The Cascade Effect, is a one-stop-guide for small businesses, startups and those who want to learn how PR can grow your business, making you a successful entrepreneur!



Showing posts with label news media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label news media. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 02, 2009

Be Prepared for Anything When It Comes to Media Interviews


You’ve written the press release, pitched media your story and now a journalist wants to interview you. The story could be a feature on you and your business or it could be a trend story a journalist is considering including you in. Either way, much like you would for a job interview, you have to be prepared for anything when it comes to the media interview.

One great example of this is a client of mine Interview Angel founder Brent Peterson. My firm recently secured him an interview opportunity with the Wall Street Journal. The journalist had a job search/interview trend story in mind regarding crazy interview tactics (hoops candidates jump through for a job) that companies take to find the right candidate. She had a specific angle that she wanted Brent to comment on and we pitched his response to her. When she was ready to write the article she interviewed Brent who did discuss the things he’d initially responded with but also gave her another angle that was informational and generous on his behalf.

The angle Brent provided was about candidates volunteering their way to a job, which the journalist closed the article with. What was so generous was that he provided a real life anecdote of someone he hired on a volunteer basis to help create and promote the Interview Angel Sweepstakes. He not only promoted his business in the article but this young man and the sweepstakes all in one of the country’s top newspaper/online outlets. Brent followed his conversation with the journalist carefully and found a unique opportunity for his business.

Did he take a risk by going off topic? Maybe but not before making sure that he covered the specific angle the journalist was working on. All in all it benefited her story and made it that much more interesting for job seekers.

Being prepared to handle anything in an interview means knowing your business, industry and journalist’s story angle inside and out. It really truly is like interviewing for a job. You have to take time to research and prepare before any kind of interview; to be able to speak wisely on your business and industry while communicating key messages, other story angles that might be of interest and know the conversation can go in several directions. Once you’ve met the journalist’s needs you can afford to go off topic. After all, you’re just having a conversation with a journalist and as long as it’s related to the story it can go anywhere.

And practice makes perfect! Print out what you want to say – story angles, key messages – get in front of a mirror and practice, practice, practice. Most importantly, remember to speak in short, valuable soundbites that the journalist can easily use as a quote.

And…you will create media opportunities that will truly benefit your business!

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Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Summit Takes a Look at Future of PR, News Media

If you're interested in knowing how the future of journalism and PR is changing, here is a great piece and synopsis of a pros conference. It impacts small business as much as corporations, but also means that small business has the same opportunities as big business with big marketing budgets. Creativity will go a long way in marketing your business in the future.

Media Relations Summit Finale: PR Pros and Journalists Envision a Brave New Relationship in Web 3.0 Future By David Copithorne, Principal, Aquarius Advisers

Dan Abrams, MSNBC's principal legal analyst, set the tone for the final day of Bulldog Reporter's Media Relations Summit 2009 Tuesday when he told keynote attendees that the rules of the media relations game have changed for good. "These days, every business is a media business," said Abrams, who is also the founder of a new advisory service leveraging a database of 2,500 mainstream- and social-media experts to help businesses navigate the new media environment.

Reporters and editors struggling to feed the web 24-by-7 must collaborate with businesses creating their own media as digital technologies break down the old adversarial relationship between journalists and professional communicators. The result is a brave new world where best practices in PR, marketing and journalism are already being radically redefined, Abrams said.

Walls tumbling down — between old media and new media, journalists and PR people, companies and their customers, and within organizations of all sizes—was a recurring theme voiced by speakers from the ranks of both the media and PR throughout the day.

Read more.....

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