Most founders think about press the wrong way. They wait until they have news, then scramble to find reporters, cold pitch into inboxes, and wonder why nobody responds.
Here's the reality: only about 3% of cold pitches ever get a response. Now, this isn't to say it's because your story isn't good. It's because the reporter has never heard of you.
The founders who consistently land coverage don't always have better stories. They're better relationship builders, and the most efficient place to build those relationships isn't in your inbox. It's in a room.
The single most underused PR move for early-stage founders: showing up in person before you have anything to announce.
This post breaks down why that works, how to do it well, and how BAM's H2 events calendar gives you a real, structured path to make it happen.
There's a mental shift that changes everything for founders who are new to media: reporters aren't evaluating your pitch, they're evaluating their trust in you as a source.
When a journalist covers a story, they're putting their name on it. That means they want to quote people they've met, whose judgment they've had a chance to assess, and who they believe will give them accurate, interesting information. A cold email from a stranger doesn't give them any of that, but an in-person conversation does.
Research consistently shows that journalists are more likely to work with sources they trust, and that trust is built through honesty, follow-through, and genuine human interaction. One insight from First Round Review puts it simply: if a reporter recognizes your name and face, they may not cover you immediately, but they'll open your email. That's the entire game at the seed and Series A stage.
The goal of meeting a reporter at an event isn't to get covered that day. It's to make sure your next pitch lands in the 3% that actually get read.
Cold outreach has its place. For founders who aren't yet household names in their space, it's a low-percentage play though. Here's what in-person events give you that email never can:
They show up and try to pitch. Don't do this.
86% of journalists reject pitches that don't align with their beat, and that number is even higher when the approach feels transactional. Reporters at events are not there to be pitched; They're there to find interesting people and gather context for stories they're already working on.
The founders who win are the ones who ask smart questions, share a real opinion, and make the reporter feel like the conversation was worth their time. Think of it as an interview where you're both the interviewer and the subject. Be curious. Be useful. Be specific about what you're building and why it matters, without turning it into a sales pitch.
Here's a repeatable approach that works whether you're attending a dinner, a conference, or a curated matchmaking event:
The compounding effect of in-person events is real. One genuine relationship with the right reporter can generate more coverage over two years than a hundred cold pitches ever would.
The framework above works, and it works a lot faster when you're in the right rooms.
BAM runs 40+ invite-only media events per year, and the H2 calendar is now live. These are curated dinners where founders, reporters, and investors are in the same space with a shared purpose, which is exactly the environment where real media relationships form.
The second half of 2026 covers every major tech vertical, across both San Francisco and New York:
|
Date |
Event |
Location |
|---|---|---|
|
August 4 |
Consumer Tech Dinner |
San Francisco |
|
August 5 |
Defense Tech Dinner |
San Francisco |
|
September 8 |
People & HR Tech Dinner |
New York |
|
September 9 |
Fintech Dinner |
New York |
|
September 10 |
AI + Tech Dinner |
New York |
|
September 29 |
Physical Tech Dinner |
San Francisco |
|
September 30 |
Health Tech Dinner |
San Francisco |
|
October 13 |
Health Tech Dinner |
New York |
|
October 14–15 |
Physical Tech + Consumer Tech Dinners |
New York |
|
October 20–21 |
Enterprise Tech + AI Dinners |
San Francisco |
|
November 17 |
Climate Tech Dinner |
New York |
|
November 18 |
Media Matchmaking Day |
New York |
|
November 19 |
Enterprise Tech Dinner |
New York |
|
December 8–9 |
Retail/Supply Chain + Climate Tech Dinners |
San Francisco |
The flagship event in the H2 lineup is Media Matchmaking Day on November 18 in New York. It's a speed-networking format where founders get structured, one-on-one time with multiple top-tier journalists in a single evening. You walk in with scheduled conversations and walk out with real relationships.
BAM has already secured 5 media placements directly through events like these.
Most major funding announcements, product launches, and growth milestones cluster in Q3 and Q4. The founders who do the relationship work now, at August and September dinners, will be the ones reporters actually call when those moments arrive in October and November. The calendar isn't just a list of events. It's a sequenced opportunity to build the familiarity that makes later coverage possible.
The worst time to build a reporter relationship is when you have news to announce. By then, you're already behind.
The founders who get consistent coverage at the seed and Series A stage aren't the ones with the best stories. They're the ones who did the groundwork early, showed up to the right events, had real conversations, and made themselves easy to say yes to when it mattered.
You don't need a big team or a flawless pitch deck to start. You need to be in the room.
BAM's H2 event nominations are open now. Find your vertical in the calendar above and submit your nomination before spots fill. The earlier you show up, the more runway you have to build the relationships that actually move the needle when it counts.