UNDER FIRE
A friend whose organization is often in the media spotlight recently told me a story about her boss. Her boss, let's call her Susan, is on the leadership team for a lobbying group that represents a somewhat unpopular industry.
Susan was interviewed a few months ago by Dateline NBC Correspondent Lea Thompson about a topic that could make her organization look bad. She knew she'd have to answer tough questions.
Nervous about saying something embarrassing about her organization, Susan carefully prepared for the interview. She developed her main messages, thought about the worst questions she could possibly face and practiced her responses.
When the interview began, Susan stayed on message. Thompson tried to throw her off, but Susan wouldn't budge. Thompson pushed and prodded, trying to get Susan to say something ? anything ? more controversial. She wouldn't.
That's when Ms. Thompson employed the old journalistic trick of trying to intimidate her subject. In middle of the interview, Ms. Thompson asked the cameraman to stop recording, scolded Susan for not answering her questions, and asked for a five minute break.
And my sources tell me that this is not the first time Ms. Thompson has used this tactic ? she's used it before with at least one other interviewee from a different organization.
An inexperienced spokesperson would have been flustered. He or she would have returned from the break with something different to say. Not Susan. She knew that Dateline NBC was simply a conduit to a larger audience and that she had full control of her own words.
It worked. When the interview aired, Susan's quotes were right on message. By sticking to her messages and consistently repeating her most important points, she ensured that Dateline's millions of viewers heard the most important things she had to say.
WHY CAN'T I BE MORE?REAL?
The trainees I work with often wonder if they wouldn't have more credibility if they acknowledged a few of their own weaknesses during an interview, instead of being perfectly on message. Doing so is occasionally appropriate, but here's why it's dangerous:
1. The answer you give which points out your own shortcomings will be the one that is used. Your other answers ? including your positive points ? will be edited out.
2. It is not your job to be your own critic ? that is the job of the reporter and your opponents quoted in the piece. In order for a truly "balanced" piece, you have to be positive toward yourself ? your opponents will happily point out your imperfections for you.
BUT BE CAREFUL
I'd like to raise three cautions with this approach. First, frustrated reporters will occasionally edit together clips of the guest repeating the same answer over and over again and will air it to show the guest's evasiveness. It's a technique that can severely damage a guest's credibility, but is easy to circumvent ? if you develop multiple ways of saying the same thing and support your messages with specific examples.
Second, this approach works well if you're defending an ideology or point of view you truly believe in. But if you or your organization did something wrong, it's not good enough. You'll need to admit your faults, apologize, and articulate your action plan to make it better.
And third, this approach worked because the interview was taped, not live. If the program was live, the audience would have quickly tired of Susan's antics. But since she knew that Dateline NBC tends to use short sound bites instead of longer interviews, she was confident the audience would never see her repetitive messaging technique.
THE END GAME
In the end, both women performed their jobs admirably. Ms. Thompson led a tough journalistic investigation, exposing an industry that probably deserved the scrutiny. And, as for Susan? She represented her organization's point of view perfectly.
Brad Phillips is the founder and president of Phillips Media Relations. He was formerly a journalist for ABC News and CNN, and headed the media relations department for the second largest environmental group in the world.
For more information and to sign up for free monthly media relations and media training e-tips, visit http://www.PhillipsMediaRelations.com
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
Have you ever gotten one of those letters from your... Read More
Done right, it delivers the key, target audience behaviors you... Read More
©2004 Jeffrey DobkinSixty dollars doesn't go a long way in... Read More
Taking your ad and turning it into paragraph-style prose is... Read More
For financial planners, getting publicity, in the end, isn't about... Read More
Here's the point: people act on their own perception of... Read More
As a business, non-profit or association manager, why continue a... Read More
Because it can alter individual perception and lead to changed... Read More
A well structured press release in an excellent way of... Read More
Often the first point of contact the media has with... Read More
Because good public relations can alter individual perception and lead... Read More
When you are planning to call a reporter for the... Read More
Small businesses have always known the importance of word of... Read More
The media need you. Need the information and expertise you... Read More
What's more crucial to the success of a business, non-profit... Read More
Many of our clients are in service businesses, such as... Read More
Most small businesses do little to no public relations (PR)... Read More
You won't be if you accept a very simple premise.... Read More
And here it is: public relations alters individual perception leading... Read More
When, as a business, non-profit or association manager, you are... Read More
They say that image is everything and some of us... Read More
Each of us is exposed to people from other cultures... Read More
Your public relations people are busy. The buzz is all... Read More
Recently I had a craving for... Read More
Most small businesses have logo'ed shirts, usually polo shirts with... Read More
I often begin my media training sessions by asking members... Read More
I got the latest issue of Internet Works in the... Read More
Talkback radio offers a fantastic opportunity to access thousands of... Read More
As the comedian Steve Martin once said, "some people have... Read More
Almost every day, I hear the same question, over and... Read More
Your important outside audiences behave in ways that stop you... Read More
Have you ever noticed that when someone is interviewed on... Read More
As a business, non-profit or association manager, occasions will arise... Read More
If your product or service can be given as a... Read More
And hurt bad if you are a business, non-profit or... Read More
Can you honestly say that your business, non-profit or association's... Read More
A few weeks ago I was participating on an on-line... Read More
Anything that lets managers achieve their managerial objectives is a... Read More
Receiving free advertising is the dream of most business people.... Read More
Yes?Good!Still, as a business, non-profit or association manager, if you're... Read More
There are a lot of things that make a business... Read More
To survive in business, you've got to focus your attention... Read More
As someone with expertise in media relations, I've been asked... Read More
A Press Release is a captive story that can be... Read More
Because it can alter individual perception and lead to changed... Read More
Is your business looking for new and creative ways to... Read More
You never want to inundate a reporter with information, but... Read More
Yes, that's what public relations really is when it tracks... Read More
Did you Know That Even TV Remote Control Units... Read More
Yes, and that pressure often comes from a CEO who... Read More
The wind of changes...The digital world has changed the form... Read More
Corporations are willing to pay substantial amounts of money to... Read More
The real public relations geniuses might be managers. You know,... Read More
When most people think of media relations, they think of... Read More
You may remember Forrest Gump's Vietnam pal ? the one... Read More
Even after a nice piece in a national publication, or... Read More
Since the major part of a small business typically comes... Read More
The message is determined by analyzing the brand being marketed,... Read More
There's the old joke about the two buzzards sitting in... Read More
Photographs are essential for getting good publicity in the print... Read More
PR, that is public-relations, leads the way to effective advertising;... Read More
How to write a press release is a major challenge... Read More
You can SO measure return-on-investment for a public relations program!Try... Read More
Considering how fundamental they are to the publicist's trade,it's always... Read More
If you have had any experience in public relations or... Read More
Southern grandmothers have often said, "there are only three... Read More
Public Relations |