​If You Want More Interviews Send Out More Requests. Simple.

Johannes K.
3 min readSep 30, 2019

Getting interviews is a numbers game, here’s how to play it

I sent out 20 requests and got this knock-out one. Photo by Sam McGhee on Unsplash

I’d never heard of the Pareto principle until about a year ago, and then, on some podcast, it came up, and then someone else in a book mentioned it, and then, I watched a talk on YouTube, and it cropped up again. Meanwhile, I’ve been to a conference and someone used it in their speech.

So many people were talking about it because it’s one of those weird principles that stacks up in fleeting ways, without all the hard and fast statistics. It has applied neatly to my brute force approach to setting up interviews too.

The Pareto principle is known as the 80/20 rule. It’s usually applied in economics and computing, but I’ve also come across it in online marketing. Basically, for every 80 people you send an email to 20 will open it.

Weirdly, I just opened up my email marketing software to check, and the average open rate on my emails is 28%. So that means that out of every 100 people, 28 people open my emails. Wait, that’s scarily close to 80/20.

I’ve been applying this same principle to the interview requests for the research on my second book and, well, you guessed right, that calculation is once again emerging. Of the 40-odd applications, I got ten responses, and from those responses, two committed. No way!

I’m not superstitious, or anything, but knowing that the Pareto principle is at work gives me peace of mind. Think about it, if you put in 100 requests, you can expect 25 responses, and so you know what to work with. Of those 25 responses, in the end, you’ll probably get 6 to commit.

It’s not a straight line but you get it. More = more.

You know what? Fine by me, that means I have to send out more interview requests and find a system to make that quick, easy and painless (maybe I’ll tackle that in another post!).

If you want to learn about an industry, something complex like blockchain, or wish to understand whether journalism can survive in a digital age, you need to talk to the people.

You can, of course, read reams of articles and books on the subject but a more natural and faster way is to talk to 10 people in the industry with in-depth knowledge. So, if you want 12.5 interviews send out 50 requests and watch your success rate soar.

The better your system for getting interviews, the more you’ll learn, and the more you’ll be able to write. It is that simple.

Connect Deeper

Thank you for reading this article. If you like what you read and got something out of it sign-up for my newsletter with irregular updates on my work, projects and other random goodies. I’m researching my second book “Behind the Scoop: why you should think and act like a journalist.” If you sign up to my list right now you’ll get a free copy of my first book “Break into Journalism: contact-building tools and tactics.” No catch. You might learn something about journalism, or about being one, which might help make you a better a person. No guarantee though.

Originally published at http://www.jarkoch.com.

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Johannes K.

I muse on being a journalist, author and on life. Husband. Father of two beautiful girls. Tennis & CrossFit.