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Five Reasons to Conduct
Media Interview Training
by Mitchell Friedman,
APR
Given the importance organizations place on generating
press coverage, it's vital to have a strategy and skilled
professionals assigned to critical tasks. Preparing
individuals charged with speaking to reporters is central
to this effort, for five reasons.
1. Media interview training helps individuals cultivate
the skills to engage in more productive give and take
with reporters. Being interviewed by a reporter isn't
simply a matter of answering questions in rote fashion,
while adopting a defensive posture. It's incumbent on
spokespeople to take the initiative in telling the organization's
story, from its perspective. To this end, spokespeople
need to be familiar with how reporters work, the editorial
environments in which they function, types of questions
they're likely to ask, and their individual backgrounds,
among other issues.
2. Trained spokespersons help an organization secure
more media coverage. Being interviewed by a reporter
with a press pass does not mean the person will be quoted, or that
a story will even result. So a successful media interview
training program must also address what makes news from
the journalist's perspective. Equipped with such knowledge,
spokespeople can focus their remarks on what journalists
want, suggest story ideas, refer reporters to other
resources, and, in short, make themselves valuable resources
reporters turn to again and again.
3. Media training produces better media coverage.
Organizations want media coverage that, to the extent
possible and practical, reflects its key messages -
in other words, the main points the organization wants
readers/viewers/listeners to gain from coverage. Training
is the best way to assure that spokespeople master these
main messages and skillfully weave them into their answers
to a reporter's questions.
4.Media training increases likelihood that what you
want to communicate is covered. It's impossible for
individuals in any audience to understand the purpose
of your communication if you don't know what you want
to say. Media training forces an organization to clarify
what it wants to say and how, thereby increasing the
likelihood that a reporter will understand these messages
and, ideally, report about the organization more accurately.
5.Media training educates spokespersons on typical
media relations challenges. Myths abound as to how journalists
work and the vital role media relations professionals
play in the editorial process. Training invites spokespersons
into this process, introducing them to the art and science
of building productive relationships with reporters
and the vital role they play. Perhaps more important,
key players within the organization begin to incorporate
media considerations into their thinking as a by-product
of a comprehensive training program, which benefits
the entire organization as it strives to navigate through
a media-rich world.
reprint permission from goarticles.com
& Mitchell Friedman, APR (Accredited in Public Relations)
helps organizations generate more and better press coverage
through media training programs. For more information,
see http://www.mitchellfriedman.com/mediatraining.html
- Copyright 2006 by Mitchell Friedman, APR. All rights
reserved. |