How Can I Contact Hopskoch for Inquiries?
One inbox, a real person reading it, and a straightforward path for whatever brought you here.
Connecting With Our Team
The fastest way to reach us is email. Send a note to [email protected] and it lands in front of someone who can actually act on it, not a routing queue that bounces your message between three departments before it dies.
We kept the contact setup deliberately plain. No phone tree, no ticket number, no form with twelve required fields asking for your company size before you've even said hello. You write what you need, we read it, we reply.
If you're already familiar with what we publish across transmedia storytelling, interactive design, and the startup ecosystem, you'll have a sense of the kind of conversations we enjoy. Email is where those start.
Where to write: [email protected] — that single address covers general questions, press, and partnership ideas alike.
A quick word on the messages that land best: specifics help. "I'd like to discuss a guest piece on interactive design for creators" gets a faster, sharper reply than "Can we talk?" You don't need a polished pitch deck. You just need to tell us what you're after.
Types of Messages We Welcome
Plenty of inboxes have an unwritten "don't bother us" energy. Ours doesn't. We read everything that comes in, and a handful of inquiry types reliably turn into good conversations.
General Inquiries
Questions about our coverage, a story you think we missed, feedback on something we published, or just curiosity about how we work. These keep us grounded in what readers actually want.
Press & Media
Journalists, podcasters, and event organizers looking for commentary on digital media or tech innovations are welcome to reach out. Tell us your deadline up front and we'll respect it.
Partnerships
Collaboration ideas, co-published research, content partnerships, or work that touches our creator spotlights. The strongest of these arrive with a clear sense of what you bring and what you're hoping for.
Two examples to anchor that. A founder once wrote in to flag a factual gap in a piece about early-stage funding patterns — that single email turned into a follow-up feature. A media outlet reached out wanting a quote on emerging web development tooling and got one inside a day because the request named its deadline.
Not every message fits these buckets, and that's fine. If your idea sits somewhere in between, send it anyway. The worst outcome is a friendly "not for us right now."
What to Expect After Reaching Out
Here's the honest version of our response rhythm: most emails get a reply within a couple of business days. Some land faster, especially when there's a stated deadline attached. A few take longer when the answer needs input from more than one person — partnership proposals usually fall into that group.
We don't send automated acknowledgements. When you hear back, it's a person who read your message and thought about it. That choice means the occasional reply arrives a day later than a bot would have, and we think the trade is worth it.
If a week passes with nothing from us, assume the message slipped through rather than that we ignored you. A short nudge to the same address is welcome and won't annoy anyone. Inboxes are imperfect, and a well-meant follow-up has rescued more than one good conversation.
One practical note specific to inquiries like these: we can't always discuss commercial terms or unpublished editorial plans over a first email, so some answers will be a starting point rather than a full commitment. That's not evasion — it's just where a single message can reasonably take us before a proper conversation begins.
For anything touching how we handle your information, our Privacy Policy spells out the details, and the broader picture of who we are lives on the About Hopskoch page. When you're ready, [email protected] is waiting.