
Your guide to understanding when to respond to media queries versus when to pitch directly—so you can choose the right approach for your goals and resources.
TL;DR – Quick Summary
- HARO offers reactive opportunities: Responding to journalists’ queries can secure quick placements, but competition is high, and you have limited control over messaging or positioning.
- Direct outreach enables strategic positioning: Pitching specific journalists requires more effort but allows you to shape narratives, build relationships, and secure more substantial coverage.
- Most teams use both: HARO supplements broader PR efforts with incremental visibility, while direct outreach remains central to strategic media relations.
Public relations teams often rely on a mix of tactics to secure media coverage, and two of the most common approaches are responding to media queries and conducting direct outreach. Platforms like Help a Reporter Out (HARO) have historically provided a structured way for journalists and sources to connect, while direct outreach involves pitching story ideas to specific reporters.
Both approaches can support media relations efforts, but they function differently and offer distinct advantages and limitations. Understanding how modern media outreach actually works behind the scenes helps clarify where each approach is still effective.
How HARO Works
HARO connects journalists with sources by distributing queries from reporters seeking expert input or commentary. PR professionals and subject matter experts can respond directly to these requests, typically within a limited timeframe.
This model creates a clear opportunity for placement. Journalists have already identified a need, and responses that meet their requirements may be included in published coverage. For organizations looking to contribute expertise without initiating a pitch, this can be a useful channel.
However, HARO is also highly competitive. A single query can receive dozens or even hundreds of responses, making it difficult to stand out. Journalists may only use a small number of submissions, and many responses don’t receive a reply. You might spend hours responding to queries without ever seeing your contributions in print.
Strengths and Limitations of HARO
One of the main strengths of HARO is efficiency in identifying opportunities. Instead of researching journalists and pitching ideas, PR teams can respond to existing requests that align with current reporting needs. Understanding what journalists actually respond to in a pitch matters less when they’ve already told you exactly what they need.
It can also provide access to outlets or journalists that may be difficult to reach through traditional pitching. For smaller organizations or those without established media relationships, this can be a useful entry point.
The limitations:
HARO offers limited control over messaging and positioning. Responses are often used in short quotes or brief mentions, which may not fully reflect a brand’s intended narrative. There’s also little opportunity to build an ongoing relationship with the journalist, as interactions are typically transactional and tied to a single request.
What you get:
- Quick visibility: When your response is selected, coverage can happen within days
- Low barrier to entry: No existing media relationships required
- Clear requirements: Journalists specify exactly what they need
What you don’t get:
- Control over narrative: Your quote may be one line in a larger story
- Relationship building: One-off interactions don’t create ongoing connections
- Guaranteed placement: Most responses are never used
👉 Pro Tip: If responding to HARO queries is your primary PR strategy, you’re being reactive rather than strategic. HARO works best as a supplement to proactive outreach, not as a replacement for it.
How Direct Outreach Works
Direct outreach involves identifying relevant journalists and pitching story ideas or sources to them. This approach requires research into coverage areas, editorial focus, and timing, as well as the development of tailored pitches. When outreach efforts translate into press coverage, it’s typically because the pitch was strategically targeted and well-timed.
Unlike HARO, direct outreach is initiated by the PR team. This provides more control over the story angle, messaging, and the organization’s positioning within the narrative. You’re not waiting for a journalist to ask—you’re identifying opportunities and bringing them ideas that fit their coverage.
Direct outreach can also support long-term relationship building. Repeated, relevant interactions over time can lead to more consistent engagement and future opportunities. A journalist who covers your pitch this month may reach out directly next month when they’re working on a related story.
Strengths and Limitations of Direct Outreach
One of the key strengths of direct outreach is the ability to align pitches with a broader PR strategy. Teams can prioritize specific messages, topics, or campaigns and connect them with journalists most likely to find them relevant.
This approach also allows for more in-depth coverage. When a journalist engages with a direct pitch, there may be opportunities for interviews, feature stories, or ongoing commentary. You’re not limited to a single quote—you can shape the entire narrative.
The challenges:
Direct outreach requires more time and effort. Researching journalists, crafting tailored messages, and managing follow-ups can be resource-intensive. Response rates can also vary, especially when pitches aren’t closely aligned with editorial priorities. Understanding why broad, volume-based outreach tends to fail helps explain why targeting matters even when it takes more time.
The tradeoff is straightforward: HARO is easier but offers less control and weaker results. Direct outreach is harder but produces better coverage and builds relationships that compound over time.
What Still Works in Practice
Both HARO and direct outreach can still be effective, but their roles have shifted over time. HARO tends to work best for securing smaller placements, contributing expert commentary, or supplementing broader media efforts. It’s often used as a reactive channel rather than a primary strategy.
Direct outreach remains central to most PR strategies, particularly when the goal is to shape narratives, build relationships, and secure more substantial coverage. It allows organizations to take a more proactive approach to media engagement.
In practice, many PR teams use a combination of both. HARO can provide incremental visibility and access to specific opportunities, while direct outreach supports more strategic goals. The key is understanding which approach fits which situation:
- Use HARO when: You have subject matter expertise to contribute, need quick wins to show activity, or want exposure to outlets you haven’t built relationships with yet
- Use direct outreach when: You’re launching something new, have a specific narrative to build, want substantial coverage, or are focused on long-term relationship building
👉 Strategic Note: If your PR metrics are mostly HARO placements, you’re likely getting mentions without building momentum. Track the ratio—healthy PR programs get more coverage from direct outreach than from reactive responses.
Choosing the Right Approach
The choice between HARO and direct outreach depends on the organization’s goals, resources, and stage of development. For teams with limited time or established relationships, HARO can offer a structured way to participate in media coverage without the research and relationship-building overhead.
For those focused on long-term positioning and consistent messaging, direct outreach is typically more aligned with strategic objectives. It allows for greater control and supports ongoing engagement with journalists.
Consider your resources:
- Limited PR bandwidth: HARO provides a lower-effort way to secure some coverage
- Dedicated PR resources: Invest in direct outreach for better long-term results
- New to PR: Start with HARO to learn what journalists need, then build direct outreach skills
- Established PR program: Use HARO opportunistically while focusing most effort on strategic direct outreach
The most effective approach often combines both, with the balance shifting based on your strategic priorities and available resources.
Key Takeaways
HARO and direct outreach serve different purposes within public relations. While HARO can help secure quick visibility, direct outreach provides a more strategic path to building relationships and shaping media narratives. Understanding the strengths and limitations of each approach helps PR teams use them more effectively within a broader communications strategy.
About the AuthorÂ
Hayden Hammerling leads media relations and social strategy initiatives for Bender Group PR. His expertise includes influencer campaigns, e-commerce positioning, and integrated visibility strategies.
About Us
The Bender Group is a boutique public relations firm that combines the strongest elements of traditional PR with innovative techniques to consistently secure top-tier media placement for our clients.