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Effective Media Strategies Maria Farrah Howell

Effective Media Strategies Maria Farrah Howell. Media Environment. The Business of News. Media outlets want Exclusives Conflict and controversy Stories affecting large numbers of news consumers Novelty – “Man bites dog” The economy has resulted in:

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Effective Media Strategies Maria Farrah Howell

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  1. Effective Media StrategiesMaria Farrah Howell

  2. Media Environment

  3. The Business of News • Media outlets want • Exclusives • Conflict and controversy • Stories affecting large numbers of news consumers • Novelty – “Man bites dog” • The economy has resulted in: • Greater focus on entertainment, sensationalism • Shorter stories – less room for nuance • Younger, less experienced reporters

  4. Opportunity Why law enforcement is uniquely positioned for success: • Departments address multiple issues that affect large populations • Issues have a strong visual component • Enforcement mobilizations, checkpoints and ride-alongs are both educational and compelling for audience • Good reporters understand the importance of a symbiotic relationship

  5. Basic Media Outreach Channels • Media events (enforcement driven) • Photo opportunities • Feature stories • Editorial boards • Opinion pieces

  6. Getting Your Story Placed • State and national issues drive local coverage • Identify the compelling “hook” or “angle” to your story • Personalize the issue with real people • Determine which media outlet would target your audience best • Identify and reach out to the appropriate reporter or editor with your story idea • Provide the reporter with credible third parties who will support your story angle • Begin cultivating relationships with beat reporters/editors who cover your issues

  7. Getting The Media To Cover Your Event • Design events that are interesting • Consider inviting media to existing law enforcement operations vs. holding a press conference • Ensure media-friendly location and start time • Use strong visuals, local data, survivors and “experts” • Keep it brief – 20 minutes • Beware of the talking heads!

  8. Becoming a Spokesperson

  9. Reporter-Spokesperson Dynamic • Reporter’s job: ask questions, get story • Your job: position department and/or issue, convey key messages

  10. Relationship Balancing Act

  11. Build Relationships • Be helpful off the record, but disciplined on the record • Reach out with story ideas that are not self serving • Understand and respect deadlines • Don’t lie – okay to say “I don’t know” or “I can’t tell you” • Speak simple English – avoid law enforcement jargon • Remember what motivates the media

  12. Key Messages 20 questions, 20 answers? or 20 questions, 3-5 answers

  13. Why Key Messages? • Frame issue, shape story • Simplify complex issues • Provide framework, building blocks for soundbites, Q&A, and all other communications on topic • Limit reporter choices

  14. CIOT Key Messages Handout

  15. Managing the Interview

  16. Be Prepared • Interview reporter • What is deadline? • What is “angle”(or thrust)? • What information does reporter already have? • Who has reporter already spoken to? • Prepare “guerilla” Q&A • Draft soundbites

  17. Establish the Ground Rules • Ground rules must be defined and agreed to ahead of time • Unless otherwise specified, interviews are on the record – everything you say can be quoted • “Off the record”, “not for attribution”, “background” have different meanings to different reporters and must be negotiated and agreed to before you begin

  18. Reporter Tactics • Creating friendly environment so you let down your guard • Waiting until end to ask tough question – or rotating friendly and hostile questions • Asking same question different ways • Silence after your response • Calling just before deadline

  19. Controlling the Interview • Stay on message • Answer question you wish you had been asked • Don’t answer in the negative – always frame answer in the positive • Stop talking when you’re done – don’t fill dead space • Rely on “bridging language” to get back to safety of key messages

  20. Bridging Language

  21. Interview Example

  22. Resources www.nhtsa.gov/CIOT/planner2011 www.trafficsafetymarketing.gov/ www.mass.gov/highwaysafety

  23. Questions and Closing Discussion

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