
Pellentesque mollis nec orci id tincidunt. Sed mollis risus eu nisi aliquet, sit amet fermentum justo dapibus.
- (+55) 254. 254. 254
- Info@la-studioweb.com
- Helios Tower 75 Tam Trinh Hoang Mai - Ha Noi - Viet Nam
© 2019 Airi All rights reserved
The food and beverage space has never been more dynamic—or more saturated. Between TikTok trends, climate-focused packaging, celebrity chef launches, and functional ingredients claiming everything from better sleep to better skin, the competition for food media attention is fierce. If you’re a brand hoping to earn editorial coverage in 2025, you need to know what food reporters are actually looking for now.
The secret isn’t just having a cool product—it’s having a story, a point of view, and an impact worth writing about.
Reporters aren’t writing product roundups—they’re writing narratives. A new oat milk doesn’t make the cut unless it has something to say about sustainability, accessibility, or taste innovation.
Ask yourself: What larger story does your product represent?
“What does this brand reflect about where food is headed?” is a reporter’s favorite lens.
Media loves a compelling founder—but not a rehearsed one. In 2025, authenticity wins. Whether you’re a fifth-generation farmer, a climate scientist turned snack mogul, or a mom solving a mealtime struggle, own that story.
Strong founder POVs help reporters:
Reporters love data—but only if it serves the story. Share concise, compelling facts that add context, urgency, or surprise:
Numbers should support your message, not overwhelm it. Make them snackable—pun intended.
Food is a visual beat. If your images feel overly commercial or generic, they’ll get skipped. Reporters want:
Also helpful: branded visuals that editors can crop or reformat for their needs.
“Clean label” isn’t enough. In 2025, reporters care where your ingredients come from—and why you chose them. Hot sourcing angles include:
If your sourcing story connects to food justice, local economies, or environmental shifts—it’s even stronger.
Food reporters are flooded with pitches claiming to be “the next big thing.” What cuts through:
Better yet: help the reporter frame the trend. Offer other examples, data, or expert takes—not just your brand.
Media is increasingly impact-minded. Food brands that can show measurable change—whether it’s community donations, school meal programs, or carbon footprint reduction—stand out.
But impact needs to be real. If your values don’t align with your actions, the story dies—or worse, backfires.
Food reporters are on deadline. They want brands that are responsive, prepared, and not overly pushy. Want to help them say yes?
The recipe for media attention in 2025 isn’t secret—it’s service, storytelling, and strategy. Give them something real to chew on—and you just might land your next big feature.