not your job title.

Your story hook Essential

2–3 sentences on what makes your story interesting — what the editor uses to pitch you internally.

Website & social links Essential

Instagram, LinkedIn, and your website. Editors check these to gauge your brand and reach.

Product or brand imagery

If product-based: high-res on white or lifestyle background. 3–5 images is enough. Images break or make a feature, so concentrate on getting the best photos you can. Tip: Look at competitors websites for ideas, a bad image can stop you getting featured. Nice background. Good lighting and check the positioning. Check out this advice on product photography by ADOBE.

Previous press coverage

Links to any existing features. Shows you're press-ready and builds credibility instantly. Don't panic if you haven't been featured yet elsewhere!

Suggested story angles

Offer 2–3 specific angles. This does half the editor's job and significantly improves your chances.

Featured Magazine - Anne Louise
Editor's note: The most common mistake is a media pack clearly written from a template — where you've just filled in your name. Write yours in your own voice. It stands out immediately. And make sure your photos are genuinely high-res. Publications cannot use a 72dpi screenshot.
"Write your media pack in your own voice. It stands out immediately — and it's what makes an editor want to meet you on the page."
Linsey — Editor, Anne Louise Magazine
03 · Hosting Your Images

Where to Host Your Images

Never attach images directly to a pitch email — it triggers spam filters and creates a poor first impression. Host everything in a shared folder and include the link instead. If you're service-based, this folder is where your headshots and brand photography live — not just product shots.

Google Drive

Shared folder, set to "anyone with the link." Free, organised, reliable.

✓ Recommended

Dropbox

Great for large files. Free tier is more than enough for a media pack.

✓ Recommended

WeTransfer

Good for follow-up sends. Free links expire in 7 days — not for the initial pack.

Your Own Website

A /press page on your site is the most professional option of all. Bonus: You can check stats to see if being viewed!

✓ Most Professional
Featured Magazine - Anne Louise
04 · Pitch Email Templates

Copy-Ready Email Templates

Always personalise these. Text in [square brackets] is where your details go. Text in italics are editor's notes — don't include them in the actual email.

Service-based business? The Expert Comment template is your most powerful starting point. Pitching yourself as a go-to expert source leads to regular, ongoing coverage — far more valuable than a one-off feature, and much easier to land than a full profile. Use the Initial Pitch template to tell your founder story, and skip the Product Feature tab entirely.

Why this works: Short, human, story-first. The media pack link does the heavy lifting so the email stays clean. Subject line is a statement, not a question — creates curiosity without overselling.
Tone is everything here. You're not chasing — you're making it easy to say yes. Never follow up more than once. If no reply, move on.
For product businesses only. The section detail is everything — "I think this works for your Mindful Living pages" shows you've done your homework. Generic pitches get deleted. Specific ones get considered. If you're service-based, use the Expert Comment template instead.
Massively underused and incredibly effective. Being on an editor's go-to list leads to regular ongoing coverage — far more valuable than a single feature, and much lower friction to arrange.
05 · Media Pack Structure

What a Media Pack Looks Like

You don't need a designed PDF — a well-structured Google Doc is absolutely fine. Here's how to lay it out:

Media Pack — [Your Name / Business Name]

Example Structure

01 · About Me

[Your name] is a [job title / founder] based in [location]. [2–3 sentences on your story — third person, warm and human, not corporate.] [Why you started, who you help, what problem you solve.]

03 · Key Milestones

  • Founded [business] in [year]
  • [Impressive stat — members, customers, revenue milestone]
  • [Award, press mention, or notable achievement]
  • [Anything particularly interesting or unusual]

02 · My Story Hook

[The most interesting, surprising, or relatable thing about your journey. Write this as if you're telling a friend, not submitting a CV. What would make someone stop and read?]

04 · Suggested Angles

  • [e.g. "From corporate to kitchen table: building a business as a single mum"]
  • [e.g. "Why I stopped chasing followers and built a paid community instead"]
  • [e.g. "The founder redefining what success looks like"]

05 · Images & Links

  • Headshots: [Google Drive link]
  • Brand imagery: [link]
  • Website: [URL]
  • Instagram: @[handle]
Featured Magazine - Anne Louise
06 · Magazine Directory

Magazines to Approach

Most major publishers don't maintain public editorial pitch pages — their contact forms are for subscribers, not press enquiries. The most reliable approach is to visit the magazine's website, find the masthead to identify the right editor, and email them directly. Links below go to each magazine's homepage. The gold notes are Linsey's editorial observations from her own experience as a publisher.

National Women's & Lifestyle
StylistPrint & Digital

Weekly for smart, independent women. Strong career and entrepreneurship content with an emphasis on real stories told without cliché.

"They love a career pivot story with a real emotional arc. Stats help but the human angle comes first. Features pitches go to features@stylist.co.uk."
Visit website
Grazia UKPrint & Digital

Fashion-forward lifestyle weekly with strong career and business coverage. Excellent reach with professional women in their 30s.

"Grazia likes aspirational stories — the journey from nothing to something, told with personality."
Visit website
Red MagazinePrint & Digital

Hearst publication aimed at women 35+. Strong features on life, work, and women doing interesting things on their own terms.

"Red's readers are thoughtful women. Depth and authenticity over hype, every time."
Visit website
Good Housekeeping UKPrint & Digital

Huge readership. Features real women's stories, particularly business success stories with a relatable, grounded angle. Very accessible for first-time pitches.

"Honest stories do really well here — they're not looking for polished perfection."
Visit website
UK Home & Lifestyle
Country Living UKPrint & Digital

Hearst title loved by half a million readers. Real homes, artisan makers, rural lifestyle, gardens, and food. Very open to small independent businesses with a story rooted in craft, countryside, or sustainable living.

"They love a maker or founder with a genuine connection to the countryside or a slower way of living. Products with a handmade or ethical angle do well here."
Visit website
Homes & GardensPrint & Digital

One of the UK's most prestigious interiors titles, published by Future. Covers elegant home design, gardens, and lifestyle. Strong digital presence and welcomes real home features and expert contributors.

"A well-styled real home or a sharp interiors opinion piece is your way in. They're actively looking for expert voices on decorating and lifestyle."
Visit website
House Beautiful UKPrint & Digital

Hearst title focused on stylish but achievable interiors. Real home makeovers, decorating trends, and product placement. Particularly good for home décor and interiors product businesses.

"Product placements in room features and real home transformations are the sweet spot here. Have great images ready."
Visit website
LivingetcPrint & Digital

Modern, design-forward interiors title from Future. One of the most approachable UK interiors magazines — welcomes homeowner submissions, not just designer-led projects. Strong digital editorial team actively seeking new voices.

"One of the easiest interiors titles to get into. They welcome homeowners and independent voices — you don't need a big name behind you."
Visit website
Country LifePrint & Digital

Established in 1897 and still going strong. Covers rural property, interiors, gardens, arts, and country pursuits. Strong readership among affluent UK and international audiences. More traditional in tone but open to relevant pitches.

"Higher end and traditional in feel. Best for businesses with a genuine heritage, countryside, or artisan angle rather than contemporary lifestyle brands."
Visit website
Elle Decoration UKPrint & Digital

Fashion-led interiors title that merges cutting-edge design with lifestyle. Covers designer profiles, trend-led home features, and stylish products. Readership skews design-savvy and aspirational.

"Lead with visual impact and design credentials. A beautifully photographed product or home with a strong aesthetic point of view is what gets noticed here."
Visit website
US Home & Lifestyle
Real SimplePrint & Digital

Published by People Inc. and read by over 7 million, predominantly women. Covers home organisation, practical living, cooking, and wellbeing. Known for its clean, uncluttered aesthetic and actionable content. Very receptive to real-life stories.

"The practical angle is everything here — how you solved a problem, simplified your life, or built something from nothing. Human stories with a useful takeaway."
Visit website
House Beautiful USPrint & Digital

Hearst's flagship US interiors title with a huge digital audience. Covers decorating trends, real homes, designer profiles, and product recommendations. Strong appetite for real transformation stories and product discovery.

"Real home transformations with before and after photography do particularly well. Have your images print-ready and the story clear before you pitch."
Visit website
Better Homes & Gardens USPrint & Digital

One of the highest-circulation magazines in America. Covers home decorating, garden design, cooking, and family lifestyle. Approachable, warm tone. Readership is broad and values practical, achievable content.

"The most accessible of the big US titles. Warm, real stories about people improving their homes and lives — no need to be a high-end designer."
Visit website
Country Living USPrint & Digital

Hearst's US country lifestyle title. Covers home décor with a rustic, cosy angle, DIY projects, gardens, recipes, and small-town living. Warm, nostalgic tone with broad appeal. Great for artisan and craft-based businesses.

"If your product or story has a handmade, heritage, or small-town American feel — this is the title to start with. They champion independent makers."
Visit website
Architectural DigestPrint & Digital

The world's most influential interiors and architecture title. High-end, design-led, and globally read. Harder to get into but worth the effort for established businesses with genuinely stunning visual assets.

"This is a stretch target for most — but don't rule it out. They do feature independent designers and unique homes, especially with a strong story behind them."
Visit website
Martha Stewart LivingPrint & Digital

Iconic US lifestyle title covering home, cooking, entertaining, crafts, and garden. Heavily DIY and project-led. Warm, instructive tone. Strong appetite for clever ideas, beautiful products, and inspiring people with a domestic creative angle.

"Lead with the idea or the project, not the product. They want to show readers how to do something — your product is the tool that makes it possible."
Visit website
Australian Home & Lifestyle
Better Homes & Gardens AustraliaPrint & Digital

Australia's number one magazine with 2.3 million readers, published by Are Media. Covers home design, renovating, gardening, cooking, and entertaining. Warm and approachable — the most accessible entry point in the Australian market.

"Australia's most-read magazine by some distance. Achievable, practical, and warm — perfect for businesses that help people improve their homes and lives."
Visit website
Australian House & GardenPrint & Digital

Are Media's premium interiors and garden title. Beautifully photographed real homes, design trends, and expert garden advice. Strong reputation and loyal readership among design-conscious Australians.

"Quality photography is non-negotiable here. If your product or home has genuine visual impact, this is a strong title to pitch."
Visit website
Inside OutPrint & Digital

Are Media title covering modern interiors, renovation, garden design, and outdoor living. Contemporary and style-forward with a broad, design-savvy Australian readership. Particularly strong on renovation stories.

"Great for renovation journeys with a personality behind them. They love a real home with a real story — not just a beautiful showroom."
Visit website
BellePrint & Digital

Australia's premium design and style magazine. Features high-end Australian and international homes, interior design, art, architecture, and travel. Aspirational, beautifully produced, and globally minded.

"The most design-led Australian title. Stretch target for newer businesses — but worth it if your visual assets are truly exceptional."
Visit website
Country Style AustraliaPrint & Digital

Are Media title celebrating relaxed country living, artisan makers, heritage homes, and rural lifestyle. Warm, authentic tone with a loyal readership. Very welcoming of small independent businesses with a genuine country or craft story.

"Australia's answer to Country Living UK. Makers, artisans, and founders with a rural or handmade story will find a natural home here."
Visit website
The Design FilesDigital

Australia's most popular independent design publication with 655k+ Instagram followers. Covers real Australian homes, gardens, art, furniture, and homewares. Known for championing independent designers and makers.

"The most approachable Australian design title for independent businesses. They genuinely champion small makers — a cold pitch with great images and a real story works here."
Visit website
UK Beauty & Fashion
Vogue UKPrint & Digital

Britain's fashion bible since 1916, published by Condé Nast. The most prestigious fashion and beauty title in the UK. High-end, visually driven, and aspirational. Harder to crack without strong visuals, but not impossible with a genuinely compelling story.

"A stretch target — but worth it. Vogue does feature independent brands and real women's stories, especially when the aesthetic is strong and the narrative is fresh."
Visit website
Harper's Bazaar UKPrint & Digital

Hearst's luxury fashion and beauty title. Covers high-end style, beauty, culture, and influential women. More editorial than commercial, with a sophisticated, intellectually curious readership. Strong appetite for women with interesting stories.

"Bazaar loves a woman of substance — someone who has built or created something significant. Lead with the person, not just the product."
Visit website
ELLE UKPrint & Digital

Hearst's fashion-forward monthly for women who want to be first to know. Covers global trends, beauty, culture, and career. Strong appetite for fresh voices, independent brands, and women doing interesting things. More accessible than Vogue.

"ELLE is more approachable than Vogue or Bazaar. They actively look for new independent brands and are very open to pitches from women with a strong point of view."
Visit website
Cosmopolitan UKPrint & Digital

Hearst's high-energy women's title covering beauty, fashion, relationships, and culture. Enormous reach — 2.5 million Facebook followers. Energetic, empowering tone. One of the most accessible of the major fashion titles for first-time press approaches.

"More accessible than most. If your story has an empowering, confidence-boosting angle, Cosmo is a natural fit — and their beauty section is very product-friendly."
Visit website
Marie Claire UKPrint & Digital

Future Publishing title combining high-gloss fashion and beauty with intelligent journalism. Covers style, beauty, career, and global women's issues. Readership skews smart, ambitious, and socially aware. Particularly good for founder stories with a broader social angle.

"Marie Claire loves stories about women who've built something — especially if there's a social mission or a bigger 'why' behind it."
Visit website
Allure UK (via Condé Nast)Digital

The definitive beauty authority from Condé Nast. Entirely dedicated to beauty — skincare, makeup, hair, and wellness. Product-focused and review-driven. If you have a beauty product or service, this is the most targeted title to pitch in the Condé Nast stable.

"Pure beauty focus makes this the right title for beauty product businesses. Have your formulation story, ingredients, and high-res imagery ready."
Visit website
US Beauty & Fashion
Vogue USPrint & Digital

The global fashion authority, published by Condé Nast. Sets the agenda for the entire industry. Extremely high standards for visual content. Worth pitching if your brand has a genuinely distinctive aesthetic and a compelling founder story. Condé Nast editor email format: firstname_lastname@condenast.com.

"The biggest reach in fashion. Be realistic about where you are in your journey — but don't rule it out. They do feature independent founders, especially with a strong cultural story."
Visit website
Harper's Bazaar USPrint & Digital

Hearst's flagship US luxury fashion and beauty title. Intellectual, elegant, and culturally engaged. Strong record of championing women who are doing interesting things beyond fashion. Hearst editor email format: firstname.lastname@hearst.com.

"Lead with your story, not your product. Bazaar is drawn to women who are redefining something — whether that's beauty, business, or what success looks like."
Visit website
ELLE USPrint & Digital

Hearst's global fashion powerhouse — the world's biggest-selling fashion magazine. Covers fashion, beauty, culture, and career with a forward-thinking, feminist perspective. More accessible than Vogue for independent voices and brands.

"One of the more accessible major US titles. They're actively interested in independent brands and women building businesses — pitch to the relevant section editor directly."
Visit website
Allure USPrint & Digital

America's leading beauty authority, published by Condé Nast. 100% focused on beauty — skincare, makeup, haircare, and wellness. Known for its Best of Beauty awards, which are hugely influential for product-based beauty businesses.

"If you have a beauty product, Allure's Best of Beauty awards are worth knowing about — winning one can transform a small brand. Pitch to the beauty editor with your hero product and its formulation story."
Visit website
Cosmopolitan USPrint & Digital

One of the highest-circulation women's magazines in the world. Covers beauty, fashion, relationships, career, and pop culture. Bold, empowering, and inclusive tone. One of the most accessible major US titles for first-time press approaches.

"Cosmo is the most accessible entry point in the big US titles. The empowerment angle resonates strongly here — lead with the human story."
Visit website
InStyle USDigital only

Fashion, beauty, and celebrity style — now a digital-only brand following the end of its print edition in 2022. Still a significant online audience with strong social reach. Good for product-based businesses and founder features pitched to the digital team.

"Digital-only now but still worth pitching. The editorial team is lean — keep your pitch short, visual, and very on-trend."
Visit website
Australian Beauty & Fashion
Vogue AustraliaPrint & Digital

Published by News Corp under Condé Nast licence. The authoritative voice in Australian fashion for over 60 years. Monthly runway coverage, trend reports, celebrity news, and beauty. Publishes under vogue.com.au — editor email format typically firstname.lastname@vogue.com.au.

"The most prestigious Australian fashion title. Strong visual assets and a distinctive Australian story are your best route in — they champion local designers and founders."
Visit website
Harper's Bazaar AustraliaPrint & Digital

Published by Switzer Media. Relaunched in 2021 after a brief closure and going strong. Australia's number one fashion magazine covering luxury style, beauty, and culture. Strong track record of championing Australian designers and creative entrepreneurs.

"Bazaar Australia is very open to Australian independent brands. Lead with the founder's story and make sure your photography is immaculate."
Visit website
marie claire AustraliaPrint & Digital

Are Media title combining high-gloss fashion and beauty with real women's stories and intelligent journalism. Covers style, beauty, career, and social issues. Readership skews smart and ambitious. Particularly receptive to women who have built something and have a compelling story to tell.

"A great title for female founders. The combination of fashion gloss and real substance means they actively look for women who are doing something interesting."
Visit website
FrankiePrint & Digital

Independent Australian bi-monthly with a cult following. Covers fashion, art, culture, and lifestyle with a smart, sarcastic, curious voice. Champions independent makers, artists, and small creative businesses. One of the most approachable and distinctive Australian titles for indie brands.

"Frankie is genuinely indie-friendly — they love discovering small, interesting businesses before anyone else does. The more personality and story behind your brand, the better."
Visit website
Gritty PrettyDigital

Australia's leading independent beauty publication, founded by Eleanor Pendleton. Expert-curated beauty content with a focus on education and honest reviews. Huge digital and social following. Very receptive to independent beauty brands with a genuine story behind the formulations.

"The most accessible Australian beauty title for independent brands. Eleanor built this independently herself — she genuinely champions indie founders and is very open to pitches."
Visit website
ELLE AustraliaPrint & Digital

Are Media's ELLE Australia returned to print in 2024 after a three-year digital-only period, publishing four editions a year. Covers fashion, beauty, and culture for style-conscious Australian women. Strong digital audience alongside the revived print edition.

"ELLE Australia is back in print and the team are commissioning actively. Pitch with strong imagery and a clear trend hook — what does your brand say about where fashion or beauty is heading?"
Visit website
Business & Entrepreneurship
Startups MagazineDigital

UK-based publication covering startup stories and founder journeys. Very open to featuring smaller, independent businesses — a great first-press option.

"Great starting point if you haven't had press before. They're actively looking for real founder stories."
Visit website
Real BusinessDigital

Long-running UK SME publication focused on founder interviews and business leadership. Best suited to established businesses with milestones to share.

"Better for businesses with stats to share — wait until you have a solid milestone."
Visit website
The Female LeadDigital

Platform celebrating women in all areas of life. Strong community focus and closely aligned with FEHQ values. Particularly good for service-based businesses.

"Perfect fit for this community — they love stories about women supporting women."
Visit website
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