A founder often has a sharp point of view but no announcement to hang it on. Investors, editors, and hires still need to hear that voice between funding rounds and product launches. That silence is what a founder op-ed in crypto fills. It puts a founder's argument in front of a serious audience without a news peg or a paid slot, and it builds the kind of authority an advertisement never can. An Op-Ed Earns Its Slot; It Is Not Bought An op-ed is an editorial article, written under the founder's name, that argues a genuine position . It is not a sponsored post, and editors reject it the moment it reads like one. That line is firm. A contributed piece cannot be an 800-word commercial for a product, because an editor will spot the sales intent and pass. Successful bylined article placement depends on offering a reader something worth their time, not a pitch dressed as commentary. Taking a side is still essential. The difference is that the opinion serves the reader's understanding of the market, rather than the author's funnel. Readers and editors both reward that restraint. A piece that explains a market shift earns trust, and that trust is what later makes the author's company worth a closer look. What Makes a Founder Op-Ed Placeable in 2026? A founder op-ed becomes placeable when it offers a unique perspective on a real market shift, backs that perspective with data, and reads as the work of a human rather than a model. Editors apply a higher bar this year than last, and those three traits clear it. Originality is now checked directly. Many editors run submissions through AI detectors and reject anything that reads as generated, so the ideas and the words have to come from the founder, not a model. Newsroom capacity tightened the filter further. Crypto desks have not grown with the volume of inbound pitches, so a piece that respects op-ed editorial guidelines and arrives sharply argued stands out against a flood of generic submissions. One clear thesis does most of the work. Editors should be able to state the argument in one sentence after reading the opening, and a piece that buries its point under setup rarely survives the first cut. Match the Argument to the Right Desk Each major outlet rewards a different angle, and a piece aimed at the wrong desk fails before an editor finishes the first paragraph. The table below maps where a given argument fits best. Outlet What the desk rewards Best-fit op-ed angle CoinDesk Regulatory and institutional depth Policy analysis, market-structure arguments The Block Protocol-level and on-chain specifics Technical positions backed by data Decrypt Accessible, culture-connected stories Crypto tied to broader business or social trends Cointelegraph A clear news peg in the lead Timely takes on a current market moment Founders pitching a tier-1 crypto outlet should read recent pieces from the target desk before writing. The match between argument and editorial appetite decides the outcome more than the quality of the prose alone. How Do You Submit an Op-Ed to a Tier-1 Outlet? Submitting a founder op-ed takes four steps: find the editor who covers your topic, pitch the argument in a short note, attach the draft, and follow the outlet's guidelines exactly. A well-argued piece sent the wrong way still ends up unread. Identify the section editor or beat reporter who handles your topic from the outlet's masthead, rather than sending to a general inbox. Write a short pitch that states the argument, the reason it matters now, and why this outlet's readers should care. Attach or summarise the draft, and lead with the idea rather than the founder's resume. Follow the published submission guidelines exactly, including length, format, and disclosure rules. Every step signals respect for the desk. An editor reads adherence to the rules as proof that the contributor understands how the publication works, and that impression often decides a close call. Timing strengthens the pitch further. An argument tied to a development the desk is already covering gives the editor a reason to move now rather than file it for later. Outset PR's Approach to Founder Op-Ed Placement Outset PR treats op-ed placement as an editorial discipline rather than a favour to call in. Its Crypto Content Creation Services produce articles, op-eds, and category commentary that editors recognise as a substantive contribution, built with a journalistic mindset rather than a promotional one. Substance before submission The method behind Outset PR op-ed placement starts with substance. The team grounds each argument in original data, drawing on findings from Outset Data Pulse, a crypto media intelligence report, so a founder's opinion rests on evidence an editor can verify. This grounding does double duty. It satisfies the editor's need for proof and gives the founder a defensible position to stand behind in any follow-up. Relationships that carry the piece Relationships carry the work in the final step. Outset PR crypto content creation runs through journalist connections maintained year-round, so a draft reaches an editor who already knows the sender. The track record shows in the output. For GoMining , the agency placed weekly thought-leadership digests under a named contributor, turning a founder's perspective into recurring, credible coverage rather than a single placement. Why Most Founder Op-Eds Get Rejected Most founder op-eds get rejected for one of five reasons: they read as advertisements, they offer a generic take, they target the wrong desk, they look machine-written, or they carry no supporting data. Each gives an editor a fast reason to pass, often before the second paragraph. A disguised advertisement, where the argument bends toward the product instead of the reader A generic take that any founder could have written, giving the editor no reason to run this one A poor desk match, where the angle does not fit the outlet's editorial appetite Machine-written copy that an AI detector flags or an editor recognises on sight An opinion with no data behind it, which reads as marketing rather than insight A common thread runs through these. Almost every rejected op-ed fails on relevance, originality, or fit, and a founder who checks for all three before submitting clears the bar most pieces miss. Write the Piece Only You Could Write Strong placement starts with an argument no one else can make. Draw on the data you hold, the market pattern you see firsthand, and the position you can defend in a live conversation. Match that argument to the desk that rewards it, submit it the way the outlet asks, and keep the founder's voice human throughout. Outset PR builds founder op-eds on that foundation, pairing real expertise with editorial craft so a byline earns its place in a tier-1 outlet. Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or business advice. Editorial practices referenced reflect general media guidance and vary by outlet.