You sent a pitch. Two weeks have passed. Nothing.
You want to follow up, but you do not want to sound clingy, annoying, or like you have nothing better to do. So you stall. And the pitch dies in someone's inbox.
Here is the truth about follow-up emails: editors expect them. Most editorial inboxes get hundreds of pitches per week. A well-timed follow-up does not make you look desperate. It makes you look professional.
This guide gives you the exact sequence to use, the timing that works, and three word-for-word templates.
Why Most Writers Never Follow Up (And Why That Kills Opportunities)
In a survey of 200 freelance writers, fewer than 40% said they consistently follow up after pitching. The reasons:
- "I don't want to annoy them."
- "If they were interested, they would have replied."
- "I don't know what to say that isn't awkward."
Every one of these beliefs is wrong, and they are costing you assignments.
Editors are human. They get busy, forget, lose emails, move to a new CMS, go on vacation. A silence after your pitch usually means nothing — certainly not a rejection. Following up once or twice is expected behavior in professional publishing.
The 3-Email Follow-Up Sequence
Use this exact sequence for any pitch to an editor or potential client. Adjust the timing based on the publication's stated response time, if they have one.
Email 1: The First Nudge (Day 7-10)
Short, confident, no groveling. Reference the pitch briefly, offer to send clips or expand if useful, and leave a clear exit.
Email 2: The Second Touch (Day 14-21)
At this point, you can introduce a small new hook — a recent news peg, a new angle, or a second idea — to make the follow-up feel like new value, not nagging.
Email 3: The Close (Day 28-35)
The final email. Keep it very short. No apologies, no drama. You are simply closing the loop so you can move on.
What Not to Do When Following Up
These are the follow-up patterns that make editors put you on their mental do-not-reply list:
- Apologizing for following up. "Sorry to bother you again" signals low confidence and wastes the reader's time before you get to the point.
- Sending too many follow-ups. Three emails over 30-35 days is the maximum. After that, let it go.
- Getting passive-aggressive. "I sent this three weeks ago and haven't heard back" is not a professional tone, even if it's factually accurate.
- Sending a wall of text. Follow-up emails should be 3-5 sentences. Not a second pitch.
- Changing the subject line. Keep the same thread. It shows continuity and makes your email easy to find.
Timing: When to Follow Up After a Pitch
General rules that work across most publications and clients:
- If the publication states a response time (e.g., "responds within 4-6 weeks"): Follow up at the end of that window, not before.
- If no response time is stated: First follow-up at 7-10 days, second at 2-3 weeks, third at 4-5 weeks.
- For client proposals: Follow up after 3 business days, then weekly twice, then let it go.
What Happens After the Third Email
If you have sent three follow-ups and received no response, pitch the idea somewhere else. Mark that contact as "low response" in your CRM and move on. Do not keep emailing.
Six months later, you can attempt to reconnect with a completely fresh idea and zero reference to your previous pitch. Editors change, editorial needs change, and a clean slate sometimes works better than a history.
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Summary: The Follow-Up Rules That Work
- Follow up 2-3 times over 30-35 days maximum
- Keep follow-ups short (3-5 sentences)
- Never apologize for following up
- Give the editor a clear exit ("I'll take it elsewhere")
- Add a small new hook in the second follow-up
- After 3 emails with no response, pitch it somewhere else
Following up is not a sign of desperation. Done right, it is a sign of professionalism — and it lands assignments that silence would have killed.