1 / 28

Health care and rural media

Health care and rural media. National Rural Health Association May 17, 2006. What are rural media?. What are rural media?. Media in communities that are designated as non-metro by the Census Bureau. What are rural media?.

brant
Download Presentation

Health care and rural media

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. Health care and rural media National Rural Health Association May 17, 2006

  2. What are rural media?

  3. What are rural media? • Media in communities that are designated as non-metro by the Census Bureau

  4. What are rural media? • Media in communities that are designated as non-metro by the Census Bureau • Newspapers with circulation under 30,000 (wide differences in these)

  5. What are rural media? • Media in communities that are designated as non-metro by the Census Bureau • Newspapers with circulation under 30,000 (wide differences in these) • Small radio stations, limited news

  6. What are rural media? • Media in communities that are designated as non-metro by the Census Bureau • Newspapers with circulation under 30,000 (wide differences in these) • Small radio stations, limited news • Local blogs and Web sites

  7. Trends in rural media • Corporate ownership growing (60%)

  8. Trends in rural media • Corporate ownership growing (60%) -- less focused on community service, more on bottom line; editors and publishers imported

  9. Trends in rural media • Corporate ownership growing (60%) -- less focused on community service, more on bottom line; editors and publishers imported • Independent papers squeezed too

  10. Trends in rural media • Corporate ownership growing (60%) -- less focused on community service, more on bottom line; editors and publishers imported • Independent papers squeezed too -- Wal-Mart effect helps some towns but hurts others, eroding advertising base for local media

  11. Types of coverage • Hospitals as businesses, institutions

  12. Types of coverage • Hospitals as businesses, institutions -- promotional stories

  13. Types of coverage • Hospitals as businesses, institutions -- promotional stories -- problem stories

  14. Types of coverage • Hospitals as businesses, institutions -- promotional stories -- problem stories • New doctors in town

  15. Types of coverage • Hospitals as businesses, institutions -- promotional stories -- problem stories • New doctors in town • Civic contributions of health-care folks

  16. Types of coverage • Hospitals as businesses, institutions -- promotional stories -- problem stories • New doctors in town • Civic contributions of health-care folks

  17. Types of coverage • Hospitals as businesses, institutions -- promotional stories -- problem stories • New doctors in town • Civic contributions of health-care folks • Health and the environment

  18. Coverage in your own words • Advertising

  19. Coverage in your own words • Advertising • Earned media

  20. Coverage in your own words • Advertising • Earned media: How to earn it --News releases, public service announcements (tied to events or specific initiatives)

  21. Coverage in your own words • Advertising • Earned media: How to earn it --News releases, public service announcements (tied to events or specific initiatives) -- Op-ed columns from providers or extension agents

  22. How to influence coverage • Call attention to problems, solutions -- check out the data -- describe the problem clearly -- personalize your points (stories on cancer survivors spur screening) -- use photos, maps, images

  23. Making the pitch for coverage • First, write to editor or news director • Follow up with phone call • Encourage editor or reporter to act as community’s “trusted messenger” • Show examples of similar stories in urban or other rural media

  24. Making the pitch for coverage • Check out corporate website for topics of interest, corporate approach to community involvement

More Related