tractatus/docs/outreach/Economist-Submission-Strategy.md
TheFlow 2298d36bed fix(submissions): restructure Economist package and fix article display
- Create Economist SubmissionTracking package correctly:
  * mainArticle = full blog post content
  * coverLetter = 216-word SIR— letter
  * Links to blog post via blogPostId
- Archive 'Letter to The Economist' from blog posts (it's the cover letter)
- Fix date display on article cards (use published_at)
- Target publication already displaying via blue badge

Database changes:
- Make blogPostId optional in SubmissionTracking model
- Economist package ID: 68fa85ae49d4900e7f2ecd83
- Le Monde package ID: 68fa2abd2e6acd5691932150

Next: Enhanced modal with tabs, validation, export

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-10-24 08:47:42 +13:00

18 KiB

The Economist Submission Strategy Guide

Amoral Intelligence Article - Complete Submission Package

Prepared: 2025-10-20 Project: Agentic Governance Research Initiative Target Publication: The Economist


EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

This document outlines the complete strategy for submitting the "Amoral Intelligence" article to The Economist, including:

  • Primary and alternative submission paths
  • Key contacts with email addresses
  • Rules of engagement and editorial expectations
  • Timeline and follow-up protocol
  • Backup strategies if declined

Key Strategic Shift: Moving from NYT (general public, emotional appeal) to The Economist (decision makers, analytical evidence) based on:

  1. Target audience: Business leaders, policymakers, executives who make AI deployment decisions
  2. Tone: Evidence-based, analytical, slightly contrarian (not activist or emotional)
  3. Angle: Governance improves performance (counterintuitive finding for business readers)
  4. Length: 920 words (Economist optimal range vs NYT 900 words)

SUBMISSION OPTIONS

OPTION 1: Direct Pitch to Technology Editor (PRIMARY STRATEGY)

Contact: Henry Tricks, US Technology Editor Email: henry.tricks@economist.com Phone: The Economist main office: +44 207 830 7000 LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/henry-tricks-5b045b48/

Why This Approach:

  • Most direct path for feature article placement
  • Technology editor has authority to commission pieces
  • Can request "By Invitation" if pitch strong enough
  • The Economist prefers section-specific pitches over general submissions

What to Send:

  1. Pitch letter (included in main document)
  2. Full article in email body (920 words)
  3. Link to supporting documentation: https://agenticgovernance.digital/docs.html
  4. Offer availability for fact-checking and editorial discussion

Email Subject Line: "Article Proposal: The NEW A.I. - Amoral Intelligence"

Expected Response Time:

  • 2-4 weeks if interested
  • No response typically means declined (per Economist practice)
  • May send to fact-checkers or article authors for technical verification

OPTION 2: Letter to the Editor (BACKUP STRATEGY)

Contact: Letters Editor Email: letters@economist.com Phone: Same as main office

Why This Approach:

  • Open submission (no pitch required)
  • Published regularly (every issue has letters section)
  • All letters begin with "SIR" (traditional British convention)
  • Maximum length: 250 words (typically 100-150 words published)

What to Send:

  • 247-word letter (separate file created: Economist-Letter-Amoral-Intelligence.md)
  • Plain text in email body (no attachments)
  • Include full name and contact details

Email Subject Line: "Letter to Editor: Amoral Intelligence and AI Governance"

Expected Response Time:

  • 1-2 weeks if accepted
  • No response if declined
  • May edit for length or clarity without notifying author

Strategy: Use this if:

  • Full article pitch declined or no response after 4 weeks
  • Want to respond to future Economist AI coverage
  • Seeking to establish credibility before re-pitching full piece

OPTION 3: "By Invitation" (ASPIRATION PATH)

Contact: Editorial team (invitation-only section) Email: Pitch through henry.tricks@economist.com or main editorial

Why This Approach:

  • Prestigious guest essay section
  • Higher profile than regular articles
  • Personally invited by editors (not open submission)

What to Send:

  • Same pitch as Option 1, noting interest in "By Invitation" if appropriate
  • Strong pitch may prompt invitation even if not initially solicited

Expected Response:

  • Invitation typically comes from editors proactively
  • Strong article pitch may lead to invitation
  • If invited, editors provide specific guidelines and deadlines

Strategy: Mention in pitch to Henry Tricks that material would suit "By Invitation" format, but don't insist on it.


KEY EDITORIAL CONTACTS

Primary Contacts

Henry Tricks - US Technology Editor

  • Email: henry.tricks@economist.com
  • Role: Oversees technology coverage in US
  • Based in: United States (The Economist has global correspondents)

Letters Editor

Structural Contacts

Main Editorial Office: The Economist Newspaper Ltd 25 St. James's Street London SW1A 1HG United Kingdom Phone: +44 207 830 7000

Email Format: The Economist uses: first.last@economist.com (82.7% of work emails follow this pattern)

Other Relevant Editors (If Technology Redirects)

Science & Technology Section:

  • Check media directory at economist.com for current editor
  • London-based section editors handle most commissioning

Business Section:

  • If framed more as enterprise/business strategy
  • May be interested in governance ROI angle

THE ECONOMIST: STYLE & EDITORIAL GUIDELINES

Writing Style (from The Economist Style Guide)

Required:

  • Essay structure: beginning, middle, end (coherent whole)
  • Each paragraph follows logically; article suffers if sentence removed
  • Clarity above all: "plain, straightforward words"
  • Readily understandable to intelligent non-expert readers
  • Facts presented as story, not just information stitched together

Prohibited:

  • Hectoring or arrogant tone ("those who disagree are not stupid")
  • Self-congratulation ("we correctly predicted")
  • Too chatty ("surprise, surprise")
  • Academic jargon or empty buzzwords
  • Long words disguising absence of thought
  • Stale metaphors

Tone Characteristics:

  • Confident but not boastful
  • Analytical, not emotional
  • Evidence-based conclusions
  • Slightly contrarian or counterintuitive findings welcome
  • International perspective (not US-centric)

Structural Preferences

Length:

  • Feature articles: 600-1200 words (sweet spot ~800-950)
  • Letters: 100-250 words maximum
  • "By Invitation": typically 800-1000 words

Anonymous Byline:

  • The Economist does NOT use bylines on regular articles
  • Publication speaks with "one collective voice"
  • Author credits only in "By Invitation" or special features
  • This means: don't expect prominent author attribution

Evidence Standards:

  • Claims must be fact-checkable
  • May send article to technical experts for verification
  • May send to authors of cited work for validation
  • Provide supporting documentation proactively

RULES OF ENGAGEMENT

DO:

  1. Pitch to specific section editor (not general submissions)

    • Identify relevant section (Technology, Science, Business)
    • Find section editor via media directory
    • Tailor pitch to section's typical coverage
  2. Provide supporting evidence

    • Link to technical documentation
    • Offer fact-checking contacts
    • Make data/metrics available for verification
  3. Follow up professionally

    • Wait 3 weeks before first follow-up
    • Send brief reminder email (3-4 sentences)
    • Accept no response as decline after 4 weeks
  4. Accept editorial control

    • The Economist will edit for style, length, clarity
    • May not notify author of edits
    • Publication owns final version
  5. Time pitches strategically

    • Relate to recent cover stories when possible
    • Connect to current news cycles
    • Offer timely perspective on developing stories

DON'T:

  1. Don't submit simultaneously to multiple Economist sections

    • Choose one section editor for initial pitch
    • If redirected, follow that direction
  2. Don't expect rapid response

    • 2-4 weeks normal for consideration
    • No response typically means declined
    • Editors receive hundreds of pitches
  3. Don't demand byline or attribution

    • Regular articles are anonymous
    • "By Invitation" does include attribution
    • This is fundamental Economist policy
  4. Don't be overly promotional

    • Avoid "visit our website" in article body
    • Supporting materials fine in pitch/submission
    • Focus on analysis, not advertising framework
  5. Don't argue if declined

    • Accept decision gracefully
    • May pitch different angle later
    • Maintain professional relationship for future

TIMELINE & FOLLOW-UP PROTOCOL

Week 1: Initial Submission

  • Day 1: Send pitch + article to henry.tricks@economist.com
  • Day 1: Set calendar reminder for 3-week follow-up
  • Day 2-7: Check for automated receipt or initial response

Week 2-3: Waiting Period

  • No action required
  • Editors review, may fact-check, may discuss internally
  • May not acknowledge receipt (standard practice)

Week 3: First Follow-Up (if no response)

Send brief email:

Subject: Following up: Amoral Intelligence article pitch

Mr. Tricks,

Following up on my October 20th pitch regarding AI governance
and performance (article: "The NEW A.I.: Amoral Intelligence").

Happy to discuss if timing/angle adjustments would strengthen
relevance for Economist readers.

Best regards,
John Stroh
research@agenticgovernance.digital

Week 4: Decision Point

  • If no response by end of week 4, consider declined
  • Move to backup strategy (letter to editor OR alternative publication)
  • Don't send additional follow-ups

Alternative Timeline: If Accepted

  • Expect editorial queries and fact-checking requests
  • Turnaround typically 1-2 weeks for revisions
  • Publication may be weeks or months after acceptance
  • No guarantee of publication even if accepted (news cycle dependent)

BACKUP STRATEGIES

If Full Article Declined:

OPTION A: Submit Letter to Editor

  • Use 247-word version (already prepared)
  • Send to letters@economist.com
  • Establishes presence in publication
  • May prompt future interest in full piece

OPTION B: Alternative Publications

  1. Financial Times (similar audience, business focus)

    • Contact: ft.com/contact
    • Style: Similar to Economist, slightly more business-focused
  2. Wall Street Journal (US business leaders)

    • OpEd page: wsj.com/news/opinion
    • Conservative-leaning but respects rigorous analysis
  3. MIT Technology Review (technical decision makers)

  4. Harvard Business Review (enterprise strategy focus)

    • Governance ROI angle strong fit
    • Contact: hbr.org/guidelines-for-authors
  5. Wired (broader tech audience)

    • More narrative style acceptable
    • Contact: wired.com/about/contact

OPTION C: Revision & Resubmission

  • Wait 6 months
  • Revise based on new developments
  • Re-pitch with updated evidence/events
  • Different angle or section

If Letter Published:

Leverage for full article:

  • Wait 2-3 months
  • Reference published letter in new pitch
  • Propose expanded treatment: "My recent letter on AI governance (published [date]) prompted questions about implementation..."
  • Demonstrates Economist has already validated core argument

SUBMISSION CHECKLIST

Pre-Submission:

  • Review article for Economist style compliance
  • Ensure supporting documentation accessible (https://agenticgovernance.digital/docs.html)
  • Prepare fact-checking contacts if requested
  • Confirm all empirical claims are defensible
  • Check article doesn't sound AI-written (human editorial review)

Primary Submission (Technology Editor):

  • Send pitch letter to henry.tricks@economist.com
  • Include full article in email body
  • Attach .docx version as backup
  • Subject: "Article Proposal: The NEW A.I. - Amoral Intelligence"
  • Include supporting links in pitch
  • Set 3-week follow-up reminder

Backup Submission (Letter to Editor):

  • Prepare 247-word letter version (completed)
  • Hold for 4 weeks after full article pitch
  • If no response, send to letters@economist.com
  • Plain text in email body (no attachment)
  • Subject: "Letter to Editor: Amoral Intelligence and AI Governance"

KEY SUCCESS FACTORS

What Makes This Pitch Strong:

  1. Counterintuitive Finding: Governance improves performance (challenges business assumption)
  2. Evidence-Based: Production metrics, ROI calculations, incident analysis
  3. Decision-Maker Relevant: Addresses liability, compliance, competitive advantage
  4. Timely: Enterprise AI deployments accelerating; regulatory frameworks forming
  5. Economist-Appropriate Tone: Analytical, confident, slightly contrarian
  6. Clear Implications: Business strategy + policy implications outlined

Potential Weaknesses to Address:

  1. Limited Track Record: Authors not widely known (counter with: data speaks for itself)
  2. Narrow Deployment: Production evidence from limited deployments (counter with: preliminary but rigorous)
  3. Technical Complexity: May seem too technical (counter with: executive summary focus)

How Pitch Mitigates Concerns:

  • Opens with surprising finding (hooks business readers)
  • Uses plain language, not academic jargon
  • Provides concrete examples (medical AI, hiring AI)
  • Quantifies ROI (4,500,000% return speaks to business audience)
  • Offers clear policy implications (not just theoretical)

POST-SUBMISSION EXPECTATIONS

If Accepted:

Expect:

  • Editorial queries about technical claims
  • Fact-checking verification requests
  • Potential length cuts (may reduce to 800 words)
  • Style edits without consultation
  • Publication weeks/months after acceptance
  • No byline on regular article (anonymous Economist voice)
  • Possible "By Invitation" upgrade if pitch very strong

Be Prepared To:

  • Respond to fact-checking within 24-48 hours
  • Provide technical expert contacts
  • Accept significant editing
  • Defend empirical claims with data
  • Wait patiently for publication timing

If Declined:

Don't:

  • Ask for explanation (usually not provided)
  • Argue about decision
  • Burn bridges with defensive responses

Do:

  • Thank editor for consideration
  • Ask if different angle would be of interest
  • Move to backup publication strategy
  • Maintain professional relationship for future pitches

Consider:

  • Was timing off? (resubmit in 6 months with updates)
  • Was angle wrong for Economist? (try business publication instead)
  • Was evidence insufficient? (strengthen with more deployment data)
  • Was tone wrong? (more analytical? less technical?)

CONTACT SUMMARY

Primary Submission Path:

  • To: henry.tricks@economist.com
  • Subject: Article Proposal: The NEW A.I. - Amoral Intelligence
  • Format: Pitch letter + full article in email + .docx attachment
  • Follow-up: 3 weeks if no response

Backup Submission Path:

  • To: letters@economist.com
  • Subject: Letter to Editor: Amoral Intelligence and AI Governance
  • Format: 247-word letter, plain text in email body
  • Timing: 4 weeks after primary pitch if no response

General Inquiries:

  • Address: 25 St. James's Street, London SW1A 1HG, UK
  • Phone: +44 207 830 7000
  • Website: economist.com

COMPARISON: ECONOMIST VS NYT APPROACH

Aspect The Economist The New York Times (previous)
Audience Business leaders, policymakers, global decision makers General educated public, US-focused
Tone Analytical, evidence-based, slightly contrarian Emotional appeal, moral urgency
Length 920 words 897 words
Opening Surprising finding (governance improves performance) Provocative question (alignment to whose values?)
Evidence Production metrics, ROI calculations Conceptual arguments, examples
Angle Business opportunity + risk management Ethical imperative + social risk
Byline Anonymous (or "By Invitation" with attribution) Authors credited
Key Message Don't trade safety for performance—get both Stop trying to make AI moral, make it governable
Call to Action Adopt structural governance (business case) Demand governance (ethical case)

Why The Economist is Better Fit:

  1. Target decision makers who can actually implement/adopt framework
  2. Business case (ROI, liability reduction) aligns with reader priorities
  3. Evidence-based approach fits analytical readership
  4. International reach beyond US market
  5. Prestigious platform for establishing credibility with enterprise/policy audiences

FILES CREATED

Primary Submission Package:

  • Economist-Article-Amoral-Intelligence.md - Full article (920 words) + pitch letter + supporting materials
  • Economist-Article-Amoral-Intelligence.docx - Word format for submission

Backup Materials:

  • Economist-Letter-Amoral-Intelligence.md - 247-word letter to editor version
  • Economist-Submission-Strategy.md - This document (strategy guide)

Supporting Documentation (already exists):


FINAL RECOMMENDATIONS

Immediate Action:

  1. Human review of article for AI-writing tells (ensure it doesn't sound generated)
  2. Send primary pitch to henry.tricks@economist.com this week
  3. Set calendar reminder for 3-week follow-up
  4. Prepare fact-checking responses (have metrics/data ready)

Medium-term:

  1. If no response by week 4: Send letter to editor version (letters@economist.com)
  2. Monitor Economist AI coverage: May provide opportunity for responsive letter
  3. Prepare alternative publication pitches: FT, WSJ, HBR, MIT Tech Review

Long-term:

  1. Build evidence base: More production deployments = stronger future pitches
  2. Publish research papers: Academic credibility strengthens "By Invitation" prospects
  3. Engage with Economist writers: Comment on AI articles, build relationships
  4. Track deployment metrics: Quarterly updates strengthen resubmission case

Strategic Intent: This is not just about getting one article published—it's about establishing the Agentic Governance framework as a credible solution in the minds of decision makers who can accelerate adoption. The Economist is the optimal platform for this positioning.

Success Metric: Not just publication, but generating enterprise inquiries, policy discussions, and framework adoption by organizations that read The Economist and make AI governance decisions.


END OF STRATEGY GUIDE

Contact for Questions: John Stroh, research@agenticgovernance.digital