Three rooms. Three brands. Each one stopped asking "can they do it" and started asking "can they do it for me."

"We went from Instagram-only to magazine shelves in six months."
IronVault had a proven product and zero editorial presence. Press identified three tier-one fitness outlets hungry for a clean-label protein story, pitched a founder profile framed around supply-chain transparency, and landed a three-page feature before the product even hit retail.
"This is the kind of pitch that makes editors look good. They understood our readership better than half our contributors do."

"Three new markets, three local front pages. Press made us the story before we opened."
Peak Form was entering Dallas, Phoenix, and Denver simultaneously. Instead of paid media blitzes, Press secured local morning show segments, city magazine features on the franchise founders, and a national trade piece that positioned the brand as the anti-big-box gym movement.
"Press sent us a story, not a press release. There's a difference, and it's everything."

"I went from Instagram athlete to Forbes contributor in one press cycle."
Marcus had 800K followers and zero mainstream press. Press repositioned him from "fitness influencer" to "performance-science entrepreneur," pitched his supplement formulation methodology to business editors, and landed a Forbes profile, an ESPN feature, and a TEDx invitation inside four months.
No pitch decks. No retainer traps. Just a direct conversation about where your brand needs to be seen — and a plan to get you there.
Where the editorial dollars flow. Which outlets are buying fitness stories. What editors actually want.