1 / 16

Advocating Through the Media: An Introduction April 6, 2013

Advocating Through the Media: An Introduction April 6, 2013. The media today. A changing landscape, increasingly concentrated – i.e. fewer outlets, fewer dedicated beats Greater need to educate Access to traditional and social media 24-7 Journalists’ objectives:

hashim
Download Presentation

Advocating Through the Media: An Introduction April 6, 2013

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Advocating Through the Media: An IntroductionApril 6, 2013

  2. The media today • A changing landscape, increasingly concentrated – i.e. fewer outlets, fewer dedicated beats • Greater need to educate • Access to traditional and social media 24-7 • Journalists’ objectives: • Defend the public’s right to information • Be honest and balanced • Beat the competition – break the story • Be seen / heard / read • Meet tight deadlines

  3. What makes news • A strong news hook to build the story on • Element of change which makes the story interesting to the public: • Community or social impact • Saving lives, saving money • First, only, largest • Conflict, scandal • Key components to shape the story: • Characters – the people involved • Problem – what’s wrong • Solution – change needed

  4. Advocating through the media • Media can be used as a conduit to share messages with a broader audience Advocacy Media • Communicate with media for two reasons: • To influence or change public opinion • To make a private issue public and put pressure on the government to bring about change

  5. Advocating through the media • In advocacy campaigns, going to the media is not usually the first step, with a few exceptions: • To set the stage, educate or provide background on a little known issue (no action needed) • Elevate an issue in the public domain when time is of the essence (action needed)

  6. How media influences change CurrentIssues Media Government Education and Awareness Public Policy Change Public

  7. Key messages • Designed to tell the story or explain the issue simply and concisely • Often developed using these key points: • Context –background on situation • Problem – what’s wrong • Solution – change needed • Action – the “ask” • What are your key messages? • The key elements of your personal story or experience with aHUS that are most relevant to the campaign

  8. Key Messages - Context • Atypical Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (aHUS) is a very rare, chronic and life-threatening, genetic condition which can cause blood vessel damage, abnormal blood clotting, organ damage, heart attack, stroke, kidney failure and death. • The prognosis for patients with aHUS has been poor, with existing supportive therapies unproven and unreliable.

  9. Key Messages - Problem • The first and only Health Canada approved treatment option available to the small number of Canadians battling aHUS is not yet funded by provincial and territorial drug programs.  

  10. Key Messages - Solution • Soliris is the first and only pharmaceutical treatment for aHUS, and has been shown to significantly improve patients’ health and quality of life. • Now that it has been approved in Canada, Soliris must be made immediately accessible to all Canadian children and adult aHUS patients who require this life-saving treatment.

  11. Key Messages - Action • All provincial and territorial governments must make an expedited decision to provide all aHUS patients across the country with immediate and equitable access to Soliris through public funding. • Immediate access to the drug would have a profoundly positive impact on the few Canadians living with aHUS, while any delay in funding treatment could lead to devastating consequences.

  12. Practice and prepare • Keep key messages short and simple • Practice getting them across in short sound bites • Average TV sound bite is just seven seconds; radio clip is 15 seconds • Make your key messages your mantra • Use in all media encounters • Modify to resonate with reporter/outlet/audience • Review facts, statistics and background information • Be aware of what you don’t know • Prepare to use “bridging” as a technique

  13. Conducting the interview • Focus on your key messages • Don’t be afraid to repeat them • Keep your answers short • Keep conversation lively • Remain focused but avoid “broken record” repetition • Say what you want to say • Take control of the interview • Make it real – no one knows your story better than you • Answer unasked questions • Reporter may not ask specifically, but what do you want to tell them?

  14. Bridging • Technique uses everyday phrases to transition between the topic the reporter is questioning you on and the topic (key message) you want to discuss • That’s a ____________ question: • “good” or “difficult”, “important”, “interesting” • What I really want to emphasize is… • What’s important about that is… • What that means is… • And don’t forget…

  15. How we can help • We’re here to guide you throughout the interview process • We conduct over-the-phone media training sessions and refreshers prior to interviews • We will help you tailor your own key messages and tell your personal story • We provide ongoing support • We know being a media spokesperson is not for everyone • We are here to help if you choose to do this work

  16. Questions? Joanne KoskieBeth DaniherCohn & Wolfe Cohn & Wolfe416-924-5700 ext. 4049 416-924-5700 ext. 4070416-400-6352 (cell) beth.daniher@cohnwolfe.ca joanne.koskie@cohnwolfe.ca

More Related