---
title: "Token2049 Singapore PR Playbook: How to Win Earned Media Before, During, and"
description: "Token2049 Singapore concentrates top-tier crypto and mainstream press in one venue for 48 hours. This tactical playbook covers the 6-week pre-conference PR sequence, on-site journalist access, and post-conference"
author: "Shilika Jain"
date: "2026-06-20T11:01:02.392+00:00"
tags: ["Token2049", "conference PR", "Singapore", "crypto conference", "earned media", "Web3 events PR", "media strategy", "founder-playbook"]
canonical: "https://www.shilikajain.com/blog/token2049-singapore-pr-playbook-earned-media"
---

# Token2049 Singapore PR Playbook: How to Win Earned Media Before, During, and

By [Shilika Jain](https://www.shilikajain.com/authors/shilika-jain) — 6/20/2026

Token2049 Singapore concentrates top-tier crypto and mainstream press in one venue for 48 hours. This tactical playbook covers the 6-week pre-conference PR sequence, on-site journalist access, and post-conference

---

# Token2049 Singapore PR Playbook: How to Win Earned Media Before, During, and After the Conference

Most projects treat Token2049 Singapore as a branding moment. Show up, badge in, post photos at Marina Bay Sands. The founders who actually move the needle treat it differently: as a compressed, time-boxed window where the entire global crypto press pool is within a 10-minute walk of your spokesperson, and where a single well-placed story can carry more credibility signal than six months of wire distributions.

This guide is about winning that window. Not sponsoring it. Winning it through earned media.

## Why Token2049 Singapore Is the APAC PR Moment of the Year

The math is simple. Token2049 Singapore returns to Marina Bay Sands on **October 7–8, 2026**, anchoring a full Token2049 Week (October 5–11). The 2025 edition sold out at 25,000 attendees from over 160 countries, with 500+ exhibitors and 300+ speakers on five stages. More importantly for PR strategy: top-tier mainstream media, leading technology outlets, and crypto trade publications all send editorial teams on-site to cover the event.

In practical terms, that means a journalist from CoinDesk, The Block, or Blockworks (someone who would otherwise respond to your pitch in five business days if you're lucky) is physically present, on deadline, and actively looking for story angles for 48 hours straight. That changes the access equation entirely.

The conference coincides with Formula 1 Grand Prix week in Singapore, extending the city's international-week energy and keeping high-profile investors and executives around well beyond the two-day agenda. The side event ecosystem numbered over 1,000 events in 2025, creating parallel venues where less formal journalist conversations happen. These are often more valuable than anything that occurs on the main stage.

Conference cycles like Token2049 create what experienced comms teams understand as **narrative gravity**: journalists are actively seeking commentary, investors are scanning for emerging sectors, and founders can reposition projects around broader market themes. A funding round, product release, or ecosystem announcement made during Token2049 Week can attract disproportionately higher media attention than the same announcement made on a quiet Tuesday six weeks later.

That gravity is real, but only if you have done the work before you land in Singapore.

## The 6-Week Pre-Conference PR Timeline

### Week 6 (Mid-August): Build Your Media Target List

Do not wait until mid-September to start mapping journalists. Six weeks out, build a beat-specific target list of 15 to 25 reporters whose coverage aligns with your project category. Crypto media is not monolithic. Some reporters cover DeFi protocol development. Others cover exchange regulation, infrastructure, or cross-chain primitives. A reporter who recently covered ZK-proof implementations is far more likely to respond to a pitch about a privacy-focused protocol than a generalist who mostly covers exchange hacks.

Check their recent bylines. Cross-reference against their event attendance history; many journalists signal their Token2049 presence on X weeks in advance. Map who is flying in from New York, London, or Seoul, because time zones affect when they publish and when they are receptive to meetings.

Do not cold-pitch this list yet. Week 6 is research week.

### Week 5 (Late August): Pre-Warm Journalist Relationships

This is where most projects skip a step that actually matters. Before you have anything to pitch, make yourself useful. Share relevant on-chain data. Offer an informed comment on an industry development without any story agenda attached. The founders who get consistent conference coverage are typically the ones who have provided value to journalists for months before they need something.

If you already have warm relationships with two or three reporters on your list, this is the moment to signal that you will have something worth their time at Token2049. Do not reveal the story yet. Just open the door.

### Week 4 (Early September): Confirm Your Speaking Angle

Token2049's speaking application process is competitive. The organizers receive a significant volume of inbound requests, and the guidance is to submit early, be interesting, and be relevant. If you are pursuing a panel slot for the 2026 edition, your window for influence opened months ago.

That said, speaking at Token2049 Week does not require a main-stage slot. Side events, satellite conferences, and ecosystem-hosted dinners all generate coverage if you are pitching a genuinely novel idea and a journalist is in the room. Map the side events relevant to your sector and get yourself into the program.

Speaking generates organic coverage in a way that a booth never does. A quote from a panel, even a small one, gives a reporter a news hook. That is harder to manufacture from a hallway conversation alone.

### Week 3 (Mid-September): Finalize Your Media Kit

A media kit for Token2049 is not a product deck with your logo on it. It is a journalist-ready asset package built to make their job easier on-site, when they have 20 conversations a day and no time to track down supporting materials.

Your kit should include:

- **A one-page company brief** with your narrative positioned against a sector theme, not a company-first description
- **Key metrics** (TVL, active wallets, transaction volume, or whatever your project's relevant data points are, with clear sourcing)
- **High-res logos and founder headshots**, because missing assets kill pickup rates
- **Two or three quote-ready statements** from your spokesperson covering your project's angle on the dominant conference themes
- **Embargo-eligible announcement materials**, if applicable

On the embargo question: offering an exclusive first look to one reporter before broader distribution gives that journalist a professional incentive to cover your announcement thoroughly. This is how consistent tier-1 placements happen. Be honest, though, about whether your announcement warrants the restriction. If the news would not be interesting without the embargo, adding one will not help.

### Week 2 (Late September): Begin Journalist Outreach

Now you pitch. Lead with the story angle, not your company name. Keep your initial outreach to three or four sentences. Reference something specific the journalist has covered recently. Offer a clear hook: exclusive data, an on-site interview slot, or embargo access to a report. One polite follow-up after five business days is appropriate. Aggressive follow-up is the fastest way to get blocked permanently.

For announcements you are timing to the conference itself, set embargo lifts for mid-week. Tuesday through Thursday mornings tend to perform better than Fridays, when newsrooms thin out. Token2049 runs Wednesday and Thursday in 2026; plan lift timing around the first day of programming when journalist attention is highest.

### Week 1 (Conference Week Prep): Lock Your On-Site Calendar

Before you land in Singapore, every journalist meeting should be pre-scheduled with a specific time, a backup location, and a one-sentence note on what you will be discussing. Journalists at Token2049 have dozens of meeting requests. The ones who commit to a time tend to show up; vague agreements to "grab coffee at some point" rarely materialize.

Build a tiered meeting structure:

- **Priority meetings**: your top three to five journalist targets, pre-booked with specific materials ready
- **Side event appearances**: panels or dinners where you are on the program and a journalist might be in the audience
- **Spontaneous conversations**: know the media lounge locations and when press teams typically pass through them

## On-Site Execution: 48 Hours That Count

### The First Morning Sets the Tone

October 7 morning is when journalist attention is freshest and their story queues are most open. If you have an announcement with an embargo lifting on the first day, coordinate the lift for early morning Singapore time, giving reporters in Asia prime time to publish while European and US desks wake up to existing coverage.

If your spokesperson is speaking on a panel, brief them beforehand on the one or two quotable insights they should land clearly: something counter-intuitive, data-backed, or genuinely opinionated about the direction of the sector. Panel quotes that make it into coverage are almost never the safe ones.

### Be Easy to Find

Journalists working a conference of 25,000 people are not going to hunt you down. Be in the locations where press circulates. Know the media lounge, the hallways adjacent to the main stage, and the side events where editorial teams tend to aggregate. Have your media kit accessible. A QR code linking to a clean Notion or Google Drive folder works better than emailing PDFs from a crowded exhibition floor.

### Protect Relationship Capital

This is not the moment to oversell or hard-pitch people who did not ask. A journalist who has a genuine conversation with your founder and comes away curious will follow up. One who feels ambushed with a sales deck will remember that, and your next pitch email will go directly to their delete folder. Be generous with context. Be restrained with asks.

## Post-Conference: Converting Buzz Into Sustained Coverage

The conference ends. Most projects stop. That is the gap.

### The Week-After Window

The seven to ten days following Token2049 are when tier-1 journalists write their synthesis pieces: the trend analyses, the "what Token2049 told us about the next cycle" features that aggregate across multiple conversations. You want your project, your founder's quote, or your announcement's data point to be part of that synthesis.

Follow up with every journalist you met on-site within 48 hours of leaving Singapore. Keep it brief. Reference what you discussed, include any supporting materials you promised, and offer one hook for a potential follow-up story. Do not recap the entire conversation. They were there.

### Sustain the Narrative

Token2049 coverage that lives only in the conference recap cycle decays fast. To convert conference buzz into sustained tier-1 coverage:

- **Turn your announcement into a 30-day follow-up sequence**: on-chain data updates, ecosystem milestones, or partner announcements that extend the original story
- **Place a bylined op-ed** in the weeks following the conference, using the panel topic or the theme you raised on-site as the hook, but now with more depth than a panel allows
- **Offer yourself as a reactive source** on the sector themes that dominated Token2049's agenda; journalists working ongoing stories about those themes will be looking for expert voices for weeks after the event

### Track What Landed

Coverage volume is a vanity metric. What matters is whether the stories that ran reached the audience that moves your business: your actual users, your current investors, or the institutional counterparties you are trying to reach. A 500-word story in The Block reaches a different decision-making audience than a 200-word mention in a round-up newsletter. Know the difference when you evaluate the week.

## The One Mistake That Kills Conference PR ROI

Treating Token2049 as a distribution event rather than a relationship event.

Projects that show up with a press release and a wire service budget walk away with some pickups and no new relationships. Projects that spend the six weeks before October 7 building genuine familiarity with the journalists covering their category (sending useful data, offering commentary without an agenda, making themselves worth talking to) walk away with coverage that compounds over time.

Token2049 Singapore concentrates the people who matter most to earned media strategy into 48 hours and a single venue once a year. That compression is the opportunity. The work that earns it starts six weeks before the opening keynote.

*Token2049 Singapore 2026 runs October 7–8 at Marina Bay Sands, anchoring Token2049 Week (October 5–11). Speaking applications and media accreditation processes have their own timelines. Confirm directly with organizers at token2049.com.*

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Canonical: https://www.shilikajain.com/blog/token2049-singapore-pr-playbook-earned-media
