CoinDesk doesn't run announcements. It runs the canonical narrative the rest of the crypto press reads to write theirs. If you want to get featured there in 2026, you have to bring a story, not a press release. Here is the playbook I run on launch day.

I have placed Web3 protocols and AI startups in CoinDesk across mainnet launches, funding rounds, regulatory crises, integration announcements, founder profiles, and category-defining op-eds — including coverage tied to RARI Foundation's mainnet, Gaia AI's positioning, MANTRA Chain's $11M raise, Web3Auth's Google Cloud x Firebase integration, and Fluence Network's DePIN narrative. The seven moves below are the ones that consistently work. They are not theory.

Step 1: Map the right reporter, not the masthead

CoinDesk has roughly 25 to 35 active newsroom reporters at any given time. They are not interchangeable. Each one covers a beat — DeFi, layer-1 infrastructure, regulation and policy, stablecoins, gaming and NFTs, AI x crypto, APAC, institutional, mining, or breaking news desk.

Before you pitch, read the last 12 to 20 bylines from each candidate reporter. List them with: their beat, the angles they have covered in the last 90 days, the kinds of stories they have not taken, and their tone (skeptical, technical, market-moving, profile-led). Pick the one whose last three pieces overlap with your story angle. This step alone separates pitches that land from pitches that die in inboxes.

Cold-pitching the breaking news desk for a category-defining DeFi story, or pitching the DeFi reporter a regulatory take, is the single most common reason a CoinDesk pitch goes nowhere. The reporter rotates the wrong beat into a delete, not a forward.

Step 2: Build a story angle, not an announcement

The first three lines of every pitch I have ever lost said something like "We're excited to announce..." or "Today, [protocol] launches..." CoinDesk editors filter for what the launch tells readers about the market, not what the launch is.

Translate every press release through this question: what does this say about where the category is going?

  • A token launch becomes "the first L2 to ship native account abstraction without a separate wallet onboarding."
  • A funding round becomes "the strategic capital that signals which infrastructure layer institutional desks are picking for stablecoin settlement."
  • A partnership becomes "Google Cloud and Firebase quietly entering the on-chain identity layer."
  • A product update becomes "the new monetisation model that breaks the NFT royalty deadlock."

The funding number, the product specs, and the partner names sit in paragraph 2 and 3. Paragraph 1 sells the category implication.

Step 3: Write a pitch under 180 words

Three paragraphs. No attachments. No PDFs. No video. Plain text email.

Pitch template — under 180 wordsSubject: Embargo May 28 — first L2 to ship account abstraction at the protocol layer Hi [Reporter first name], Quick context, then the angle. [Protocol] is launching on [date] with native account abstraction at the protocol layer — no SDK, no wallet add-on. It is the first L2 to do this, and it changes how onboarding works for consumer apps. I noticed your March piece on [specific recent article they wrote]; this story sits in the same territory. We are offering CoinDesk the first look. Embargo May 28, 9 AM ET. Founder Alex Lee is available for a 30 min briefing this week. We can ship: full press kit, three customer quotes (Polygon, Coinbase Ventures, and one anonymised exchange), founder photos, and a 12-month roadmap. We are not pitching The Block or Decrypt for this exclusive. Can you take a look? Shilika

That is the entire pitch. The reporter takes 90 seconds to read it. If the angle is right and the embargo is real, you have a reply in 24 hours.

Step 4: Offer a real embargo with a clear window

The single fastest way to burn a reporter is to break an embargo, or to pitch the same exclusive to a competing outlet without telling either.

MoveOutcome
Offer embargo 7-10 days before launchGives reporter time to brief, draft, and clear with editor
Offer 48-72 hour embargo windowStandard CoinDesk window. Anything tighter looks rushed
Confirm embargo in writing"Confirmed for May 28, 9 AM ET" — never verbal
One outlet per exclusive, unless statedTelling Decrypt and The Block you offered them the same exclusive is the end of all three relationships
Brief no asset distribution until embargo agreedPress kit goes out only after reporter accepts terms

If you have not done embargo coordination before and you are pitching CoinDesk on a meaningful launch, hire someone who has — or read the rules through three times. The downside of getting it wrong is worse than the upside of getting one piece of coverage.

Step 5: Pre-brief and send a tight package

Once the embargo is accepted, schedule a 30 to 45 minute founder briefing within 72 hours. The reporter will probe for:

  1. Why now. Why this story, this week.
  2. What is provably new. Not "first ever" marketing claims — actually verifiable.
  3. What the market doesn't yet see. The thesis the reporter can carry.
  4. Who else is in the room. Named customers, investors, partners.
  5. What can break the story. Founders who don't disclose risk get burned later.

The press kit you send after the briefing should fit on one page of key facts plus links: 2 named customer quotes, 3 usable charts, 2 founder photos at 2400x1600 or higher, a one-paragraph bio, and a one-paragraph company description. Anything longer doesn't get used.

Step 6: Manage the day-of-launch

Day-of is operations, not strategy. Three things matter:

  • Confirm publish window. Email the reporter the morning of launch with a one-line: "Confirming 9 AM ET publish. Anything else you need from the founder before then?"
  • Founder on standby. 90-minute window pre-publish where the founder is reachable on Telegram or phone for last-minute clarifications.
  • Coordinate partner timing. Any exchange announcement, partner tweet, or syndication push should lag CoinDesk's piece by 15 to 30 minutes. CoinDesk going second on its own exclusive is the most extractable thing you can do to a reporter.
Field ruleIf your launch breaks across five outlets at once, CoinDesk is no longer covering your story. They are covering the same news everyone else is. That is a roundup, not a feature.

Step 7: Follow up with the second story

The largest leverage in the relationship sits in story two, not story one. Reporters who covered you once are roughly 4 to 5 times more likely to cover you again than cold contacts. Use that.

Two weeks after launch, return to the same reporter with a tied second beat — usage data ("here's what the first two weeks looked like"), a partnership that ties into the original story, or a customer outcome. Keep the relationship warm with a quarterly check-in even when you have nothing to pitch. The next launch is the one the reporter is already inclined to cover.

Three worked examples

Quick teardowns of campaigns I have run where the moves above either landed or didn't.

RARI Foundation mainnet — 11 Tier-1 placements in 24 hours

The category angle was NFT royalties, not L2 launch. CoinDesk got the exclusive on the royalty enforcement mechanism, embargoed 9 days out, with named exchange partners. The launch hit at 9 AM ET. By the next morning the story had been re-reported across Decrypt, The Block, NFTNow, and ten regional outlets. Lesson: the story you sell CoinDesk has to be the story the rest of the press is willing to re-report.

Gaia AI — Forbes-led, CoinDesk follow-on

Gaia AI's "Stripe for AI agents" positioning landed in Forbes first, then triggered CoinDesk's AI x crypto beat to pick up the on-chain agent angle. The play was sequential, not simultaneous. CoinDesk would not have taken it as a launch announcement; they took it as a category piece once Forbes had established the narrative. Lesson: sometimes CoinDesk is story three, not story one.

MANTRA Chain — Middle East crossover

The $11M raise had a Middle East angle that mattered for regulated RWA. The pitch led with regulatory significance, not raise size. CoinDesk's policy desk picked it up because the story was about UAE policy, not about the funding number. Lesson: lead with the angle the desk actually covers, not with the dollars.

Why a CoinDesk placement is worth more in 2026 than it was last year

Two changes from May 2026 raised the floor on what a CoinDesk byline is actually worth. First, Google's AI Overviews update of May 6, 2026 introduced a "subscribed publication" callout — when an Overview cites an outlet the searcher pays for, the source line is visibly highlighted. CoinDesk, Cointelegraph, Forbes, and The Information all benefit. Second, AI Overviews now appear on roughly 48 percent of US Google queries (WordStream / Heroic Rankings, April 2026 sample), and citations sit immediately next to the generated text rather than in a side panel. Translation: a single CoinDesk feature in 2026 is showing up next to the answer text on roughly half of category searches, with a subscription-pay highlight when the buyer is already a subscriber.

That changes the buyer math. A Tier-1 placement is no longer just a referral source — it is a structural citation surface in the same answer your buyer is reading on ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude and Google AI Mode. The Princeton GEO study (Aggarwal et al., arXiv:2311.09735, ACM SIGKDD 2024) measured a 30 to 40 percent uplift in generative-engine citation rates when articles carry inline statistics, named sources, and direct quotations. CoinDesk's editorial standard already covers those signals; pitching with them in mind compounds the effect.

What I do for clients on this

For most founders, the gap between "I want to be in CoinDesk" and "I am in CoinDesk this Tuesday" is not pitch craft — it is the reporter map, the embargo etiquette, and the ability to translate a launch into a category story under pressure. That is the entire job.

If you want help running this for a specific launch, the 30-minute teardown is the next step. Bring your launch timeline, your top three CoinDesk reporters by beat, and the angle you are considering leading with. You will leave with a sharper one of each.

SJ
Shilika Jain

Senior Web3 & AI PR consultant. 50+ protocols placed in Forbes, CoinDesk, Cointelegraph, Decrypt, The Block, Blockworks, Bitcoin Magazine, Benzinga, and AI Magazine. APAC coverage across Korea, Japan, Vietnam, Singapore and India. View full profile → · Book a 30-min teardown →

Frequently asked questions

How do you actually pitch CoinDesk and get a response?
Read the reporter's last 12 to 20 bylines, find the one whose beat matches your story (DeFi, infra, regulation, stablecoins, gaming, AI x crypto, APAC), and write a pitch under 180 words: one paragraph on what's news, one on why it matters to that beat specifically, one on what's exclusive. Confirm you can ship assets in 24 hours.
Does CoinDesk accept press releases?
CoinDesk publishes paid press release distribution via partners, but editorial coverage in the newsroom is earned through direct reporter outreach, not press release submissions. The two funnels are firewalled — paying for one does not increase the odds of the other.
How far in advance should I pitch CoinDesk for a launch?
7 to 10 days before launch is the sweet spot. Earlier and the reporter forgets; closer than 5 days and they may not have an editor slot. Offer a 48 to 72 hour embargo, confirm in writing, send the press kit only after terms are agreed.
What gets a pitch killed at CoinDesk in 2026?
Five things: pitching the wrong reporter, leading with a funding announcement instead of a category-level story, broken embargo behavior, no data or named customers behind the claims, and asking for editorial coverage in exchange for paid press release distribution.
Can I get CoinDesk coverage without a PR agency?
Yes — and many founders do, especially in the first 18 to 24 months. Direct founder-to-reporter relationships are valued by CoinDesk editors. What an experienced operator brings is the journalist map, the embargo etiquette, the pitch craft, and a 2-week-out launch timeline that doesn't burn the relationship.
How long does it take to land a CoinDesk feature?
Editorial coverage tied to a launch typically takes 2 to 4 weeks from first reporter contact to publish. Profile pieces or category-defining features that aren't tied to a launch can take 2 to 3 months because they require multiple briefings and editor sign-off.