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Media Relations

Media Relations . Presented by Dena Reynolds, M.S. Grading System. All students will receive one credit through VCU for their participation in this class. This grade will appear on your official VCU transcript. The student attends less than the full two days* – administratively withdrawn

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Media Relations

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  1. Media Relations Presented by Dena Reynolds, M.S.

  2. Grading System • All students will receive one credit through VCU for their participation in this class. This grade will appear on your official VCU transcript. • The student attends less than the full two days* – administratively withdrawn • The student attends both full days and participates, but does not complete an assignment– can earn a maximum of a C. • The student attends both full days and submits an assignment – the student is eligible for an A or B. The only grades eligible towards the certificate is an A or B. • *Please note that students need 10‐15 contact hours with an instructor, it is mandatory that students attend every hour of the program to receive a passing grade.

  3. Overview | Syllabus | Examples • Identifying Good Story Angles. Making the Pitch • Writing Press Releases and Media Advisories • Preparing for Interviews: Live and Taped • Working with the Media. Obtaining a TV Story or Interview • Pitching to Local weekly newspapers • How to land stories and mentions in the Richmond-Times Dispatch • Tracking and Measuring Coverage. How to Get Started

  4. Today • Introductions • Schedule • Identifying a good story pitch • Mid-morning break • Writing Pitch • Lunch at Noon • Guest speaker at 1pm: Reporter Nate Eaton, WRIC TV8 (ABC) • Making the Pitch

  5. Media Relations for Nonprofits Why is it IMPORTANT?

  6. Media Relations for Nonprofits • FREE Awareness • Adds Credibility • Creates Name Recognition • Invites Potential Donors to Learn More About You • Gives Current Donors, Volunteers, Board of Directors and Advisory Committee Members a Sense of Pride • Helps Increase Staff Morale. Recruits Volunteers • Becomes a Source of Research • Creates Material for Newsletters, Annual Reports

  7. Before you start… • Spokesperson • Real People • Clients • Volunteers • Donors • Event attendees • Patients • Get organized! • A good story angle • Fact Sheet about Agency • Folks to be interviewed • Availability • Timeline • Expected Outcomes • Support from Management • Plans for measurement

  8. Identifying a GOOD Story Idea to Pitch Think Like a Reporter

  9. Identifying a Good Idea to Pitch Critical Elements of a Pitch: • Timely • Unique • Relevant • New • Compelling

  10. Examples of Pitches for Nonprofits • Emotional, human-interest personal story. Put a face on the story. • Positive results from a program • New program, new building launched • Local response to a National Issue, Awareness Month, Holiday • Local tie-in to a National TV Show • Upcoming Event, Speaker • Anniversary, Achievement

  11. “Stories are more than compelling facts. People remember stories more than they remember statistics.” – Soledad O’Brien Anchor and Special Correspondent for CNN At PRSA International Conference October 2011 in Orlando, Florida

  12. Front Page • The Hospitality House: “Nobody’s a Stranger” • How was it pitched? • What’s unique? • What made the main person interesting? • Did you learn facts you didn’t know? • Note the Graphic Box

  13. Examples of Pitches • Emotional Personal Story/ Human Interest Story • World Pediatric Project: RTD: Conjoined Twins Separated • Noah’s Children: Richmond Family Magazine Adding Life to Each Day • The Virginia Home: RTD (in file)Man faithfully visits sweetheart at The Virginia Home • Greater Richmond ARCenter: RTDLocal boy excels in unique cooking program

  14. Personal/Human-Interest Stories • Need to always have REAL people that the media can interview • Identify throughout the year. Ask staff, volunteers, BOD. Interview them. Develop a relationship. • Know their availability. Are they comfortable with interviews at home? • Keep a story sheet about them • YMCA Camps LifeNet Stories of Hope • Find angles to relate to their story • Holiday, Awareness Month • Anniversary, achievement • Speaking at Upcoming Event • Receiving award at event

  15. Personal/Human-Interest Stories • Staff, BOD and advisory members can be the STORY too. • Belle June 2012 Issue: “Memories on a Mission” about Richmond Baptist Association

  16. Examples of Pitches • Positive Results from a Program ~ The Solution • Virginia Supportive Housing: WTVR News6Success of A Place to Start program after three years • YMCA Cancer Program • NBC12 Success of Cancer program with graduation of students • Midlothian Exchange (in file)

  17. Video

  18. Examples of Pitches • Positive Results from a Program • Virginia Supportive Housing: WTVR News6Success of A Place to Start program after three years • YMCA Cancer Program • NBC12 Success of Cancer program with graduation of students • Midlothian Exchange (in file)

  19. Video

  20. Examples of Pitches • New program/initiative/building launched: • Children’s Museum of Richmond: RTD New Branch in Chesterfield • Art 180: RTDNew Mural Unveiled with Dedication and Celebration Ceremony • Daily Planet: Style Weekly (in file) • New Grant Funded Program to Tackle Diabetes Among Homelessness

  21. Examples of Pitches • Local Response to a National/State Issue • YWCA: NBC12 (in file)Protective Order Law: New law now applies to dating relationships • Fan Free Clinic: RTDHealth-care reform will help young adults get coverage • Prevent Child Abuse Virginia: WRIC TV8 Calls increase after Penn State Allegations • FeedMore: TV8 Peanut Butter Prices Increasing • SPCA: NBC12 (in file) Response to GA Bill on Dog Breeds

  22. Video

  23. Examples of Pitches • Local Response to a Holiday • Virginia Supportive Housing: Corporate volunteers paint apartments for volunteers on Veteran’s Day: RTD Photo • Fan Free Clinic: • RTD Preparation for World Aids Day Ribbon • News6 World Aids Day • Research awareness months, commemorative days. • January 11 is Laughing Day! • March 2: Read Across America Day (Top 10 books every child should read)

  24. April 4: National Walking Day May 2012 Health Journal

  25. Examples of Pitches • Upcoming Event, Speaker • American Cancer Society: Style Weekly (in file)Behind the Scenes Look at Committee Meeting to Plan Cure by Design Fashion Show with Cancer Survivors • March of Dimes: Richmond Family Magazine, October 2011: Preview two fall events with a focus on one family with an emotional story

  26. Examples of Pitches • Invite Media to the Event • Ag in the Classroom: RTD, July 2012 Teachers Connect with Teaching (in file) • “Show and tell” • Pick the best time • Line up interviews beforehand

  27. Examples of Pitches • Anniversary, Achievement • Positive Vibe Café: Richmond Magazine (in file)500th Student Graduates from Training Program • ElderHomes: Chesterfield ObserverVolunteer Builds 200 Wheelchair Ramps for Those in Need • SPARC: Boomer MagazineCelebrating 30 years of teaching more than 10,000 kids • Salvation Army: RTD Director plays euphonium for 36-hour marathon • Lewis Ginter: 10,000 pounds of vegetables donated to FeedMore • Children’s Museum: Downtown Shortpump.com100,000th Visitor

  28. Examples of Pitches • Local Tie-In to a National TV Show/Movie/Book • Medical Storyline: NBC’s Saving Hope • Law angle: Law & Order • Dateline, 20/20, Rock Center with Brian Williams • Nightline • Event at Theater – John Q Example, HOME Example

  29. Pitches for Smaller Nonprofits • Collaborate with other nonprofits in the same area • Goodwill, Salvation Army, RAL: Chesterfield Observer: Thrift Stores benefiting Nonprofits • Develop a joint event • Art 180 and Boys & Girls Clubs: Joint event called Paint Outside the Box Day, Boomer Magazine • Hold your event at a larger nonprofit • Identify a good time to mark an achievement • We just helped our 500th nonprofit …. • We’ve just taught our 2,000th student or had our 500th class or just graduated the 1,000th person…

  30. Pitches for Smaller Nonprofits • Move/New Building • Merger with another nonprofit or national agency • Share resources with another nonprofit • Celebrating your 1,000th Client Served • Personal story on Founder, Volunteer, Donor, Client • Tips for your family, kids or Myths about your Cause • For State, City, Association Offices create “show and tell” stories: • See how new Green Initiative is making a big impact in our community • Meet Local Residents Benefiting from State’s New Program

  31. Creating News • Volunteer Appreciation or Client Appreciation Event • Speaker’s Panel, Documentary or Author Event • “From Place to Place” documentary: Profiles 3 Children in Foster Care, Byrd Theater, Local Youth Panel Afterwards • Susan G. Komen Author Lunch Event • Create an Awards Event. Donor “Thank You” Event • An Event for Kids, Teens, Families • Display Table • LifeNet: WRIC TV8 Heart recipients Celebrate Valentine’s Day • Celebrity Visit, Tour for Congressman/Senator

  32. Inviting Media to Your Event… Still Need a Compelling Angle • Revise the event • Change the date/time • Add a compelling speaker/spokesperson • Healthy Kids Day Example • Invite media to participate • Create a unique visual opportunity • Salvation Army

  33. Video

  34. Inviting Media to Your Event… Still Need a Compelling Angle • Revise the event • Change the date/time • Add a compelling speaker/spokesperson • Healthy Kids Day Example • Invite media to participate • Create a unique visual opportunity • Salvation Army

  35. Trolleys, Barrels and Bikes: Mayor Unveils Green Plan Standing behind a row of painted rain barrels at Saturday’s open of the 17th Street Farmers’ Market, Mayor Dwight C. Jones unveils “the next major step” in making Richmond a greener city.

  36. What are the Critical Elements of a Pitch? What’s NEW that you can try to capitalize on? What’s your next pitch?

  37. The PITCH “Confidence is the Key to a Good Pitch.” Sally Stewart Former USA Today Reporter

  38. The “Perfect PR Pitch” • “Perfect PR pitch” — a brief, compelling and well-told story that will link your publicity needs with the reporter’s rational self-interest. • You’re selling an idea — an idea about you and your nonprofit. • Your job is to tell that story briefly and compellingly — just as if you were trying to hook a donor during a 30-second elevator ride. • Keep your pitch tight, bright, and to the point. • Craft your pitch to an individual reporter’s needs. (Beat, County, Schedule) • You’re selling it to a jaded individual who’s been there and seen that — but you’re also selling it to an individual who NEEDS story ideas and leads. • Better to email the pitch first (NOT as an attachment). Then, wait a day or two and call.

  39. Recommended Email Pitch Formats • 1. Formal Press Release:Pasted into Email • You want to release figures and results. Year end Numbers. • To announce that your agency received a grant or award. • Volunteer or Client Awards announced. Announce an upcoming holiday. • To announce results or outcome of an event. • 2. Media Advisory/Media Alert:Pasted into Email • Upcoming event, tour, celebrity visit. Centers around what, when, where • 3. Casual Email Paragraph Format – Unique 2 -4 paragraphs about idea. • Not centered around an event. New program/initiative • Program update, follow-up.

  40. Announcing a holiday: • SPCA’s Work with Feral Cats on National Holiday Example of Formal Press Release

  41. Press Release Elements • Logo: Your logousually goes in the top left-hand corner. • Headline: Your headline is the first thing an editor will read. You want to draw the editor in, using your headline as a "hook.” • Date: Date your news releases for the day you plan to distribute them. News releases with last week's date on them could be mistakenly be perceived as "old news." • Lead: Your lead is the first sentence of your news release. Like the headline, your lead has to be both catchy and informative. • Body: Your body paragraphs should answer the questions, What? Why? Who? When? Where? How? • Real People: Include compelling quotes from those helped by your agency. Let the quotes show how your agency makes a difference. Include titles from those quoted. Try to include at least two people. • Contact information: Always include information on how to reach you.

  42. Press Release Examples • After an event. You want to release figures and results. Year end Numbers. • VMFA Picasso Exhibits Generates $30 Million • To announce that your agency received a grant or won an award. • Virginia Historical Society Wins Award • Volunteer or Client Awards announced. • Boys and Girls Club Award • Announce a holiday (hand-out) • SPCA’s Work with Feral Cats on National Holiday • New CEO. Retiring CEO. • Richmond Habitat for Humanity New CEO • To issue your statement on an issue/report. • Meals on Wheels responds to Census Report • Announce a partnership. • Central VA Foodbank/ConAgra • A name change (hand-out). • project:HOMES Example

  43. Example of Media Advisory Hand-out Examples: • VSH: Results of Program • YMCA Healthy Kids Day • Library: Speaker

  44. Example of Media Advisory Pasted into Email

  45. Example of Casual Email Paragraph Pitch

  46. Writing Tips • One page. Concise. Short sentences. Using plain language to communicate with journalists is not considered bland but effective. • Include most important information at top. Inverted pyramid. • Your purpose is not to impress them with big words but to clarify why your message is important, and has news value. • Think like a reporter. • Offer compelling stories. Who can they interview? Why are they important? • Example: Big Brothers Big Sisters • Provide media contact and cell phone • Offer media opportunities (tour, behind the scenes)

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