Write for AI News Grid
We publish original reporting, technical deep-dives, and informed analysis on artificial intelligence. If you have something worth saying and can back it up, we want to hear from you.
What We Publish
Not everything gets published. We have a small editorial team, and we're selective about what goes on the site. That said, here's what tends to land well:
Technical Analysis
Break down a new model, framework, or research paper with the depth our readers expect. Explain the architecture, walk through the benchmarks, and give your honest assessment of what it means in practice.
Industry Commentary
Share your perspective on where the industry is heading. We're not looking for hot takes — we're looking for informed opinions backed by evidence and real-world experience.
Tutorials & Guides
Walk readers through building something with an AI tool or framework. The bar here is high — we expect working code, tested examples, and clear explanations of tradeoffs.
Original Reporting
If you have a story that nobody has covered yet — a company shift, a research finding, or a policy development — bring it. We verify everything, but we're always looking for fresh angles.
Before You Pitch
Save yourself (and us) some time. Read through these so you know whether your piece is a fit:
If it's been published elsewhere — your blog, Medium, LinkedIn, another outlet — it's not a fit. We only accept pieces that haven't appeared anywhere else, in any form.
If your article is really about promoting your company or tool, we'll spot it immediately. Write about the problem, not your product. If your company is genuinely relevant to the story, mention it briefly and let the reader decide.
Cite your sources. Link to papers, documentation, official announcements. If you reference a benchmark number, tell us where it came from. Unsupported claims won't make it through editing.
Our audience is technical. Engineers, researchers, product leaders, founders. You don't need to simplify things — but you do need to be clear. Skip the jargon-for-jargon's-sake and write like you'd explain it to a sharp colleague.
There's no minimum or maximum word count. Some of our best pieces are 800 words. Some are 3,000. Write what the topic demands and nothing more.
How to Pitch
We keep it simple. Send us an email or use our contact form with the following:
- Working title — What you want to write about, in a sentence.
- Brief outline — Three to five bullet points covering the main thrust of the piece. We don't need a finished draft to evaluate a pitch.
- Your background — A few lines on why you're the right person to write this. Relevant experience, credentials, or links to past work.
- Select "News Tip" as the subject if using our contact form, or just email us directly.
We respond to every pitch, usually within a week. If we're interested, we'll outline next steps and any editorial expectations before you start writing.
What Happens After You Submit
Here's how the editorial process works, no surprises:
Pitch Review
We read your pitch and decide whether it's a fit for our editorial calendar. Some pitches are great ideas but the timing isn't right — we'll tell you that.
Writing & Drafting
If approved, you write the piece. We might suggest angle adjustments or areas to expand on, but the voice stays yours.
Editorial Review
Our editors review for accuracy, clarity, and style. We fact-check claims, verify sources, and tighten the prose where needed. You'll see all edits before publication.
Publication
Your piece goes live with a full byline and author bio. We promote it across our channels and you're free to share it from your own accounts.
Ready to pitch?
Send your pitch to [email protected] or use the contact form. We read every submission.
Go to Contact Page