15. How AI is changing the media landscape & PR with former media journalist Steven Perlberg from Merantix Capital

APR 22, 202648 MIN
Scaling Nerds | Startup PR, Thought Leadership and Storytelling for Startup Founders

15. How AI is changing the media landscape & PR with former media journalist Steven Perlberg from Merantix Capital

APR 22, 202648 MIN

Description

<p>The Future of Media, AI &amp; Founder Visibility </p><p><strong>Guest: Steven Perlberg</strong>LinkedIn: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/sperlberg/">⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/sperlberg/⁠</a> · Merantix Capital: <a href="https://www.merantix-capital.com">⁠https://www.merantix-capital.com⁠</a>Head of Communications at Merantix Capital — Berlin-based VC investing in early-stage AI. Former reporter at WSJ, BuzzFeed News, and Business Insider covering media, tech, and politics. Happy to connect with journalists exploring life after reporting.</p><p><strong>Host: Marina Schmidt</strong>LinkedIn: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/schmidt-marina/">⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/schmidt-marina/⁠</a> · Website: <a href="https://www.scalingnerds.com">⁠https://www.scalingnerds.com⁠</a>Communications advisor helping science and tech founders get seen, heard, and backed — on stages, podcasts, and in the press.</p><p><br></p><p>The media landscape is shifting fast — and as a founder, understanding that shift is no longer optional. Steven Perlberg, Head of Communications at Merantix Capital and former tech journalist at the Wall Street Journal, BuzzFeed News, and Business Insider, joins Marina to unpack what AI, fragmentation, and the death of the &quot;mushy middle&quot; mean for how founders should think about visibility, PR, and media strategy.</p><p>Warning: this one gets philosophical.</p><p><strong>US vs. European tech media</strong> — The fundamental difference is size and reach. US outlets skew toward covering Silicon Valley companies, making it harder for European seed-stage startups to break through without a strong narrative hook, major fundraising news, or a US expansion angle. Steven&#39;s rule: define your goal first, then pick the outlets that match it.</p><p><strong>Why founders should pitch journalists directly</strong> — When Steven was a reporter, a direct email from a founder saying &quot;I cover your space, want to grab coffee?&quot; always got a yes. Today&#39;s version of the five-reporter shortlist might include a Substack writer or LinkedIn creator. Build those relationships personally, not through agencies.</p><p><strong>The AI slop problem</strong> — Faceless, generic AI content is flooding every channel. The counter-move: a growing premium on human faces and authentic voices. OpenAI&#39;s acquisition of tech news show TBPN for reportedly hundreds of millions signals exactly this.</p><p><strong>LLMs as the new search</strong> — If your audience is getting their news via AI tools instead of clicking TechCrunch, the tier of the outlet matters less than it used to. What matters is that your company and point of view exist across enough credible sources to be surfaced by LLMs. GEO is becoming as important as SEO.</p><p><strong>Opinions as the new gold</strong> — As information becomes a commodity, what becomes scarce and valuable is judgment, taste, and a distinctive point of view. Founders who show up consistently with a genuine perspective are positioned to become trusted, parasocial key opinion leaders in their space.</p><p><strong>The 10-80-10 rule for AI-assisted content</strong> — 10% you → 80% AI → 10% you again to edit, humanize, and make it sound like yourself. Prompt it to use your actual language from transcripts and speeches. Don&#39;t let it default to &quot;momentum&quot; and bullet points.</p><ul><li><em>Trust Me, I&#39;m Lying</em> — Ryan Holiday</li><li>TBPN — live tech news show acquired by OpenAI</li><li>ETN — European equivalent of TBPN</li></ul><p><br></p>