Pitch a story, tip, or product to Techiadd
Built something that's working? Know a quiet achiever, a community that solved a problem, an idea worth backing? Tell us. Pitching is free, coverage is free, and we read every pitch that names what changed.
The kind of story we're looking for
Genuine, verifiable consumer tech — especially the products and tools the hype cycle overlooks.
Techiadd is an independent consumer-technology publication that tests products hands-on and explains them plainly. We are not a spec-sheet aggregator and we do not run press releases as journalism — we report and review with named bylines, cited sources, and no sponsored scores. If you have a genuine, verifiable tech story or a product worth reviewing, it may belong on one of our seven beats:
What makes a great pitch
Answer four questions and you're most of the way there.
What changed?
Name the concrete development — a milestone reached, a problem solved, a record broken. Not "a story about education", but the specific thing that happened.
Who's involved?
The people, the organisation, the community at the centre of it — and how you know them or have access to them.
How can we verify it?
Point us to at least one independent source — a government record, a published report, a person who'll speak on record.
Why now?
A recent development, a data release, an anniversary or a policy moment that makes the story timely.
Do this, not that
Do
- Lead with the specific thing that changed
- Name people, places and numbers
- Offer independent ways to verify the claim
- Be honest about what's unproven or hard
- Keep it to two or three tight paragraphs
- Tell us about under-reported regions and communities
Don't
- Send a press release and call it a pitch
- Offer or expect payment for coverage
- Make claims you can't back with a source
- Blast a generic, un-targeted mass email
- Pitch pure promotion with no news in it
- Ask for copy approval over our journalism
Pitching is free — and coverage can't be bought
We never charge to consider a story, and we never accept payment to run editorial coverage. It is one of our four standing rules: accept no paid placement. A pitch wins coverage on the strength of the story and its evidence — nothing else.
If what you actually want is a paid, clearly-labelled commercial placement, that is a separate and legitimate thing: see Advertise with Techiadd. The two never mix.
This page is for you if you're a…
Startup or product maker
Built a gadget, app or AI tool worth testing? We want products real people will use and verifiable claims — not valuations or buzzwords.
Developer or indie team
Shipped something genuinely useful or clever? Open-source projects, side projects and small studios are all welcome — show us what it does.
Researcher or institution
Published work, a benchmark, a breakthrough with real consumer impact — especially in AI, computing or applied science.
Communications or PR professional
You're welcome here — if you bring a genuine, newsworthy product or story rather than spin. Lead with what is new and the evidence.
Want a review?
Have a device or app you'd like us to test? Tell us what it is and why it matters. Coverage and scores are never paid for.
A reader who spotted something
You don't have to make the product to flag it. Found a great tool, a clever fix, or a bug worth knowing about? Send the tip — that's a pitch too.
Four steps to a pitch we can act on
Write a tight pitch
Two or three paragraphs answering the four questions above. Specific beats long every time.
Add your sources
List two or three ways the central claim can be independently verified — documents, data, or people who will speak on record.
Email the editorial desk
Send it to editorial@techiadd.com with a clear subject line naming the beat and a working headline.
We take it from there
The relevant section editor reads it. If it's a fit, we'll follow up with questions and report the story to our standards.
Subject: Pitch: [Beat] — [Working headline]
What changed: In one or two lines, the specific development.
Who's involved: The people / organisation / community, and your connection to them.
How to verify: Two or three independent sources or documents.
Why now: What makes this timely.
About me: One line on who you are.
Pitching FAQs
How do I pitch a story to Techiadd?
Email editorial@techiadd.com with a short, specific pitch: what is new or notable, why it matters to readers, where it can be verified, and why now. Two or three tight paragraphs and a couple of source leads are far better than a long press release. Put a clear subject line on it — for example, "Pitch: AI — open-source model runs offline on a phone". The relevant section editor reads it.
Does it cost anything to pitch, or to be featured?
No. Pitching is free, and coverage is free. We never charge to consider a story and we never accept payment to publish editorial coverage — that is one of our four rules. If you want a paid, clearly-labelled commercial placement instead, that is a different thing entirely: see Advertise. Editorial coverage cannot be bought, by anyone, ever.
What kind of stories are you looking for?
Consumer-tech news, products to review, and how-to ideas — across AI, Gadgets, Mobile, Software & Apps, Reviews, How-To and Science & Future. We especially want products and tools real people use, and stories the hype cycle overlooks. The best pitches come with evidence and are honest about limitations — we test before we score.
Who can pitch? Do I need to be a journalist?
Anyone can pitch a story for coverage — founders, NGO teams, researchers, community organisers, the people at the centre of an achievement, or simply a reader who has spotted something worth telling. (If instead you want to write for us as a contributor, see Write for us.)
What makes a pitch stand out?
Specificity and verifiability. Name the concrete development (a milestone reached, a problem solved, a person who did something real), name the people and places involved, and point us to at least one independent way to verify the central claim — a government record, a published report, a person who will speak on record. Tell us why the story is timely.
Will you just republish my press release?
No. We do not publish press releases as journalism. A press release can be useful background, but our reporters verify independently and write their own pieces to our standards. A pitch that is only a press release will not be commissioned.
How long until I hear back?
We read every pitch that meets our basic criteria. We aim to respond to promising, specific pitches within a few working days (IST). If a story is a strong fit, an editor will follow up with questions; if it is not right for us, we will try to let you know rather than leave you waiting.
Can I suggest someone else's story — not my own?
Absolutely, and we welcome it. Some of the best stories come from readers who noticed a quiet achiever in their district. Tell us what changed, who is involved, and how we can verify it.
What happens if you decide to cover my story?
An editor or reporter will contact you, verify the facts independently, and report the story to our editorial standards. We may ask for documents, interviews or additional sources. The published piece is our independent journalism — we cannot offer copy approval, but we are committed to accuracy and will correct genuine errors.
Got a tech story or product we should cover?
Tell us what changed, who's involved, and how we can check it. The best pitches are specific, sourced, and honest — and they're always free.
Pitch your story →Want to write for us instead of being covered? See Write for us. Questions? The contact desk is here.